The bottle was tossed into the North Sea sometime between 1904 and 1906.
LONDON (AP) -- A century-old message in a bottle, possibly the oldest ever found, has finally reached its destination.
Tossed into the North Sea sometime between 1904
and 1906, the bottle washed up on the beach on the German island of
Amrum, and was found by a couple in April. Inside they found a postcard
asking that it be sent to the Marine Biological Association of the U.K. -
which they did.
"We were very excited," Guy Baker, a spokesman for
the group, said Friday. "We certainly weren't expecting to receive any
more of the postcards."
Baker said the bottle was one of some 1,000
released into the North Sea by researcher George Parker Bidder, who
later became the association's president. The bottles were weighed down
to float just above the sea bed, and used as part of a study into the
movement of sea currents.
Inside each bottle was a postcard promising a "one
shilling reward" to anyone who returned it to the association, along
with information about where and when they found the bottle. Most
bottles were trawled up by fishermen and returned decades ago, Baker
said.
The association is now looking into having the
Guinness Book of Records recognize the message in a bottle as the oldest
ever found. The current record-holder, released in 1914 for a
scientific experiment, was found 99 years later.
Meanwhile, an old shilling has been sent to the couple who found the bottle.
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