Archivist Page Review

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Document: 20 Some New Fruits

Source page: Open page 7 in document reader

Institution: Open PRAIRIE | Publisher: | Year: | Pages: 41

Source URL: https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1129&context=agexperimentsta_bulletins

Selected Versions

Left: archivist-1.0 (fragment 3724)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 11368)

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Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • none
Claims Added
  • Hanska | description_snippet | The page is a plate entry for Hanska, emphasizing growth, parentage, and fruit resemblance to Prunus simoni with practical nursery observations.
  • Hanska | entry_hardiness_observation | Early performance is presented through nursery-age growth and fruiting observations rather than explicit zone rating.
  • Hanska | entry_pedigree | Hanska was bred with a female parent identified as a seedling of wild northwestern plum (Prunus Americana) and a male parent identified as the Chinese apricot plum Prunus Simoni.
  • Hanska | flavor_profile | The cultivar is described as having noticeable fragrance and fruit quality similar to the Chinese parent.
  • Hanska | fruit_color | In fruit, Hanska is described as closely resembling its Chinese parent in form, color, and overall quality.
  • Hanska | fruit_size | The fruit is said to be smaller than the Chinese parent and described as "only 11 -2 inches in diameter" in the page text (OCR ambiguity).
  • Hanska | growth_habit | The cultivar is described as rapidly growing in nursery, with three-year-old trees reaching approximately twelve feet and two-year-old trees too heavy to ship well.
  • Hanska | release_year_reference | Hanska is presented as offered for the first time in this bulletin; it fruited in 1906 and 1907 on two- and three-year-old trees in nursery row.
  • Hanska | selection_origin_reference | The cultivar name Hanska is attributed to a Sioux Indian word meaning "tall."
  • Hanska | source_reference_abbreviation | No explicit citation abbreviation is defined on this page fragment; evidence is within the bulletin narrative for the Hanska entry.
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • Hansen, N.E., "Some New Fruits" (1911). South Dakota State University Agricultural Experiment Station. Paper 130.
Cultivars Removed
  • none
Claims Removed
  • Hanska | description_snippet | In fruit, Hanska closely resembles its Chinese parent in form, color, fragrance, quality, and firmness of flesh.
  • Hanska | description_snippet | Its Chinese parent was noted as popular in California orchards.
  • Hanska | description_snippet | The name is a Sioux Indian word meaning "tall."
  • Hanska | entry_pedigree | The female parent is a seedling of the wild northwestern plum (Prunus Americana), and the male parent is the large, firm-fleshed, fragrant apricot plum of China (Prunus Simoni).
  • Hanska | fruit_size | The fruit size was smaller than the Chinese parent, being only about 1 1/2 inches in diameter so far.
  • Hanska | growth_habit | The variety was named in allusion to its extraordinarily rapid nursery growth; three-year-old trees attained about twelve feet, and two-year-old trees were too heavy to ship well.
  • Hanska | productivity | Hanska fruited first in 1906 and 1907 on two- and three-year-old trees in the nursery row.
  • Hanska | release_year_reference | Offered for the first time in Spring 1908.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • none

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
888archivist-1.0activegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist1 cultivars / 8 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3661archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist1 cultivars / 10 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active