Stilts are sticks you strap to your legs to make you taller. Well, scientists decided to strap very tiny stilts on ants to see how far they’d walk. Why? Ants in the desert always find their way home, even though all the sand looks the same. How far they walk? It turns out they use math: they count their steps. When the ants tried to walk home on stilts, the stilts made their steps bigger. The ants didn’t fix this by taking fewer steps — they walked way past their anthill!
Lace up: If you’ve taken 6 steps, what number step comes next?
Jog: How many more legs does an ant have than you? (Hint if needed: All insects have 6 legs.)
Sprint: If you have a pair of ants and you put a tiny stilt on every leg, how many stilts do you need to make? (Hint if needed: All insects have 6 legs.)
Hurdle: If an ant thinks it’s walking 52 miles to get home, but the stilts make it walk twice that distance, by how many miles does the ant overshoot its home?
High Jump: You’ve made 6,000 stilts! How many ants will get stilts for all 6 legs?
Answers:
Lace up: Step number 7!
Jog: 4 legs more…that’s 6 for the ant vs. 2 for you.
Sprint: 12 stilts.
Hurdle: By 52 miles! It walks 104 instead of 52.
High Jump: 1,000 ants.