Puzzles wanted
-
- Posts: 5916
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Huntsville, AL
- Contact:
Puzzles wanted
I work in a lab full of engineers and scientists. A couple of weeks ago, I wrote on one of the white boards:
"What is the last item in this sequence?
1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,3,1,1,_"
After a few days, no one had written anything in it, so I put up the hint "3 = W", and eventually someone came up with the answer that the numbers represent the number of syllables of the letters of the alphabet.
I followed it last week with
"What is the next letter in this sequence?
O, T, T, F, F, S, S, _" and someone got it today.
Any suggestions for what I should put up next?
"What is the last item in this sequence?
1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,3,1,1,_"
After a few days, no one had written anything in it, so I put up the hint "3 = W", and eventually someone came up with the answer that the numbers represent the number of syllables of the letters of the alphabet.
I followed it last week with
"What is the next letter in this sequence?
O, T, T, F, F, S, S, _" and someone got it today.
Any suggestions for what I should put up next?
-
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: April 13th, 2008, 6:56 am
- Favorite Magician: Lubor Fiedler
- Location: Durham, England
Re: Puzzles wanted
This book might be of use.
Plus - the article has a nice puzzle involving the days of the week.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/behind-gchqs-fiendish-new-puzzle-book/
Plus - the article has a nice puzzle involving the days of the week.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/behind-gchqs-fiendish-new-puzzle-book/
- Matthew Field
- Posts: 2846
- Joined: January 18th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Favorite Magician: Slydini
- Location: Hastings, England, UK
Re: Puzzles wanted
Bill -- an oldie, but a goodie.
Matt Field
Matt Field
-
- Posts: 5916
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Huntsville, AL
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
Thanks Joe, but we are all Americans and monolingual, so it wouldn't have a chance of getting solved.
But I came up with this:
"This set has seven elements. Name the missing one.
Sun
Moon
Norse god Tyr
Norse god Wodin
Norse god Thor
Norse god Freyja
XXXXX"
But I came up with this:
"This set has seven elements. Name the missing one.
Sun
Moon
Norse god Tyr
Norse god Wodin
Norse god Thor
Norse god Freyja
XXXXX"
-
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: April 13th, 2008, 6:56 am
- Favorite Magician: Lubor Fiedler
- Location: Durham, England
Re: Puzzles wanted
For the past few years - I have prepared xmas quizzes for work.
I will comb through them and pull out some questions that are more "puzzle" like in feel.
-------------------
Egypt one.
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
------------------
Using just the letters in the top row of a typewriter - what is the longest word you can spell?
Q W E R T Y U I O P
------------------
23°26′13.6″ north
23°26′13.6″ south
Author?
-----------------
February is the shortest month in the year, but which is the longest?
-----------------
On a clear day, from the top of Mount Rushmore, what is the furthest thing you can see?
----------------
What is the only word in the English language that ends in the letters "mt"?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Wiseman had a great puzzle that went viral recently:
What value should ‘x’ be in the following sequence?
16 06 68 88 x 98
http://i.stack.imgur.com/CT56W.jpg
https://richardwiseman.wordpress.com/20 ... uzzle-105/
Richard Wiseman has a collection of 101 puzzles here. He is a great writer since he has a knack of finding the most interesting stuff to write about of record for his youtube videos.
https://richardwiseman.wordpress.com/10 ... y-puzzles/
He also has an ebook containing 101 puzzles that he published previously:
https://www.amazon.com/PUZZLED-Cunning- ... 338&sr=1-1
I will comb through them and pull out some questions that are more "puzzle" like in feel.
-------------------
Egypt one.
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
------------------
Using just the letters in the top row of a typewriter - what is the longest word you can spell?
Q W E R T Y U I O P
------------------
23°26′13.6″ north
23°26′13.6″ south
Author?
-----------------
February is the shortest month in the year, but which is the longest?
-----------------
On a clear day, from the top of Mount Rushmore, what is the furthest thing you can see?
----------------
What is the only word in the English language that ends in the letters "mt"?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Wiseman had a great puzzle that went viral recently:
What value should ‘x’ be in the following sequence?
16 06 68 88 x 98
http://i.stack.imgur.com/CT56W.jpg
https://richardwiseman.wordpress.com/20 ... uzzle-105/
Richard Wiseman has a collection of 101 puzzles here. He is a great writer since he has a knack of finding the most interesting stuff to write about of record for his youtube videos.
https://richardwiseman.wordpress.com/10 ... y-puzzles/
He also has an ebook containing 101 puzzles that he published previously:
https://www.amazon.com/PUZZLED-Cunning- ... 338&sr=1-1
-
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: April 13th, 2008, 6:56 am
- Favorite Magician: Lubor Fiedler
- Location: Durham, England
Re: Puzzles wanted
I am not sure if this counts as a puzzle but something I noticed once is this...
