Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Bamboo and Multiplication in Ancient China

Fascinating, the things that turn up in the Hong Kong antiquities market. Nature News:
Five years ago, Tsinghua University in Beijing received a donation of nearly 2,500 bamboo strips. Muddy, smelly and teeming with mould, the strips probably originated from the illegal excavation of a tomb, and the donor had purchased them at a Hong Kong market. Researchers at Tsinghua carbon-dated the materials to around 305 bc, during the Warring States period before the unification of China.

Each strip was about 7 to 12 millimetres wide and up to half a metre long, and had a vertical line of ancient Chinese calligraphy painted on it in black ink. Historians realized that the bamboo pieces constituted 65 ancient texts and recognized them to be among the most important artefacts from the period.
So that is an important find in its own right, ancient copies of famous Chinese texts. But there's more. The string that once bound the strips in order had decayed, leaving them as a jumbled mass. But as they played with various arrangements of the strips, scholars realized that 21 of them bore only numbers, and that arranged correctly the numbers form a pattern. They form a multiplication table, the world's oldest. Translated, they look like this:

As in a modern multiplication table, the entries at the intersection of each row and column in the matrix provide the results of multiplying the corresponding numbers. The table can also help users to multiply any whole or half integer between 0.5 and 99.5. Numbers that are not directly represented, says Feng, first have to be converted into a series of additions. For instance, 22.5 × 35.5 can be broken up into (20 + 2 + 0.5) × (30 + 5 + 0.5). That gives 9 separate multiplications (20 × 30, 20 × 5, 20 × 0.5, 2 × 30, and so on), each of which can be read off the table. The final result can be obtained by adding up the answers. “It’s effectively an ancient calculator,” says Li.
Remarkable.

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