Yes
Yea
A series is a set of numbers to work with, which may vary as the problem changes. A sequence is a set of numbers which must be in the same order and they do not vary. The sequence may not be in a "logical" order such as 123. They may be 132 or 213, but they always present in the same order. The series can be any numbers but they may present out of "order". These numbers can present without some of the "logical" numbers being present such as 124. If the problem changes, the numbers might in the series. If the problem changes and the "2" is no longer needed, the series can change to 134. In this case, the series changes to fit the problem...the sequence is always in the same order and uses the same number.
One number does not make a pattern - no matter how big it is. No pattern so no next numbers in the pattern.
the fibonacci pattern of numbers came round about in the 1980's
Yes. There is a pattern in square numbers. They are fun to play with.
The checkerboard pattern on the Inca textile would likely indicate the status of the person wearing it. In Inca culture, patterns and symbols on clothing often denoted social rank, occupation, or role within the community. The checkerboard pattern could indicate royalty or nobility.
There is no such pattern because there are no even odd numbers. Odd numbers, by definition, are odd and therefore, not even.
Its impossible to count because so many die and get reproduced at any given moment without any pattern
Rhythm.
There is no pattern.
I have heard that one set of wings does a veritcal figure eight pattern while the aft set does a horizontal figure eight pattern, enabling forward, backward, and hovering flight.
There can be no pattern from a single string of numbers and points.
The pattern changes every year.