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- Q5139849 subject Q7215630.
- Q5139849 subject Q9042343.
- Q5139849 abstract "The coconut pearl is alleged to be a coconut-produced gemstone. Claimed to be the rarest botanical gem in the world, the coconut pearl supposedly grows inside the coconut. However, the existence of these pearls is in dispute, and some claim that published photos are hoaxes.Wayne's Word, the source of much of the descriptive text and photographs used to illustrate coconut pearls on the Internet, writes that "several botany textbooks flatly state that coconut pearls are a hoax because proof of their existence is totally unfounded" and "I prematurely published an on-line note about this "pearl" [The Maharaja coconut pearl, on display at the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Coral Gables, Florida] in 1996 before I discovered that it did not come from a coconut." They form in roughly one in every million coconuts according to the Ripley's believe it or not daily calendar.".
- Q5139849 wikiPageWikiLink Q1203684.
- Q5139849 wikiPageWikiLink Q13187.
- Q5139849 wikiPageWikiLink Q190084.
- Q5139849 wikiPageWikiLink Q7215630.
- Q5139849 wikiPageWikiLink Q83437.
- Q5139849 wikiPageWikiLink Q9042343.
- Q5139849 comment "The coconut pearl is alleged to be a coconut-produced gemstone. Claimed to be the rarest botanical gem in the world, the coconut pearl supposedly grows inside the coconut.".
- Q5139849 label "Coconut pearl".