How many days in a week? 7
How many weeks in a year? 52
How many days in a year? 365 (or 365.24 if you want to be exact)
So 52 x 7 = 365?
Wrong.
52 x 7 = 364.
What happened to the missing day?
How many days in a week? 7
How many weeks in a year? 52
How many days in a year? 365 (or 365.24 if you want to be exact)
So 52 x 7 = 365?
Wrong.
52 x 7 = 364.
What happened to the missing day?
-
- Posts: 2631
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
There are 52 weeks, and then the extra day, Without that, New Year would be on the same day every year.
Ian Kendall Close up magician in Edinburgh and Scotland
-
- Posts: 404
- Joined: February 26th, 2012, 9:22 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
Using only numbers expressed with Arabic numerals, fill in the blanks in the following statement so that it is true:
"This sentence contains _____ 0's, _____ 1's, _____ 2's, _____ 3's, _____ 4's, _____ 5's, _____ 6's, _____ 7's, _____ 8's, and _____ 9's."
There are TWO correct solutions. Get both solutions to earn the genius badge of honor!
"This sentence contains _____ 0's, _____ 1's, _____ 2's, _____ 3's, _____ 4's, _____ 5's, _____ 6's, _____ 7's, _____ 8's, and _____ 9's."
There are TWO correct solutions. Get both solutions to earn the genius badge of honor!
-
- Posts: 2631
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
Bit of a paradox with the 2s in that one...
Ian Kendall Close up magician in Edinburgh and Scotland
- erdnasephile
- Posts: 4768
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
I like this one. https://puzzlersworld.com/logical-puzzl ... qus_thread
After a series of math puzzles, it is very deceptive--especially if you are a math-oriented person.
After a series of math puzzles, it is very deceptive--especially if you are a math-oriented person.
-
- Posts: 2631
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
Joe posted that one above. I never found it deceptive, but I realise I'm not normal...
Ian Kendall Close up magician in Edinburgh and Scotland
-
- Posts: 404
- Joined: February 26th, 2012, 9:22 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
Ian Kendall wrote:Bit of a paradox with the 2s in that one...
Only with the 2's, Ian?
Obviously there's at least 1 of everything in the sentence ... but then all those 1's you put in the blanks alter the number of 1's in the sentence. So then you have to adjust that. And don't forget that if you write a number like 10, that puts another 0 and another 1 in the sentence, so your blanks for 0's and 1's may now be incorrect (again.)
It definitely takes some iterating!
- erdnasephile
- Posts: 4768
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
-
- Posts: 404
- Joined: February 26th, 2012, 9:22 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
Too easy - just look for four matches that already have symmetry as a group and move the other one.
-
- Posts: 2631
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
Only with the 2's, Ian?
Obviously there's at least 1 of everything in the sentence ... but then all those 1's you put in the blanks alter the number of 1's in the sentence. So then you have to adjust that. And don't forget that if you write a number like 10, that puts another 0 and another 1 in the sentence, so your blanks for 0's and 1's may now be incorrect (again.)
I got as far as the 2s and gave up after the paradox. Writing 10 is moot, because there is not ten of anything.
Ian Kendall Close up magician in Edinburgh and Scotland
- erdnasephile
- Posts: 4768
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
brianarudolph wrote:
Too easy - just look for four matches that already have symmetry as a group and move the other one.
Actually, Martin Gardner wrote of this item: "I consider this the finest of all toothpick puzzles." (Impromptu, pg 788)
-
- Posts: 366
- Joined: December 24th, 2015, 10:29 am
- Favorite Magician: Paul Megram
Re: Puzzles wanted
I have two children.
One is a boy who was born on a Tuesday.
What is the probability that I have two boys?
One is a boy who was born on a Tuesday.
What is the probability that I have two boys?
-
- Posts: 366
- Joined: December 24th, 2015, 10:29 am
- Favorite Magician: Paul Megram
Re: Puzzles wanted
A mother is 21 years older than her son
In 6 years, she will be 5 times her son's age
Where is the father?
(An easy one)
In 6 years, she will be 5 times her son's age
Where is the father?
(An easy one)
-
- Posts: 366
- Joined: December 24th, 2015, 10:29 am
- Favorite Magician: Paul Megram
Re: Puzzles wanted
A guy is doing a door-to-door survey
“Excuse me madam, I'm sorry to bother you, but could I ask whether you have any children?”
