Plants

Wednesday, 10 December 2025
21 facts about olives
21 facts about olives
"Where the olive refuses to grow, there the Mediterranean world ends"
It is not known exactly when and where the first olive tree, characteristic of the Mediterranean region, grew. Paleobotanists claim that wild olives g ...

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Baobab tree
Baobab trunks were oftenly made a burial places, sometimes prisons and even a bar once.
Brussels sprout
The caloric value of Brussels sprouts is 37 kcal per 100 g.
It also has a high fiber content.
Beetroot
Beets have a lot of valuable nutrients that positively affect health.
Beetroot contains B vitamins, especially B9, A, C, macro, and microelements: potassium, iron, magnes ...
Coconut tree
The coconut palm is extremely versatile and useful - virtually every part of it can be used by humans in some way and has significant economic value.
In Sanskrit, it is referred to as kalpavriksha - the tree that provides everything necessary for lif ...
Watercress
On the ANDI scale (nutrient density index), watercress, along with kale, is ranked among the most valuable vegetables.
Cinnamon
The Ceylon cinnamon tree, the most valued species, comes from India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Sri Lanka.
The cinnamon tree comes from China.
Carob
The world production volume of carob fruit was 51,907 tons in 2021. The largest producers are: Morocco, Turkey and Lebanon.
Smaller quantities were produced in Algeria, Tunisia and Israel. The main consumers are the food ind ...
Beetroot
It is a biennial plant.
In the first year of cultivation, it forms a rosette of leaves and a storage root and in the second year, it forms an inflorescence shoot.
Lemon
In the 18th century, lemon was very popular as a treatment for scurvy.
In the English fleet, a mandatory 1 ounce daily dose of lemon juice was introduced for each seaman to address the problem of common scurvy at that time.
Lemon
The caloric value of a lemon is very low, it has 29 kcal in 100g.