>
7 Ancient Crops We Forgot How to Grow..And How to Grow Them Today
Know what jurisdiction you are in and know the Bible.
Plant Once, Harvest Forever: Why Don't You Know About It?
The Thanksgiving Heritage Of America
First totally synthetic human brain model has been realized
Mach-23 potato gun to shoot satellites into space
Blue Origin Will Increase New Glenn Thrust 15-25% and Make Rocket Bigger
Pennsylvania Bill – 'Jetsons Act' – Aims To Green-Light Flying Cars
New Gel Regrows Dental Enamel–Which Humans Cannot Do–and Could Revolutionize Tooth Care
Researchers want to drop lab grown brains into video games
Scientists achieve breakthrough in Quantum satellite uplink
Blue Origin New Glenn 2 Next Launch and How Many Launches in 2026 and 2027
China's thorium reactor aims to fuse power and parity
Ancient way to create penicillin, a medicine from ancient era

There is a root that doubles the harvest of potatoes. It lives forever. Plant it once, harvest for decades. It survives cold that kills wheat, drought that turns corn to dust. And for thousands of years, it fed entire civilizations without replanting.
Then we erased it. Not because it failed. But because a crop that refuses to die, that feeds without permission, that spreads across any soil without control, cannot be owned. And what cannot be owned cannot be sold.
This is the sunchoke, also known as Jerusalem artichoke. The perennial sunflower root that Native Americans called kaishucpenauk, sun root.
THE ANCIENT FOUNDATION
Long before European contact, tribes across North America knew its power. Plant once, harvest forever. Lewis and Clark nearly starved crossing the Dakotas in 1805. Sacagawea saved them by digging sunchokes from mouse caches and roasting them over fire.