Oakwood's Geometry Hunters

Students from Oakwood High School (Morgan Hill, CA) noticing cool examples of geometric objects and concepts in the world around them.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Pyramid



This is something I made a few years ago for a school project. It is in the shape of a regular square pyramid.

With the given dimensions, the pyramid would have a volume of about 572.33cm3 and a lateral area of 344.2008cm3. (~CS1)
Posted by Geometry Hunter at 3:32 PM
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Labels: geometry, math, pyramid, surface area, volume

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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2014 (119)
    • ▼  May (29)
      • Turtle Tank
      • Pyramid
      • Cylinders
      • Area of the Side of a Goal
      • Tennis Balls
      • The Presence of the Golden Ratio
      • Memorable Geometry
      • Scale Factor
      • Proof of Parallels
      • Measuring Lateral Area and Volume of a Cone
      • Tessellations in Boston
      • Surface Area of the Pentagon
      • Circumference, Area, and Pie
      • Hexagonal Prism
      • Geometric Structures from the East Coast Trip
      • Cubic Net
      • Geometry in an Old Sailing Ship
      • Shadows
      • Parallelogram in Railing
      • Decorative Segment
      • Tangent Coins
      • Hamster Wheel
      • Congruent Parallelograms?
      • Baskets and Circles
      • Arch
      • Drum Segment
      • Congruent Segments and Arcs
      • Almost Parallel...
      • Beijing Olympic Swimming Pool
    • ►  April (23)
    • ►  March (38)
    • ►  February (24)
    • ►  January (5)
  • ►  2013 (1)
    • ►  December (1)

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