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8 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
O(a)K ........we can figure this out together. Maple it out of my hat......but I'm determined to find this answer. It might not be the most Poplar answer, but even a Dog-wood not ignore this one.
Ok so.....give me a Pear of numbers and I'll conifer with my mathematical teacher friends and see what they can come up with. I knew I shouldn't just read all the time.......but it is so hard for me to branch out. But I'll go out on a limb this time.......just cause it's Yew.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
You have to dig deep to find the answer. I made a trunk call to a British mathematician and he said it depends on how many square knots are involved. Perhaps I am barking up the wrong tree and can't see the trees through the forest, but I think the answer is the radius of the foliage divided by pi ne squared. When in doubt always listen to your alders fir advice, and spruce up a bit. Remember what the acorn said when it grew up. "Geometry." What trees can do is beyond beleaf.
- 1 decade ago
tricky question
root of a tree or square root of a tree/
(tree)^(1/2)
Source(s): there you go - How do you think about the answers? You can sign in to vote the answer.
- AntnyLv 51 decade ago
shovel + (trial + error) = 56(holes in yard)
Keep diggin until you find the one that isn't round.
- 1 decade ago
you first take the derivative of the bark then solve for for 'axe' then graph function.