Hello, I just spotted an old article of National Geographic http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/06/0624_040624_tvspider.html titled "New" Spider Species Weaves Uncommonly Regular Webs Reading the article, it seems the spider makes regular cells and put them together to match the place it wants to cover. Nowhere is an example image of such "Uncommonly Regular" web to be seen in the article itself. I have searched in vain such an image on the WWW. One of my trouble is that the only identification mentionned in the article was that the spider was of the Ochyroceratidae family and found in Peru. But there is more than 150 species in that family. Perhaps can math-fun members more versed in arachnology give me more information on the subject ? Olivier