CO2 bad? How about a 30 foot high tomato plant?

CrusaderFrank

Diamond Member
May 20, 2009
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One long-lived tomato plant (shown right) was grown in a special nutrient-rich solution to be exhibited at the Japan Expo ‘85. Under piped sunlight and controlled atmosphere, this tomato tree grew over 30 ft high and yielded more than 13,000 ripe tomatoes during the six months of the Expo! (Hiroshi, Koichibara, “Tomatomation,” UNESCO Courier, March 1987.) Could Mori’s environment of filtered sunlight, enhanced carbon dioxide, and nutrient-rich liquids mirror the conditions on the early earth?

Atmospheric Experiments Genesis Park

homer-simpson-doh-400x288.jpg
 
One long-lived tomato plant (shown right) was grown in a special nutrient-rich solution to be exhibited at the Japan Expo ‘85. Under piped sunlight and controlled atmosphere, this tomato tree grew over 30 ft high and yielded more than 13,000 ripe tomatoes during the six months of the Expo! (Hiroshi, Koichibara, “Tomatomation,” UNESCO Courier, March 1987.) Could Mori’s environment of filtered sunlight, enhanced carbon dioxide, and nutrient-rich liquids mirror the conditions on the early earth?

Atmospheric Experiments Genesis Park

homer-simpson-doh-400x288.jpg

No
 

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