this post was submitted on 29 Apr 2026
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[–] davidagain@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

That's what I thought, so I investigated.

The base of the log can be accounted for by a constant scale factor, because, for example, if n is the number of bison,

log10(n)
= log10(e^ln(n))
= ln(n) log10(e) and log10(e) is a constant.
This change of base is a linear scale on the logs.

Hence we can just take log 10 of the numbers of bison, and scale the answer by a constant factor which is log10(correct base), getting
7.778, 2.477 and 4.477
Scale that by about 2 = log10(100) to match the 5 bison in the middle pictogram, and there should be
16, 5, 9 bison on a logarithmic scale.

The diagram is also wrong if it's logarithmic.