This problem is a restatement of this question, first announced in MathStackExchange.
We start with a triangle $T$ in the Euclidean plane and we define $A_n$ as the set of angles of the $6^n$ triangles obtained from the $n$-th barycentric subdivision of $T$. (Angles are geometric angles, i.e., the angles of $T$ and its children lie in $[0, \pi]$).
What we can say about set $A=\bigcup_{n=0}^{\infty}A_n$?
Is there a specific predefined triangle for which $A$ is dense on $(0,\pi)$?
If no, does there exist another simple alternative to this iterative procedure, i.e., barycentric subdivision, using other concurrent lines in triangles, which achieves our goal?