Finding information in cyberspaceElectronic indexes of paper resourcesExercise: Internet Scavenger Hunt

Exercise: Internet Scavenger Hunt

Use the Internet to find the following items, and record the URLs where you found them. 

(For foreign students, part 0 is to find an online dictionary that defines "scavenger hunt".)

  1. The World-Wide Web home page of the town where you were born. If there is no such home page, find the home page of a city as close as possible to the place where you were born.
  2. The title of a mathematical publication by a person (not a member of your immediate family) whose name differs from yours by as few letters as possible. For example, "Harold Boas" and "Harald Bohr" differ in three letters.
  3. A picture of the Borromean rings. 
  4. The probabilities of the different hands in standard five-card poker. 
  5. A java applet that graphs partial sums of Fourier series. 
  6. A large number of decimal places of the number pi. 
  7. A picture of the Nephroid of Freeth.
  8. A biography of the mathematician Charles Lutwidge Dodgson.
  9. The home page of the most recent recipient of the Chauvenet Prize.
  10. The title of Cathleen Morawetz's 1946 master's thesis. (This one is tricky!)

logo The Math 696 course pages were last modified April 5, 2005.
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Finding information in cyberspaceElectronic indexes of paper resourcesExercise: Internet Scavenger Hunt