The world's oldest message in a bottle spent 108 years at sea for a critical science experiment
Guinness Book of World Records
Last August, retired post office worker Marianne Winkley discovered a mysterious bottle with a message inside on the shores of Amrum - an island in the German North Sea.
Rumors began circulating that Winkley had found the world's oldest message in a bottle, and on March 14 of this year, the official judge - the Guinness World Records - confirmed everyone's suspicions:
"After a careful review of the historic evidence, Guinness World Records has just confirmed that a mysterious postcard found on the shores of Amrum Island, Germany is the Oldest message in a bottle ever," Guinness World Records stated on their website.
The bottle is actually part of a science experiment conducted by British marine biologist George Parker Bidder III.
At the turn of the 20th century, before the age of satellites, GPS, and water-proof electronic trackers, Bidder released 1,020 bottles off the eastern shores of England to see which direction the bottles would travel.
Inside each bottle were clear instructions to break the bottle along with a postcard requesting that whoever discovered it describe where they found it and to return the postcard to the Marine Biological Association (MBA).
More than half of the bottles were collected after the first few months, most of them by sailors, and Bidder was able to prove, for the first time, that the North Sea current flowed from east to west.
When Winkley discovered one of these bottles 108 years later, 310 miles away from the UK, she did exactly what the sailors had done: She completed the postcard and mailed it to the MBA.
While she's a little late to contribute to Bidder's scientific investigations, she can now officially say that she holds the Guinness World Record for discovering the world's oldest message in a bottle.
- US buys 81 Soviet-era combat aircraft from Russia's ally costing on average less than $20,000 each, report says
- 2 states where home prices are falling because there are too many houses and not enough buyers
- A couple accidentally shipped their cat in an Amazon return package. It arrived safely 6 days later, hundreds of miles away.
- Markets rebound in early trade amid global rally, buying in ICICI Bank and Reliance
- Women in Leadership
- Rupee declines 5 paise to 83.43 against US dollar in early trade
- Election Commission issues notification for sixth phase of Lok Sabha polls
- 6 Coffee recipes you should try this summer