Message found in bottle after 98 years sets world record
By Douglas Stanglin, USA TODAY
Updated 3d 7h ago
Scottish government, AP
By Scottish Government, AP
By Scottish Government, AP
Leaper says Anderson is "very unhappy that I have topped his record."
"He never stopped talking about it -- and now I am the one who is immensely proud to be the finder of the world-record message in a bottle," Leaper says, according to the BBC.
Inside each bottle, a postcard asks the finder to record details of the discovery and promises a reward of a sixpence, the AP reports. Unfortunately for Leaper, the coin no longer exists.
The Scottish government says adrift bottle 646B was released on June 10, 1914, by Capt. C. H. Brown of the Glasgow School of Navigation, as part of a batch of 1,890 scientific research bottles specially designed to sink downward and float close to the seabed.
"By tracking the location of returned bottles, it was possible for the undercurrents of the seas around Scotland to be mapped out for the first time," the government said in a statement.
It says the water-tight glass bottles contained a postcard asking the finder to record the date and location of the discovery and return it to the "Director of the Fishery Board for Scotland" – with a reward of sixpence available. It says Brown's original log is now held by Marine Scotland Science in Aberdeen and is updated each time a discovery is made.



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