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I picked this up from a tree in Greece, where the landform was plain. It is about 2.5cm (see other objects for scale). I would like ot know its name

seed/fruit next to ruler, leaf, and euro coin

hhayf
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This might be brier you're talking about.
It's hard to tell based on only that picture... it may be a type of cherry, but when I saw the post, I instantly pictured it to be a type of brier.

enter image description here

gion_13
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Looks clearly like a cherry, but might not be an edible one. The fruit is a bit ambiguous, but the leaf is a perfect match. The stem is also very telling.

A clarification on language: The sweet black cherry sold in the market is not the only fruit called "cherry". There are many types of cherry, and while I am quite sure the picture depicts one of these, I can't promise that it is a tasty, edible cherry. It is certainly not the sweet black type. It may be a chokecherry, as mentioned in the comments; botanically, this would still be a cherry, just like a cantaloupe is still a melon. Or it may be any other of a number of edible and inedible cherries.

Cascabel
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rumtscho
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    could be a chokecherry though – Kate Gregory Apr 12 '14 at 18:27
  • My thought exactly,but its too small for a cherry. – hhayf Apr 12 '14 at 18:58
  • @user24364 : we have nothing to give it scale ... you need a ruler in the picture or a coin or something else of a standard size. – Joe Apr 12 '14 at 22:36
  • It's 2.5 cm tall. – hhayf Apr 12 '14 at 23:01
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    There are many different types of cherry. I cannot promise that the picture is of one of the types which are normally eaten. A chokecherry is, botanically speaking, as much of a cherry as the ones we eat. Of course, if somebody can make a more differentiated identification than mine, it would be good. – rumtscho Apr 13 '14 at 01:15
  • "It's a cherry" might imply to a lot of people that it's an edible one, so I added a bit at the beginning to be safe. – Cascabel Apr 13 '14 at 01:32