Puzzles
A Puzzling Activity
One of our friends who is a former
educator gave our family a jigsaw puzzle for Christmas. No one else
seemed all that interested, so I decided to tackle the project. I
have a quirky interest in maps and geography anyway, and I thought
it might stimulate the children to get involved. Alas, working on
the jigsaw puzzle simply got added to the list of “wacky things Dad
gets interested in.”
You can see that this was a global puzzle. In addition to the
standard jigsaw construction, there were several interesting
characteristics. First of all , each country (also individual
states and provinces in the United States and Canada) was its own
correct geographically shaped piece. Some large countries were
broken up into more than one piece. The ocean pieces were the usual
random jigsaw shapes. Helping to place the ocean pieces was
lettering on the pieces describing each country, its capital,
population, and area, all arranged in alphabetical progression
across the globe. So instead of a large area of featureless blue
one could actually get some sense of where ocean pieces belonged
from the lettering on the piece--but many pieces had only fragments
of text.
In all, there were 600 pieces. I worked on it in spurts, whenever I
needed to be still, but not thinking or talking, solving or
planning, reading or figuring. Total time was about three to four
weeks. I learned several interesting facts in the process. For
example, did you know there was a Canadian province named
“Nunavut?” Or that South Georgia Island is nowhere near the state
of Georgia? Madagascar and Mauritius are both islands off the
southeastern coast of Africa. Kazakhstan is a huge country formed
from the former Soviet republic located south of Russia. Burkina
Faso is a landlocked country between Mali and Ghana.
This was a “pseudo-cylindrical” projection of the earth’s
surface in two dimensions. Some distortions are obvious, which made
the puzzle a little difficult at times. Nonetheless, when I was
done, I felt an embarrassing sense of accomplishment about the
project. Sometimes little goals are better than big one.



