WHAT MARSHMALLOWS, BATTERIES, AND GLUE HAVE IN COMMON
Today is Corn on the Cob Day, a great time to eat a very math-y food. For starters, what are all those bumpy kernels on an ear of corn? Unlike fruits that come from a fluffy flower, in the case of corn the ear IS the flower, and the kernels are the seeds. It turns out that any ear of corn has to grow an even number of rows. Most ears have 16 rows, holding 800 kernels in total. So those kernels add up fast: A “bushel” is a barrel, and a bushel of corn will have about 72,000 kernels and weigh 56 kg! We use corn to make more than 3,500 other things, including foods like cereal, peanut butter and marshmallows. The starch is also used to make stuff like fireworks, glue, and batteries. Weird!! That said, the yummiest way to eat corn is right off the cob.
Wee ones: Corn can grow in many colors: purple, green, blackish, bluish, red, white, and of course yellow. How many colors is that?
Little kids: A number is even if it can be cut into 2 equal parts. What numbers from 1 to 10 are even? Bonus: All even numbers end in the same digits as those 5 numbers. If an ear of corn has to have an even number of rows, can it have 15 rows?
Big kids: If you eat every 3rd row of corn as you go 1 full time around a cob with 16 rows, at most how many rows can you eat without passing where you started?
Bonus: A bushel of corn holds enough sugar to sweeten 400 cans of soda. If you drink 1 of those cans, how many cans are left?
Answers:
Wee ones: 7 colors.
Little kids: 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. Bonus: No, because 5 isn’t even, either.
Big kids: 6 rows at most: rows 1, 4, 7, 10, 13, and 16. Bonus: 399 cans.