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. . . I think I'd have to go with corn/maize and bananas.
Maize and bananas are both plants whose cultivatable, food-producing forms are very different from the closest wild relatives. In both cases, the ancestral cultivatable forms are also very different from the modern plant: the earliest cultivated forms or maize produced ears that were smaller than what we have today as "baby corn", and the earliest cultivated bananas were less than two inches long. But, even so, those forms are closer to the modern plants than to the closest wild plants.
Their genetic codes show evidence of massive tampering, of course. I mean, corn has a genetic sequence orders of magnitude more complex than that of human beings, for instance. And that's got to be a result of massive crossbreeding over thousands of years. Even so, the amount of crossbreeding that would have had to be done to get the earliest wild plants into forms that were worth crossbreeding boggles the mind. Who would have spend dozens, maybe hundreds, of years, crossbreeding plants into a form that would eventually become an amazingly useful crop? And a similar argument can be made for bananas and plantains. Clearly, it must have been the work of time-traveling genetic engineer botanists. Or aliens. Or possibly the Easter bunny.
But probably time travelers.
Maize and bananas are both plants whose cultivatable, food-producing forms are very different from the closest wild relatives. In both cases, the ancestral cultivatable forms are also very different from the modern plant: the earliest cultivated forms or maize produced ears that were smaller than what we have today as "baby corn", and the earliest cultivated bananas were less than two inches long. But, even so, those forms are closer to the modern plants than to the closest wild plants.
Their genetic codes show evidence of massive tampering, of course. I mean, corn has a genetic sequence orders of magnitude more complex than that of human beings, for instance. And that's got to be a result of massive crossbreeding over thousands of years. Even so, the amount of crossbreeding that would have had to be done to get the earliest wild plants into forms that were worth crossbreeding boggles the mind. Who would have spend dozens, maybe hundreds, of years, crossbreeding plants into a form that would eventually become an amazingly useful crop? And a similar argument can be made for bananas and plantains. Clearly, it must have been the work of time-traveling genetic engineer botanists. Or aliens. Or possibly the Easter bunny.
But probably time travelers.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-07-23 02:44 am (UTC)*adores you and your wacky brain*