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We received many interesting ideas concerning the Ishango bone. Thanks to you all for sending in your comments.
We were particularly pleased to hear from Huylebrouck at the Department of Archeology in Brussels, who gave us these fact concerning the bone:
A second Ishango rod was found indeed.
The Ishango rods are not "believed" to be 22000 years old. They are: they were dated through Carbon 14.
Alex and Theo said
We looked at Row C and found that $9 + 10=19$ and that $21 - 10 = 11$, the top line is all prime numbers so the bone could be a mathematical aid in the shape of a pen so people could use it as they worked.
Ben and Joshua from Lancaster Royal Grammar School noted the mathematical fact that
Row c has a pattern of not prime, prime, not prime, prime and the non primes are multiples of three.
Shrish, also from Lancaster Royal Grammar School gave a very interesting analysis. We had not previously seen the concept of adding the numbers in vertical columns(well done for thinking of this Shrish!)
Row A: 19, 17, 13, 11
Row B: 7, [5, 5, 1, 9], 8, 4, [6, 3]
Row C: 9, 19, 21, 11
If we add the rows vertically, with the extra number in middle row getting added on at the end we get
$$19+7+9=35 \quad17+20+19=56 \quad 13+8+21=42 \quad 11+4+11+9=35$$
Since 35 is the common factor, we will divide the other numbers by this:
$$\frac{42}{35}=1.2 \quad \frac{56}{35}=1.6
$$
These answers add up to make 2.8. All the numbers on all the rows add up to 168. If we divide this by 2.8, we get 60 which is the sum of the first and third rows. Now instead of adding 1.2 and 1.6, we subtract the first first from the latter to get 0.4. If we times 168 by 0.4 we get 67.2. Now take 48 from 67.2 (48 is the sum of the middle row). We get 19.2. 19.2 to 48 is the same proportion as
67.2 to 168.
$$
\frac{19.2}{48} =\frac{67.2}{168} = \frac{2}{5}
$$
I think this shows there are definitive patterns and the numbers are not random. [we agree!]
Some of you suggested thesethe uses for the bone
We loved the idea that the bone was used as a game of bingo.
When in 1821 Charles Babbage invented the `Difference Engine' it was intended to take over the work of making mathematical tables by the techniques described in this article.