For Christmas my kids had received a set of 26 wooden blocks, one for every letter of the alphabet. While playing with my children I would make various shaped towers and walls out of the blocks that they took great delight in demolishing. During one of my building sprees I was thinking back to stacking oranges and wondered if I could make a square pyramid out of the blocks. Certainly I could make one with a 3x3 base, but that would only need 14 blocks, leaving a lot of unused blocks. After some thought I made a square pyramid with a 4x4 base that ended with 1 block on top using only the blocks I had available (which my daughter promptly kicked into oblivion with much glee). How would such a structure be built?
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Prof. Templeton
For Christmas my kids had received a set of 26 wooden blocks, one for every letter of the alphabet. While playing with my children I would make various shaped towers and walls out of the blocks that they took great delight in demolishing. During one of my building sprees I was thinking back to stacking oranges and wondered if I could make a square pyramid out of the blocks. Certainly I could make one with a 3x3 base, but that would only need 14 blocks, leaving a lot of unused blocks. After some thought I made a square pyramid with a 4x4 base that ended with 1 block on top using only the blocks I had available (which my daughter promptly kicked into oblivion with much glee). How would such a structure be built?
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