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Seeds sprout 120 years after going underground. (Time Capsules).


An experiment designed by a botany professor to last longer than his own life has demonstrated that seeds of two common flowers still sprout and blossom despite more than a century in a bottle.

This work ranks as the longest-running test of seed dormancy in soil, says the current generation of researchers, Frank Telewski and Jan Zeevaart of Michigan State University Michigan State University, at East Lansing; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855. It opened in 1857 as Michigan Agricultural College, the first state agricultural college.  in East Lansing East Lansing, city (1990 pop. 50,677), Ingham co., S central Mich., a suburb of Lansing, on the Red Cedar River; inc. 1907. The city was first known as College Park, but was renamed when it was incorporated. .

William James Beal started the experiment in 1879 by burying several feet deep in a sandy knoll on campus 20 bottles containing sand and seeds from 21 common plants. Scientists have been retrieving bottles at various intervals. Telewski and Zeevaart exhumed Exhumed may refer to:
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 the 15th bottle in 2000 and tried to coax the aged seeds to life. Two species sprouted--moth mullein mullein: see figwort.  and a mallow mallow, common name for members of the Malvaceae, a family of herbs and shrubs distributed over most of the world and especially abundant in the American tropics. Tropical species sometimes grow as small trees.  called cheeses (Malva rotundifolia)--the researchers report in the August American Journal of Botany The American Journal of Botany (ISSN 0002-9122) is a peer-reviewed scientific journal which includes research papers on all aspects of plant biology. The American Journal of Botany is published by the Botanical Society of America and has been published on a monthly basis .

"This kind of experiment is very useful" comments Jane Shen-Miller of the University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising. . In 1995, she sprouted a lotus seed that she estimated by radiocarbon dating was almost 1,300 years old. Because tales of seeds sprouting after millennia in the pyramids have now been discredited, Shen-Miller's lotus holds the record for oldest viable seed. Very little is known about the length of dormancy in most species under natural conditions, she says, so she welcomes a near-natural experiment with precise records.

Beal packed every bottle with 50 seeds of each of the plants, including primrose, plantain plantain (plăn`tĭn), any plant of the genus Plantago, chiefly annual or perennial weeds of wide distribution. Many species are lawn pests and the pollen is often a hay fever irritant. P. , wild clover, and cedar. He buried all the bottles uncorked and upside down in a row. His original plan called for digging up one every 5 years, and he lived to test five bottles' contents. Later experimenters extended the time intervals.

By 1920, seeds of eight species of seeds could still sprout. But in 1940, only the primrose, curly dock, and moth mullein came up. The second most recent bottle, examined in 1980, produced one cheeses plant and 21 moth mulleins.

Telewski's crew retrieved the next bottle on an April night in 2000, not so much for secrecy as for keeping a blast of daylight from triggering sprouts in the five bottles left for the future. The same species sprouted and bloomed that had come up in 1980, and the researchers also demonstrated that the 2000 crop set viable seeds.

Telewski says he hopes to collect the next bottle's data in 2020 himself, but finishing the experiment will probably take at least one more generation of seed scientists.
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Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Aug 31, 2002
Words:408
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