Close
Notification:  
v2.2.1 Professional
Login
Loading
Wiki About this wiki Volume 1 Volume 2 Test Page Vol 1 - v053 - Errata Vol 1 - v053 - Aux Book Features Vol 1 - v053 - Alternative Format Vol 1 - v054 - Notes Vol 1 - v054 - Pages Vol 1 - v054 - New Paragraph Sources Vol 1 - v055 - The Delivery Method Vol 1 - v055 Notes Vol 1 - v056 Notes Vol 1 - v057 Notes Fundamental Images test -paste in table Test Buttons New Page New Page Where is the Password for Additional Features? Next Word Version FR Issues with TOC and Book Interleaving Dynamic Text Display Everywhere Very Large Books Book content mapping New Behavior Evolutionary News Microsoft Courier Literate Programming Currently Reading We're going to Mars - Mission to Mars 2 New Big Book Links Circular library Wiki Distribution The Mind's You Preservation in the Digital Age - REPRINT Introduction If Words were Flowers Foreword and | or Preface HyperTextopia and the Docuverse Chronology Time Quantum Self Reference print paragraphs of text in pseudo KANJI - Paul Haeberli - 1996 Hypertext that works Les Sous-Sols du Revolu Napoleon romance novel finally released Books and architecture The Archivist - Schuiten -- Peeters Authoring Bots More Book Stats Non-Ownership Collaborative Writing Literary Evolution and the Russian Formalists New Printing Surfaces Failed Time Capsule Methods Toilet Paper Novels Bed Cover Non-Fiction Texting Jargon Finding books in other books with x-rays Data in Motion is Safer Data Rosetta disk Calendar Based Update What we can learn from slow music Media that last for ever Plastic Logic E Books Future or Libraries by Thomas Frey This Book's Seven Wonders Oreilly Montly Subscription Book Borrowed for the Longest time v055 stats Count how many dragees results - January 1 Jen and William's Annual Hangover Brunch- Experiment Results My Name is Zachary, I am 21 and I am hot 10 Literary Exploits - Commented The Tyranny of Gadgets RSVP techniques Book Pricing Algorithn New Links Political Parametrics - 2d to 3d conversion of the American Political Landscape TOPANGA to DOWNTOWN LA - Good Books Graze, Hunt and Browse Expedition Typing without a keyboard Computing_Timeline Software Cracking for the Mass by Google, inc. Fixes for Multi-Level Moving-Image Semantics Chalkbot Hardware Accelerated Bible Code extreme poetry New Page New Page New Page New Page Interview with a chatbot - (c) New Scientist anthropomorphic middle 'man' Reinterpreting Mount Rushmore Books that became algorithms Reading old stones Norsam Technology 219 Years of bets at Cambridge Long Term Backup strategies Recovering Mesopotanian Tablets Carlos Ruiz - Book Cemetary Flexible OLED Foldable displays - what happened to Readius Copyright law issues that inline linking raises Deep Linking - Printing the internet with the Google clause New Page Math Tables keyword reading scheme - teaching reading Best Man Speech Flowchart comments New Page

http://blog.longnow.org/2008/01/18/how-not-to-do-a-time-capsule/

How Not to Do a Time Capsule

January 18th, 02008 by Kevin Kelly

A buried time capsule is a popular way to mark an anniversary for a school or community. Hundreds of thousands of capsules have been buried in the last 50 years. Every now and then one is remembered and resurrected. In 1957 the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma entombed a brand new 1957 Plymouth Belvedere, stuffed with momentos, as a time capsule to celebrate the state’s centennial.

A few days before the time capsule was opened, Robert Lauer, a local reporter set the scene:

The Plymouth was sprayed with cosmoline, wrapped in plastic, and buried in a concrete tomb, placed on a steel plate so the wheels were off the ground. Stuffed in the trunk were five gallons of gasoline in glass jugs, oil, a case of beer, and other artifacts. Placed inside the glove compartment at the last minute were the contents of a woman’s purse containing fourteen bobby pins, a ladies compact, plastic rain cap, combs, a tube of lipstick, pack of gum, facial tissues, $2.73 in money, and a pack of cigarettes. Also placed in were unpaid parking tickets and a bottle of tranquilizers which the winner of the car may need. During the party in 1957, residents were asked to guess the population of Tulsa in 2007; the guesses were sealed in a steel container and placed in the car. The winner or their heir will receive the Plymouth and a $100 trust fund which was accruing interest since 1957, (reportedly now containing $400). The car was buried in downtown Tulsa with traffic cruising nearby; some were concerned that vibrations may have cracked the concrete tomb allowing moisture to enter. Will the 1957 Plymouth be in mint condition or will it require itself to come back to life like its sister car Christine? I will be there for the unveiling on 15 June 2007 for either a pristine 1957 Plymouth with 7 miles on her or a pile of rust with four dried out rubber tires!

It will be the event of a lifetime!

When the capsule was opened, the prize was not what everyone wanted.

Swimming

Engine

2007-1

I kind of like the gunk covering the car. It’s unique and transforms it into an art piece. One could see it in an museum gallery. As this page make clear, the same car was better preserved outside the capsule by ordinary buffs.

One conclusion from this mishap is that time capsules should attempt to preserve not popular items, but things that have no fans, no enthusiasts, no one to care for them. You should stuff them with artifacts that people currently find dumb, stupid, worthless, and insignificant. That’s the stuff that won’t be saved, and will therefore be of prime interest in 100 years.

If you are making a time capsule today don’t put in an iPod, a copy of Lost, a Prada bag, or a Nike sneaker. And for goodness sake, waterproof it.




http://blog.longnow.org/2008/12/11/movage/