Current:Home > ScamsThe dinosaurs died. And then came one of humanity's favorite fruits. -Secure Growth Solutions
The dinosaurs died. And then came one of humanity's favorite fruits.
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:05:49
Scientists can now point to when and where the world's first grape came into being, paving the way for thousands of years of evolution, domestication by humans and of course, wine.
Researchers on Monday announced that the "grandmother" grape of all grapes originated in what is now Latin America, and as a result of the dinosaurs' extinction about 66 million years ago.
“The history of the common grape has long, long roots, going back to right after the extinction of the dinosaurs,” Fabiany Herrera, the study's lead author, told USA TODAY. "It was only after the extinction of the dinosaurs that grapes started taking over the world."
The extinction of dinosaurs allowed trees to grow taller and develop closed canopies, according to the study published Monday in the journal Nature Plants. This change "profoundly altered" plant evolution, especially flowering plants which produce fruit, the study says, and led to new plant-insect interactions.
“Large animals, such as dinosaurs, are known to alter their surrounding ecosystems. We think that if there were large dinosaurs roaming through the forest, they were likely knocking down trees, effectively maintaining forests more open than they are today,” said Mónica Carvalho, a co-author of the paper and assistant curator at the University of Michigan’s Museum of Paleontology.
The new finding also confirms past hypotheses that common grapes came from the Western Hemisphere, and were later cultivated in Italy, Herrera said. Similar examples that loom large in human culinary history include tomatoes, chocolate and corn, which Herrera said all came from the Americas but were cultivated elsewhere, including Europe.
"Fossils help us figure out those mysteries," he said.
We've known that grapes were first domesticated by humans only several thousand years ago, Herrera said, but now, we know the fruit has a much longer evolutionary history.
Herrera and other scientists searched for grape fossils for the past 20 years in Colombia, Peru and Panama, he said. Interestingly, the grapes found in the fossil record in those places no longer grow there, and instead they're now found in Africa and Asia, he said.
"That tells us that the evolution of the rainforest is more complicated than we ever imagined," Herrera said.
In thick forests of Latin American countries, Herrera's group was specifically looking for grape seeds, which are extremely challenging to find because of their small size, he said. The designs created by grape seeds in fossil records look like a face, Herrera said, with two big eyes and a little nose in the middle, and the unique shape helped the team know what to look for.
"People tend to look for the big things, the big leaf, the big piece of fossil wood, fossilized tree, things that call the attention really quickly," he said. "But there is also a tiny wall of plants preserved in the fossil record, and that's one of the things that I'm just fascinated by."
What did the first grape look like?
Scientists have not figured out how to reconstruct the color of the first grapes, so we don't know if they were purple and green, Herrera said. But the oldest grape's shape and biological form was "very similar" to today, he said.
“The ones we see in the fossil record are not drastically different from the ones today, that's how we were able to identify them," Herrera said.
The grape seeds specifically are the fruit's most unique feature, Herrera said, because of the face-like depressions they make in the thin wall of fossil records. It's just finding the tiny seeds that's the challenge.
"I love to find really small things because they are also very useful, and grape seeds are one of those things," Herrera said.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Taylor Swift Cancels Austria Concerts After Confirmation of Planned Terrorist Attack
- 2025 NFL mock draft: QBs Shedeur Sanders, Cam Ward crack top five
- Just Eat Takeaway sells Grubhub for $650 million, just 3 years after buying the app for $7.3 billion
- 1 million migrants in the US rely on temporary protections that Trump could target
- Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
- Prosecutor failed to show that Musk’s $1M-a-day sweepstakes was an illegal lottery, judge says
- Gisele Bündchen Makes First Major Appearance Since Pregnancy
- Mike Tomlin's widely questioned QB switch to Russell Wilson has quieted Steelers' critics
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Martha Stewart playfully pushes Drew Barrymore away in touchy interview
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- The View's Sara Haines Walks Off After Whoopi Goldberg's NSFW Confession
- Lunchables get early dismissal: Kraft Heinz pulls the iconic snack from school lunches
- 'Full House' star Dave Coulier diagnosed with stage 3 cancer
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Stop smartphone distractions by creating a focus mode: Video tutorial
- Does the NFL have a special teams bias when hiring head coaches? History indicates it does
- Martha Stewart playfully pushes Drew Barrymore away in touchy interview
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
NBPA reaches Kyle Singler’s family after cryptic Instagram video draws concern
Daniele Rustioni to become Metropolitan Opera’s principal guest conductor
Darren Criss on why playing a robot in 'Maybe Happy Ending' makes him want to cry
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
John Krasinski Details Moment He Knew Wife Emily Blunt Was “the One”
John Krasinski Details Moment He Knew Wife Emily Blunt Was “the One”
Prominent conservative lawyer Ted Olson, who argued Bush recount and same-sex marriage cases, dies