The is the counterintuitive observation that the length of a coastline does not have a well-defined value; instead, it increases as the unit of measurement decreases. 🌊 The Core Concept
If you measure Great Britain with a 100 km ruler, you get a length of about 2,800 km. Coastline Paradox
A mathematician who first observed the "Richardson effect," noting that border measurements vary based on map scale. The is the counterintuitive observation that the length
Using a 50 km ruler allows you to "fit" into more curves and bays, increasing the total length to 3,400 km. increasing the total length to 3