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A Passion for Fruit

Published on: 2025-04-26 02:05:45

A 15th-century manuscript shows trees bearing (clockwise from top left): sweet apples, jujubes, lemons, cherries, dates, and sour apples. By 7,000 years ago, people in New Guinea were cultivating bananas. Around the same time, figs in the Near East and avocados in Mesoamerica were well on their way to becoming the fruits we savor today. People across the world consume an astonishing variety of fruits. These range from the smallest edible example—a neon green sphere produced by the Asian watermeal plant that measures less than the width of a pencil tip—to the largest, the 100-pound yellowish-green jackfruit. “The fruit we eat now is a result of people experimenting extensively for thousands of years,” says archaeobotanist Erica Rowan of Royal Holloway. For archaeologists, evidence of ancient fruit opens unexpected pathways to understanding the past. “The seeds or pits of fruit are quite hardy and survive well in the archaeological record,” says Rowan. Studying fruit can give scholars ... Read full article.