The Methuselah Plant

A seed that was discovered in the 1970s in an archaeological site and was found to be 2,000 years old has sprouted, making it the oldest fertile seed known. This seed produced a date palm that was plentiful in Roman times -- a plant that has since disappeared.

"People tell me the tree I'm raising looks like a typical palm you might see in your dentist's waiting room," says Elaine Soloway, who teaches at Kibbutz Ketura's Arava Institute for Environmental Studies and who germinated the 2,000-year-old date seed that was found at Masada. "But that's not true." Soloway says the first leaves that have sprouted are extraordinarily long. "We don't know yet if it's a male or a female, but if it's a female, in another two or three years we'll be able to know how dates tasted in Judea in ancient times."

According to historical sources, that taste was splendid. The Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder, who lived in the first century C.E., wrote that Judea's dates were known for their succulence and sweetness.

The palm tree has been named "Methuselah".

Cited story.

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I think this is so interesting! I've often wondered if anyone did anything with the seed or grains found at archeological sites & pyramids. Sorta like a jurassic garden. I hope it lives to fruit.

By Diane in Ohio (not verified) on 15 Feb 2007 #permalink

Oldest? Didn't someone manage to sprout grains from the Egyptian pyramids?

By David Harmon (not verified) on 16 Feb 2007 #permalink