What puzzles me a bit is that they've been taking seeds into space for a long 
time to see what happens to them. On the ISS, I think they even grow stuff. 
Have there been no other signs of accelerated maturation or other genetic 
mutation besides with the cherry trees? I haven't heard of any. 

 

 
 The mysteries of nature. Could this be evolution caught in action? People have 
often speculated cosmic rays could have forced some of the huge leaps in life 
on Earth but I don't think anyone has ever documented it.   

 Thing is, you wouldn't expect radiation to produce this much change in one go, 
normally radiational changes are destructive but who knows? Whereas most things 
get mutated too much and die, one gene in the right place gets zapped and two 
major differences occur. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <authfriend@...> wrote :

 Tokyo (AFP) - A cosmic mystery is uniting monks and scientists in Japan after 
a cherry tree grown from a seed that orbited the Earth for eight months bloomed 
years earlier than expected -- and with very surprising flowers.
 

 The four-year-old sapling -- grown from a cherry stone that spent time aboard 
the International Space Station (ISS) -- burst into blossom on April 1, 
possibly a full six years ahead of Mother Nature's normal schedule.
 

 Its early blooming baffled Buddhist brothers at the ancient temple in central 
Japan where the tree is growing.
 

 "We are amazed to see how fast it has grown," Masahiro Kajita, chief priest at 
the Ganjoji temple in Gifu, told AFP by telephone.
 

 "A stone from the original tree had never sprouted before. We are very happy 
because it will succeed the old tree, which is said to be 1,250 years old."
 

 The wonder pip was among 265 harvested from the celebrated 
"Chujo-hime-seigan-zakura" tree, selected as part of a project to gather seeds 
from different kinds of cherry trees at 14 locations across Japan.
 

 The stones were sent to the ISS in November 2008 and came back to Earth in 
July the following year with Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata, after circling 
the globe 4,100 times.
 

 Some were sent for laboratory tests, but most were ferried back to their 
places of origin, and a selection were planted at nurseries near the Ganjoji 
temple.
 

 By April this year, the "space cherry tree" had grown to around four metres 
(13 feet) tall, and suddenly produced nine flowers -- each with just five 
petals, compared with about 30 on flowers of the parent tree.
 

 It normally takes about 10 years for a cherry tree of the similar variety to 
bear its first buds.
 

 The Ganjoji temple sapling is not the only early-flowering space cherry tree.
 

 Of the 14 locations in which the pits were replanted, blossoms have been 
spotted at four places.
 

 Two years ago, a young tree bore 11 flowers in Hokuto, a mountain region 115 
kilometres (70 miles) west of Tokyo, around two years after it was planted.
 

 It was of a variety that normally only comes into flower at the age of eight.
 

 Cosmic rays
 

 The seeds were sent to the ISS as part of "an educational and cultural project 
to let children gather the stones and learn how they grow into trees and live 
on after returning from space," said Miho Tomioka, a spokeswoman for the 
project's organiser, Japan Manned Space Systems (JAMSS).
 

 "We had expected the (Ganjoji) tree to blossom about 10 years after planting, 
when the children come of age," she added.
 

 Kaori Tomita-Yokotani, a researcher at the University of Tsukuba who took part 
in the project, told AFP she was stumped by the extra-terrestrial mystery.
 

 "We still cannot rule out the possibility that it has been somewhat influenced 
by its exposure to the space environment," she said.
 

 Read more:
 http://news.yahoo.com/cherry-tree-space-mystery-baffles-japan-085044593.html 
http://news.yahoo.com/cherry-tree-space-mystery-baffles-japan-085044593.html






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