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Can you solve the buried treasure riddle? - Daniel Griller

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    After a massive storm tears
    through the Hex Archipelago,
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    you find five grizzled
    survivors in the water.
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    Shivering their timbers,
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    they explain that they’re the former crew
    of the great pirate Greenbeard,
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    who marooned them
    after they tried to mutiny.
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    Each was bound up in a different
    spot on a small island,
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    until the storm washed them out to sea.
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    In gratitude for saving them,
    they reveal a secret:
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    the island they were on is also where
    Greenbeard has buried his treasure hoard.
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    But when the sailors try to describe
    the island, something seems off.
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    All agree it was flat and barren with no
    prominent features except for some trees.
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    Yet each pirate claims they saw
    a different number of trees,
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    ranging from two to six.
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    The pirate who saw two trees says the
    treasure was buried right at his feet.
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    When you fly your hot air balloon
    over the area to investigate,
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    you see hundreds of small islands,
    each with exactly six trees.
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    The next storm will be here soon,
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    so you’ll have to hurry
    and narrow your search.
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    What does the island with Greenbeard’s
    treasure look like from the sky?
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    And where will the treasure be
    on that island?
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    Pause here if you want
    to figure it out for yourself!
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    Answer in 3
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    Answer in 2
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    Answer in 1
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    It might seem like the pirates
    are delirious from dehydration.
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    But that’s not what’s going on.
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    Remember, each was confined
    to a separate point on the island,
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    and no two of them could see
    the same number of trees.
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    That means that for all but one pirate,
    something was blocking their view.
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    And since there are no other
    features on the island,
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    that something could only
    have been other trees.
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    A pirate would see fewer trees
    when two or more
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    fell along a straight line
    from their vantage point.
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    So we need to find the island
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    where five different pirates standing
    in different spots
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    would each see a
    different number of trees.
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    Virtually every island has a position
    from which you can see six trees.
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    And on most islands there’s a
    position where 5 trees can be seen
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    by standing in line with two of them.
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    It turns out that the hardest locations
    to find are those with fewer visible trees
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    precisely because they require more trees
    to line up with the viewer’s position.
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    So how can we see just two trees?
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    One way would be if all the trees
    were lined up in single file,
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    such as on this island.
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    Then you could stand at the end
    of the line and see one,
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    stand in the middle and see two,
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    or stand anywhere else and see all six.
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    But there’s no place from
    which you can see only three,
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    four,
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    or five,
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    so one straight line of trees is out.
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    So what about two lines of trees?
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    So long as the lines aren’t parallel
    and they intersect over land,
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    there’ll always be a position
    where the two lines converge
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    from which you could
    see exactly two trees.
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    And if they’re grouped two and four,
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    or three and three,
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    there are many arrangements in which
    you could also see three,
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    four,
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    five,
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    and six trees.
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    Fortunately for us, there’s only
    one island in the archipelago
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    with two non-parallel lines of trees,
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    and it’ll be buried at the intersection
    of the two lines.
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    You land on this island and dig up a chest
    containing a massive pile of tree seeds,
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    ready for planting.
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    Was this treasure really worth
    all that trouble?
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    That’s a matter of perspective.
Title:
Can you solve the buried treasure riddle? - Daniel Griller
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:03

English subtitles

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