“Why yes, I have three children”
“Could you tell me their ages, please?”
“If you multiply their ages together, you get 36”
He smiles, and says “Well, that doesn't tell me how old they are”
“And if you add their ages together, you get the number of this house”
He takes a pace back, looks at the house number, thinks briefly, and says “Well, that still doesn't tell me how old they are”
“And the youngest has red hair”
“Thank you, madam”, and he writes down their ages and leaves
How old are the children?
“Excuse me madam, I'm sorry to bother you, but could I ask whether you have any children?”
“Why yes, I have three children”
“Could you tell me their ages, please?”
“If you multiply their ages together, you get 36”
He smiles, and says “Well, that doesn't tell me how old they are”
“And if you add their ages together, you get the number of this house”
He takes a pace back, looks at the house number, thinks briefly, and says “Well, that still doesn't tell me how old they are”
“And the youngest has red hair”
“Thank you, madam”, and he writes down their ages and leaves
How old are the children?
-
- Posts: 45
- Joined: January 25th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Lincoln Park NJ
Re: Puzzles wanted
Martin Gardiner book. "my best mathematical and logic puzzles" can help you.
-
- Posts: 404
- Joined: February 26th, 2012, 9:22 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
erdnasephile wrote:brianarudolph wrote:
Too easy - just look for four matches that already have symmetry as a group and move the other one.
Actually, Martin Gardner wrote of this item: "I consider this the finest of all toothpick puzzles." (Impromptu, pg 788)
Finest does not automatically imply toughest.
- Matthew Field
- Posts: 2846
- Joined: January 18th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Favorite Magician: Slydini
- Location: Hastings, England, UK
Re: Puzzles wanted
Punctuate the following so it makes sense:
Time flies we cannot their flight is too swift
Matt Field
Time flies we cannot their flight is too swift
Matt Field
Re: Puzzles wanted
Here is a really nice collection of puzzles with an unusual feature http://www.lybrary.com/cranium-conundrums-p-126100.html
Lybrary.com Magic & Gambling
preserving magic one book at a time
preserving magic one book at a time
- erdnasephile
- Posts: 4768
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
brianarudolph wrote:erdnasephile wrote:brianarudolph wrote:Too easy - just look for four matches that already have symmetry as a group and move the other one.
Actually, Martin Gardner wrote of this item: "I consider this the finest of all toothpick puzzles." (Impromptu, pg 788)
Finest does not automatically imply toughest.
Fair enough--I found it tough.
-
- Posts: 2332
- Joined: January 18th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Simi Valley, CA
Re: Puzzles wanted
I created this one for a spec script I wrote many years ago, about a younger detective who trades these puzzles with his older partner.
What is the next letter in this sequence:
C O P S V W __
This is sort of a hint: This is a bit weird because it's not about the sequence, really, more about what those letters have in common, and which of the remaining letters also has that in common. Anyway, at least you haven't seen it before, since the movie never got made, so I never found out how easy or hard it is. Let me know.
What is the next letter in this sequence:
C O P S V W __
This is sort of a hint: This is a bit weird because it's not about the sequence, really, more about what those letters have in common, and which of the remaining letters also has that in common. Anyway, at least you haven't seen it before, since the movie never got made, so I never found out how easy or hard it is. Let me know.
-
- Posts: 366
- Joined: December 24th, 2015, 10:29 am
- Favorite Magician: Paul Megram
Re: Puzzles wanted
I'd posted three puzzles here. Incidentally, I didn’t actually post them for people here to solve them, I posted them because Bill asked for puzzles for his colleagues.
A PM dialogue about the boy-born-on-a-Tuesday puzzle has persuaded me to suggest that it's not suitable for Bill's purpose, because some people will disagree with the reasoning.
In case anybody's interested - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/m ... 735812.stm
Dave
Dave
A PM dialogue about the boy-born-on-a-Tuesday puzzle has persuaded me to suggest that it's not suitable for Bill's purpose, because some people will disagree with the reasoning.
In case anybody's interested - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/m ... 735812.stm
Dave
Dave
- Matthew Field
- Posts: 2846
- Joined: January 18th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Favorite Magician: Slydini
- Location: Hastings, England, UK
Re: Puzzles wanted
Here's another punctuation problem. Punctuate the following so it makes (some) sense:
That that is is that that is not is not is not that that is not that that is not is not that that is not not that that it it is
Matt Field
That that is is that that is not is not is not that that is not that that is not is not that that is not not that that it it is
Matt Field
-
- Posts: 1376
- Joined: February 7th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Brooklyn NY
Re: Puzzles wanted
Ten people line up facing the same way in size order, with person #10, the tallest, at the back, and #1, the smallest, in front.
