Multum in parvo
Multum in parvo is a methuselah found by Charles Corderman in 1972.[1]
| Multum in parvo | |||||||
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| Pattern type | Methuselah | ||||||
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| Number of cells | 7 | ||||||
| Bounding box | 6×4 | ||||||
| MCPS | 7 | ||||||
| Lifespan | 3933 generations | ||||||
| Final population | 633 | ||||||
| L/I | 561.9 | ||||||
| F/I | 90.4 | ||||||
| F/L | 0.161 | ||||||
| L/MCPS | 561.9 | ||||||
| Discovered by | Charles Corderman | ||||||
| Year of discovery | 1972 | ||||||
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Stable pattern
The stable pattern that results from multum in parvo (excluding 13 escaping gliders) has 568 cells and consists of 41 blocks, 36 blinkers (including four traffic lights), 29 beehives (including two honey farms), eight boats, six loaves, three ships, two tubs, one pond, and one toad. Although the final population (including the number of escaping gliders) is the same as that of acorn, these two are unrelated in any other way.
Generation 3933
gollark: Clearly we need a shiny new even MORE free social network.
gollark: Radio stuff is longer range without infrastructure, but mostly there is some (even developing countries apparently have quite good cellular coverage these days).
gollark: You can get on the internet with a £50 phone and free WiFi somewhere, radio still requires a bunch of specialised hardware.
gollark: Australia *and* south-east asia.
gollark: You claimed to be a qualified electrical engineer, see.
References
- Robert Wainwright. "Lifeline Volume 5".
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