The Denver Post

WORLD’S OLDEST MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE SURVIVED 132 YEARS

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Before there were computers and GPS beacons to track the ocean’s whims, there were slips of paper and bottles. Or more specifical­ly, slips of paper in bottles.

The world’s oldest message in a bottle recently was discovered on a beach in western Australia 132 years after it was tossed into the Indian Ocean as part of an experiment on ocean drift patterns, according to experts who call it “an exceedingl­y rare find.”

A report released by the Western Australia Museum details how the bottle was found and what its well-preserved message reveals about science and history.

The dark glass bottle, less than 9 inches long and 3 inches wide, was found in January north of Perth by a woman named Tonya Illman, according to a museum news release Tuesday that quotes Illman. She and a friend were walking along the dunes when she saw it near where her son’s car had become bogged in soft sand.

“It just looked like a lovely old bottle so I picked it up,” Illman said. “My son’s girlfriend was the one who discovered the note when she went to tip the sand out. The note was damp, rolled tightly and wrapped with string. We took it home and dried it out. And when we opened it we saw it was a printed form, in German, with very faint German handwritin­g on it.”

After some research and excitement, the family not knowing if what they found was “historical­ly significan­t or a very inventive hoax,” brought their discovery to the museum. Experts there took detailed measuremen­ts of everything from the opening of the bottle to the twine wrapped around the yellowed paper inside of it. There was no cork and researcher­s believe it may have dried out, shrunk and became dislodged at some point. Because the paper was so well preserved, they also believe the bottle probably washed onto shore within a year of being thrown and lay buried for more than a century in damp sand.

On the paper were two significan­t details: the date June 12, 1886, and the name of a ship, “Paula.”

More digging, along with help from authoritie­s in the Netherland­s and Germany, revealed that the bottle was part of a long-term German Naval Observator­y program studying global ocean currents. An entry in the Paula’s Meteorolog­ical Journal written by the captain detailed the bottle being tossed overboard on the same date listed on the paper. The handwritin­g also matched his, down the extra curl in his C’s.

 ?? Courtesy of Kym Illman, via AFP ?? Tonya Illman shows off the bottle found on Australia’s west coast that contained a message that was almost 132 years old.
Courtesy of Kym Illman, via AFP Tonya Illman shows off the bottle found on Australia’s west coast that contained a message that was almost 132 years old.

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