They each have on either a white hat or black hat, and can only see the hats of all the people with lower numbers than themselves. So, for example, person #5 can only see the hats of persons #4, 3, 2, and 1. They cannot turn around to look at hats of people with higher numbers, nor can they see their own hats.
Starting from #10, in order, onto #1, they each say only one word: either "White" or "Black."
They are allowed to discuss strategy beforehand; what strategy will allow at least nine of the ten to correctly say the color of the hat on their own head.
This is strictly a logic puzzle: no wires, threads, mirrors, or rough and smooth.
They each have on either a white hat or black hat, and can only see the hats of all the people with lower numbers than themselves. So, for example, person #5 can only see the hats of persons #4, 3, 2, and 1. They cannot turn around to look at hats of people with higher numbers, nor can they see their own hats.
Starting from #10, in order, onto #1, they each say only one word: either "White" or "Black."
They are allowed to discuss strategy beforehand; what strategy will allow at least nine of the ten to correctly say the color of the hat on their own head.
This is strictly a logic puzzle: no wires, threads, mirrors, or rough and smooth.
Click here to get Gerald Deutsch's Perverse Magic: The First Sixteen Years
All proceeds to Open Heart Magic charity.
All proceeds to Open Heart Magic charity.
-
- Posts: 5916
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Huntsville, AL
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
Thanks so much, and keep 'em coming.
For my purposes, the link to Richard Wiseman's work is most helpful.
Joe -- I have no idea about the Egypt/Greece/Turkey and Mt. Rushmore puzzles.
I like good matchstick/toothpick puzzles, but they aren't good for what I'm doing (hard to stick them on a blackboard on a wall!) See Roberto Giobbi's matchstick routine in Genii Oct 2007, where he puts together a small set with the giraffe puzzle, and builds on it and a couple of variations.
The two children one on Tuesday is a stumper. One year at the Gathering for Gardner, Gary Foshee did a talk on this one. This is a room with a couple of hundred high-powered mathematicians (John Conway, etc.), and I'm not sure he convinced everyone. Like the Monty Hall problem, people gonna argue no matter what.
Pete – I can't figure this one out.
For my purposes, the link to Richard Wiseman's work is most helpful.
Joe -- I have no idea about the Egypt/Greece/Turkey and Mt. Rushmore puzzles.
I like good matchstick/toothpick puzzles, but they aren't good for what I'm doing (hard to stick them on a blackboard on a wall!) See Roberto Giobbi's matchstick routine in Genii Oct 2007, where he puts together a small set with the giraffe puzzle, and builds on it and a couple of variations.
The two children one on Tuesday is a stumper. One year at the Gathering for Gardner, Gary Foshee did a talk on this one. This is a room with a couple of hundred high-powered mathematicians (John Conway, etc.), and I'm not sure he convinced everyone. Like the Monty Hall problem, people gonna argue no matter what.
Pete – I can't figure this one out.
-
- Posts: 2332
- Joined: January 18th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Simi Valley, CA
Re: Puzzles wanted
Bill,
The letters C O P S V W all are the same shape in both lower and upper case. So the next letter would be X, then not Y, then Z.
Again, I never showed this to anyone so I have no idea if it seems valid, if that's the right word. Anything based on the shapes of letters is tricky because there is no "official" shape for letters. I would love to hear if other people think my explanation is sound or not.
In any event, you are welcome to use it if it serves your purposes.
The letters C O P S V W all are the same shape in both lower and upper case. So the next letter would be X, then not Y, then Z.
Again, I never showed this to anyone so I have no idea if it seems valid, if that's the right word. Anything based on the shapes of letters is tricky because there is no "official" shape for letters. I would love to hear if other people think my explanation is sound or not.
In any event, you are welcome to use it if it serves your purposes.
-
- Posts: 404
- Joined: February 26th, 2012, 9:22 pm
Re: Puzzles wanted
Bill Mullins wrote:The two children one on Tuesday is a stumper. One year at the Gathering for Gardner, Gary Foshee did a talk on this one. This is a room with a couple of hundred high-powered mathematicians (John Conway, etc.), and I'm not sure he convinced everyone. Like the Monty Hall problem, people gonna argue no matter what.
I can see why arguments would arise from this one as there is a difference between "I have two children. What is the probability that I have two boys?" and "I have two children. If I now told you that one of them for certain is a boy, what is the probability that I have two boys?"
