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Honeycomb Fractal Pattern
by Owen Borville
September 30, 2021
Science, Biology

The honeycomb is a unique structure created by the bee that contains unique patterns, repeating hexagon shapes.

​The honeycomb produced by bees is the product of design and is composed of beeswax. The honeycomb is produced by honey bees in their nests to hold their larvae and store honey and pollen. Each shell of the honeycomb is a near perfect hexagon that further points toward an Intelligent Design. The honey bees consume honey to excrete the beeswax, which is exerted from the bee's abdomen. Somehow, the honeybee knows how to use the beeswax to build the walls of the honeycomb into hexagonal cells. The honeybee also heats up the wax, causing it to melt and form flat plates. This behavioral process is incredibly complex for such a small animal and is a testament to Intelligent Design. The hexagonal pattern for the cells is the most efficient use of space. The hexagonal shape does not leave gaps like circular cells would and the hexagonal cells are stronger than square or rectangular shaped cells. Evolutionists argue that the hexagonal shape is a product of physics and not creative design, such as when bubbles connect. However, even so, the process of the bee building the honeycomb is complex nevertheless and points toward Intelligent Design. How did the bee originally learn how to build the honeycomb? The honeybee and its unique creative behavior is simply the product of Intelligent Design and not millions of years of random chance evolution. 
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