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Resources
This site, from the University of Toronto, provides an overview of chaos theory and concisely explains the characteristics of chaotic systems. The bifurcation of a rabbit population, with the transition to chaos, is...
This website from the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Johns Hopkins University introduces chaos and describes how it appears in animal populations and weather models. The site also describes fractals and explains...
This site describes Ben Tamari's thoughts on dynamical system in economics, fractals and chaos in nature. The site is divided into six sections: Patterns, Attractors, Economics, Stocks, Form, and Metaphors.
Chaos is an interdisciplinary science founded on the idea that nonlinear deterministic systems can behave in an apparently unpredictable and chaotic manner. The department's homepage has information on people, research...
High school teacher Glenn Elert wrote the original edition of the Chaos Hypertextbook for his M.S. degree in secondary science education at Teachers College, Columbia University. After graduation, Elert put the hypertext...
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