The basic shape of a tomahawk consists of a semicircle (the "blade" of the tomahawk), with a line segment the length of the radius extending along the same line as the diameter of the semicircle (the tip of which is the "spike" of the tomahawk), and with another line segment of arbitrary length (the "handle" of the tomahawk) perpendicular to the diameter. In order to make it into a physical tool, its handle and spike may be thickened, as long as the line segment along the handle continues to be part of the boundary of the shape. Unlike a related trisection using a carpenter's square, the other side of the thickened handle does not need to be made parallel to this line segment.
In some sources a full circle rather than a semicircle is used, or the tomahawk is also thickened along the diameter of its semicircle, but these modifications make no difference to the action of the tomahawk as a trisector.
If the apex of the angle is labeled A, the point of tangency of the blade is B, the center of the semicircle is C, the top of the handle is D, and the spike is E, then triangles △ACD and △ADE are both right triangles with a shared base and equal height, so they are congruent triangles. Because the sides AB and BC of triangle △ABC are respectively a tangent and a radius of the semicircle, they are at right angles to each other and △ABC is also a right triangle; it has the same hypotenuse as △ACD and the same side lengths BC = CD, so again it is congruent to the other two triangles, showing that the three angles formed at the apex are equal.
The inventor of the tomahawk is unknown, but the earliest references to it come from 19th-century France. It dates back at least as far as 1835, when it appeared in a book by Claude Lucien Bergery, Géométrie appliquée à l'industrie, à l'usage des artistes et des ouvriers (3rd edition). Another early publication of the same trisection was made by Henri Brocard in 1877; Brocard in turn attributes its invention to an 1863 memoir by French naval officer Pierre-Joseph Glotin [d].
Yates, Robert C. (1941), "The Trisection Problem, Chapter III: Mechanical trisectors", National Mathematics Magazine, 15 (6): 278–293, doi:10.2307/3028413, JSTOR 3028413, MR 1569903. /wiki/Doi_(identifier)
Gardner, Martin (1975), Mathematical Carnival: from penny puzzles, card shuffles and tricks of lightning calculators to roller coaster rides into the fourth dimension, Knopf, pp. 262–263. /wiki/Martin_Gardner
Dudley, Underwood (1996), The Trisectors, MAA Spectrum (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 14–16, ISBN 9780883855140. 9780883855140
Alsina, Claudi; Nelsen, Roger B. (2010), "9.4 The shoemaker's knife and the salt cellar", Charming Proofs: A Journey Into Elegant Mathematics, Dolciani Mathematical Expositions, vol. 42, Mathematical Association of America, pp. 147–148, ISBN 9780883853481. 9780883853481
Yates, Robert C. (1941), "The Trisection Problem, Chapter III: Mechanical trisectors", National Mathematics Magazine, 15 (6): 278–293, doi:10.2307/3028413, JSTOR 3028413, MR 1569903. /wiki/Doi_(identifier)
Meserve, Bruce E. (1982), Fundamental Concepts of Algebra, Courier Dover Publications, p. 244, ISBN 9780486614700. 9780486614700
Isaacs, I. Martin (2009), Geometry for College Students, Pure and Applied Undergraduate Texts, vol. 8, American Mathematical Society, pp. 209–210, ISBN 9780821847947. 9780821847947
Yates, Robert C. (1941), "The Trisection Problem, Chapter III: Mechanical trisectors", National Mathematics Magazine, 15 (6): 278–293, doi:10.2307/3028413, JSTOR 3028413, MR 1569903. /wiki/Doi_(identifier)
Isaacs, I. Martin (2009), Geometry for College Students, Pure and Applied Undergraduate Texts, vol. 8, American Mathematical Society, pp. 209–210, ISBN 9780821847947. 9780821847947
Gardner, Martin (1975), Mathematical Carnival: from penny puzzles, card shuffles and tricks of lightning calculators to roller coaster rides into the fourth dimension, Knopf, pp. 262–263. /wiki/Martin_Gardner
Meserve, Bruce E. (1982), Fundamental Concepts of Algebra, Courier Dover Publications, p. 244, ISBN 9780486614700. 9780486614700
Isaacs, I. Martin (2009), Geometry for College Students, Pure and Applied Undergraduate Texts, vol. 8, American Mathematical Society, pp. 209–210, ISBN 9780821847947. 9780821847947
Eves, Howard Whitley (1995), College Geometry, Jones & Bartlett Learning, p. 191, ISBN 9780867204759. 9780867204759
Wantzel, L. (1837), "Recherches sur les moyens de reconnaître si un Problème de Géométrie peut se résoudre avec la règle et le compas", Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées (in French), 1 (2): 366–372. /wiki/Pierre_Wantzel
The word "neusis" is described by La Nave, Federica; Mazur, Barry (2002), "Reading Bombelli", The Mathematical Intelligencer, 24 (1): 12–21, doi:10.1007/BF03025306, MR 1889932, S2CID 189888034 as meaning "a family of constructions dependent upon a single parameter" in which, as the parameter varies, some combinatorial change in the construction occurs at the desired parameter value. La Nave and Mazur describe other trisections than the tomahawk, but the same description applies here: a tomahawk placed with its handle on the apex, parameterized by the position of the spike on its ray, gives a family of constructions in which the relative positions of the blade and its ray change as the spike is placed at the correct point. /wiki/Barry_Mazur
Yates, Robert C. (1941), "The Trisection Problem, Chapter III: Mechanical trisectors", National Mathematics Magazine, 15 (6): 278–293, doi:10.2307/3028413, JSTOR 3028413, MR 1569903. /wiki/Doi_(identifier)
Aaboe, Asger (1997), Episodes from the Early History of Mathematics, New Mathematical Library, vol. 13, Mathematical Association of America, p. 87, ISBN 9780883856130. 9780883856130
Yates, Robert C. (1941), "The Trisection Problem, Chapter III: Mechanical trisectors", National Mathematics Magazine, 15 (6): 278–293, doi:10.2307/3028413, JSTOR 3028413, MR 1569903. /wiki/Doi_(identifier)
Brocard, H. (1877), "Note sur la division mécanique de l'angle", Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France (in French), 5: 43–47. /wiki/Henri_Brocard
Glotin (1863), "De quelques moyens pratiques de diviser les angles en parties égales", Mémoires de la Société des Sciences physiques et naturelles de Bordeaux (in French), 2: 253–278. https://books.google.com/books?id=FQ9_wRdXYXUC&pg=PA253
George E. Martin (1998), "Preface", Geometric Constructions, Springer http://math.albany.edu/pers/preface.html
Dudley (1996) incorrectly writes these names as Bricard and Glatin. - Dudley, Underwood (1996), The Trisectors, MAA Spectrum (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 14–16, ISBN 9780883855140