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Babilonia
http://www.crystalinks.com/babylonia.html
The Babylonian counting system developed in ancient Mesopotamia near the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. The Babylonians had a base-60 (sexagesimal) positional counting system, meaning that numeration was done in positions that incremented by powers of 60. A present day example would be how time is kept using increments of 60, such as 60 seconds to a minute and 60 minutes to an hour. The Babylonians kept track of their mathematics on clay tablets using their ancient form of stylus writing call cuneiform. These clay tablets survived to present day and in the 1930s, a scholar by the name of Otto Neugebauer translated the Babylonian collections housed at the British Museum, the Louvre, Yale, Columbia, and Penn and revealed that all of the clay tablets were indeed mathematical in nature. The Babylonians are a very important culture to mathematics because found in their mathematical clay tablets were precursors to today's Quadratic Equation and the Pythagorean Theorem which had been later refined by the Greeks. The Babylonians were also the first to make use of fractions.
http://students.cis.uab.edu/cateli/body3.html
http://www.crystalinks.com/babylonia.html
The Babylonian counting system developed in ancient Mesopotamia near the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. The Babylonians had a base-60 (sexagesimal) positional counting system, meaning that numeration was done in positions that incremented by powers of 60. A present day example would be how time is kept using increments of 60, such as 60 seconds to a minute and 60 minutes to an hour. The Babylonians kept track of their mathematics on clay tablets using their ancient form of stylus writing call cuneiform. These clay tablets survived to present day and in the 1930s, a scholar by the name of Otto Neugebauer translated the Babylonian collections housed at the British Museum, the Louvre, Yale, Columbia, and Penn and revealed that all of the clay tablets were indeed mathematical in nature. The Babylonians are a very important culture to mathematics because found in their mathematical clay tablets were precursors to today's Quadratic Equation and the Pythagorean Theorem which had been later refined by the Greeks. The Babylonians were also the first to make use of fractions.
http://students.cis.uab.edu/cateli/body3.html