Nevertheless I will apply the term tessellation (as other authors have) to describe the patterns resulting from the arrangement of one or more polyiamonds to cover the plane without any interstices or overlapping. Semi-regular tesselations are possible with combinations of the moniamond and the hexagonal hexiamond. Regular tessellations in the mathematical sense are possible, however, with the moniamond, the triangular tetriamond and the hexagonal hexiamond. The patterns might more accurately be called mosaics or tiling patterns. Taking account of the above mathematical definitions it will be readily appreciated that most patterns made up with one or more polyiamonds are not strictly tessellations because the component polyiamonds are not regular polygons. There is an infinite number of such tessellations. Non-regular tessellations are those in which there is no restriction on the order of the polygons around vertices. There are eight semi-regular tessellations which comprise different combinations of equilateral triangles, squares, hexagons, octagons and dodecagons. Semi-regular tessellations are made up with two or more types of regular polygon which are fitted together in such a way that the same polygons in the same cyclic order surround every vertex. There are only three regular tessellations which use a network of equilateral triangles, squares and hexagons. Regular tessellations are made up entirely of congruent regular polygons all meeting vertex to vertex. In geometrical terminology a tessellation is the pattern resulting from the arrangement of regular polygons to cover a plane without any interstices (gaps) or overlapping. Examples range from the simple hexagonal pattern of the bees' honeycomb or a tiled floor to the intricate decorations used by the Moors in thirteenth century Spain or the elaborate mathematical, but artistic, mosaics created by Maurits Escher this century. Patterns covering the plane by fitting together replicas of the same basic shape have been created by Nature and Man either by accident or design.
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