Lycopersicon lycopersicum, one scientific name for the tomato, means "__." | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Known tomato varieties | 15,000 |
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| | Average seeds per tomato | 150-300 |
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| Tomato seeds sent to the International Space Station for the Tomatosphere project | 600,000 |
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| | DNA shared by every single human | 99.9% |
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| People used to think tomatoes were poisonous. |
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The humble tomato used to have a far more sinister moniker: "poison apple." In the 18th century, many believed that European aristocrats were falling ill and even dying after eating tomatoes — a misconception stemming from the use of pewter plates, which contained high lead content. Tomatoes, which are highly acidic, would leach that lead and then poison the unlucky eater. The fear of tomatoes was just as prevalent across the pond, where some American farmers believed that the green tomato worm was "poisonous as a rattlesnake." An entomologist eventually set the record straight, and by the late 1800s more people began to appreciate tomatoes for the nutritious treat they are. | |
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You might also like | 5 Surprising Facts From the Produce Aisle | The typical American grocery store carries 40,000 to 50,000 items, including hundreds of fruits and vegetables. Those displays of dew-kissed leafy greens, pyramids of shiny apples, and baskets of sun-kissed lemons are carefully organized to entice shoppers into purchasing them. | |
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