Many years ago before it was too well publicized, I posed the Monty Hall problem to my staff of IT folks. It generated a lot of arguments. When I revealed the solution, the biggest argument against it came from my head of software engineering. I told him to write a program to simulate it over a few thousand trials. When his own program proved the solution I gave was correct, he still wouldn't accept it - he figured his program was wrong. For all I know he's still off somewhere trying to debug it so it'll work "correctly."
-
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: April 13th, 2008, 6:56 am
- Favorite Magician: Lubor Fiedler
- Location: Durham, England
Re: Puzzles wanted
Egypt one.
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
------------------
Using just the letters in the top row of a typewriter - what is the longest word you can spell?
Q W E R T Y U I O P
TYPEWRITER
------------------
23°26′13.6″ north
23°26′13.6″ south
Author?
Henry Miller - Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn
-----------------
February is the shortest month in the year, but which is the longest?
October - has 31 days and the clocks go back an hour (at least here in the UK)
-----------------
On a clear day, from the top of Mount Rushmore, what is the furthest thing you can see?
The Sun
----------------
What is the only word in the English language that ends in the letters "mt"?
Dreamt
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
------------------
Using just the letters in the top row of a typewriter - what is the longest word you can spell?
Q W E R T Y U I O P
TYPEWRITER
------------------
23°26′13.6″ north
23°26′13.6″ south
Author?
Henry Miller - Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn
-----------------
February is the shortest month in the year, but which is the longest?
October - has 31 days and the clocks go back an hour (at least here in the UK)
-----------------
On a clear day, from the top of Mount Rushmore, what is the furthest thing you can see?
The Sun
----------------
What is the only word in the English language that ends in the letters "mt"?
Dreamt
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Posts: 5916
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Huntsville, AL
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
February is the shortest month in the year, but which is the longest?
October - has 31 days and the clocks go back an hour (at least here in the UK)
Just for your info, we are jumping clocks at 2 a.m. tonight here.
If you ask most people "How many different lengths of a month can there be?" and they include leap days, you'll typically get 4. But Nov this year (for us) is 30 days + 1 hour, and March had 31 days less 1 hour. Before 2007, DST adjustments took place in April (30 days - 1hr) and Oct (31 days + 1 hr). And in last year, a leap second was added to June (30 days plus 1 sec), and this year one will be added to December (31 days + 1 sec).
John Conway has an interesting talk on anomalies of the calendar. It is written up in this book (p 191).
Pete -- your puzzle (and answer) make sense to me. But be advised that some comic book and comic strip letterers make their upper case "Y" the same shape as a typical lower case one -- what would be a vertical stroke is a diagonal extension of the right side. Mac King's cousin Bill does this. (and pedantically, should we be referring to majescule and miniscule letters?)
-
- Posts: 2332
- Joined: January 18th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Simi Valley, CA
Re: Puzzles wanted
Bill I knew that Y was tricky, but since the puzzle technically only asks for the next letter, X is the answer regardless.
-
- Posts: 2631
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
- Contact:
Re: Puzzles wanted
Egypt one.
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
One could also argue that 'vowels' would be a legitimate answer (especially when the total in the puzzle is only six...)
Ian Kendall Close up magician in Edinburgh and Scotland
-
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: April 13th, 2008, 6:56 am
- Favorite Magician: Lubor Fiedler
- Location: Durham, England
Re: Puzzles wanted
But Greece has 3 vowels not 2.
-
- Posts: 1376
- Joined: February 7th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Brooklyn NY
Re: Puzzles wanted
Egypt one.
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
Alternate answer: number of meanings to a radio audience.
Click here to get Gerald Deutsch's Perverse Magic: The First Sixteen Years
All proceeds to Open Heart Magic charity.
All proceeds to Open Heart Magic charity.
-
- Posts: 2631
- Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
- Contact:
-
- Posts: 342
- Joined: August 31st, 2014, 5:32 am
- Favorite Magician: Harry Kellar - Charlie Miller - Paul Rosini - Jay Marshall
- Location: Chicago
Re: Puzzles wanted
Ian Kendall wrote:Egypt one.
Greece two.
Turkey two.
Iraq one.
What am I referring to?
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
the total in the puzzle is only six...)
Boy, the lighthouse of Alexandria gets no respect ...
-
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: April 13th, 2008, 6:56 am
- Favorite Magician: Lubor Fiedler
- Location: Durham, England
Re: Puzzles wanted
Got that question for a book.
Sorry if it is wrong!
I know nothing about ancient history.
Sorry if it is wrong!
I know nothing about ancient history.