# Square and Rectangle Overlapping in a Semi-Circle +-- {.image} [[SquareandRectangleOverlappinginaSemiCircle.png:pic]] > The square and rectangle intersect at the centre of the semicircle. What's the total yellow area? =-- ## Solution by [[Area of a Triangle]] and [[Congruent Triangle]] +-- {.image} [[SquareandRectangleinaSemiCircleLabelled.png:pic]] =-- With the points labelled as above, both $O D$ and $O A$ are radii of the semi-circle and so have the same length. Triangle $A O D$ is therefore [[isosceles]] and so triangles $D C O$ and $A B O$ are [[congruent]]. This means that $O C$ is half the length of $B C$ and so the area of triangle $D C O$ is a quarter of that of the whole square. A similar argument applies to rectangle $D E F G$ to show that the area of triangle $D E O$ is a quarter of that of the whole rectangle. The two rectangles taken separately (that is, without considering their overlap) is therefore $4 \times 15 = 60$. To find the area of the yellow regions, each then needs the purple region removed so the area of the yellow region is $60 - 2 \times 15 = 30$.