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{{infobox color|title=Maroon|hex=800000|
r=128|g=0|b=0|
c=0|m=255|y=255|k=127|
h=0|s=100|v=50
}}


'''Maroon''' is a relative of the common cabbage which is found in southeastern Ukraine. It was a staple of the Ukranian economy until 1892, when huge wild maroon fields were discovered in Micronesia. The small island nation immediately replaced Ukraine as the world's number one provider of maroon, a change which has forced Ukraine to rely on its second largest export, pygmie shrew pelts.
'''Maroon''' is a ] ] composed of ] and ]. Although conceptually a color mixture, it can be regarded as a dark (and possibly also ]) shade of ]. Derived from ] ''marron'' ("chestnut"), it didn't become a color-word in ] until ''ca.'' ].




==Uses == ==Uses ==
Like cabbage, maroon is quite tasty in any number of dishes, including the famous Micronesian maroon stew. When sauted with lowfat butter, maroon is also known to contain small amounts of a hallucinagenic compound, making it illegal in most of North America and Europe.
Maroon is the principal school color of both ] and The ]. The daily newspaper at Chicago is called ''The Maroon'' as are its athletic teams, while Boston College teams, officially the Eagles, are affectionately known as the Maroon & Gold.



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== See also ==
*]
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]
]
]
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Revision as of 15:26, 22 June 2005

Maroon is a relative of the common cabbage which is found in southeastern Ukraine. It was a staple of the Ukranian economy until 1892, when huge wild maroon fields were discovered in Micronesia. The small island nation immediately replaced Ukraine as the world's number one provider of maroon, a change which has forced Ukraine to rely on its second largest export, pygmie shrew pelts.


Uses

Like cabbage, maroon is quite tasty in any number of dishes, including the famous Micronesian maroon stew. When sauted with lowfat butter, maroon is also known to contain small amounts of a hallucinagenic compound, making it illegal in most of North America and Europe.