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Time capsules - those containers, often buried, that hold items to be dug up by a later generation as a 'snapshot' of a given time and place, have been popular since the early part of the Golden Era. A mini craze for them developed in the 1930's and again in the 1950's.
They can survive well, or go spectacularly wrong, as the buried 1957 Plymouth in Tulsa, OK demonstrated.
If moisture reaches the contents of a time capsule, they will be destroyed within months. Kept dry, the contents can still self-destruct because of the gases exchanged in a tightly sealed environment over time.
This is the bicentennial year of the founding of my City in 1807. A time capsule will be buried in November in a sealed vault buried under a marble slab. It is to be opened in 2107.
I had an idea I hope our great-grandchildren will think is nifty. We're calling for letters from current residents to be written to their descendants. They'll be submitted digitally, and burned to archival quality digital media that should survive the journey through time. There is no doubt that people in 2107 will be capable of reading any kind of disk we throw at them. We've asked people to give their name and address, and something of family history ("I am Mary Dokes, daughter of Johnny and Betty Dokes, my married name is Mary Jones," etc.).
I hope that people who live here in a hundred years will be excited about the possibility of reading a letter written just for them by someone who is long gone.
Anyone have any experience with time capsules? Any suggestions for items to include in one?
They can survive well, or go spectacularly wrong, as the buried 1957 Plymouth in Tulsa, OK demonstrated.
If moisture reaches the contents of a time capsule, they will be destroyed within months. Kept dry, the contents can still self-destruct because of the gases exchanged in a tightly sealed environment over time.
This is the bicentennial year of the founding of my City in 1807. A time capsule will be buried in November in a sealed vault buried under a marble slab. It is to be opened in 2107.
I had an idea I hope our great-grandchildren will think is nifty. We're calling for letters from current residents to be written to their descendants. They'll be submitted digitally, and burned to archival quality digital media that should survive the journey through time. There is no doubt that people in 2107 will be capable of reading any kind of disk we throw at them. We've asked people to give their name and address, and something of family history ("I am Mary Dokes, daughter of Johnny and Betty Dokes, my married name is Mary Jones," etc.).
I hope that people who live here in a hundred years will be excited about the possibility of reading a letter written just for them by someone who is long gone.
Anyone have any experience with time capsules? Any suggestions for items to include in one?