[Spridgets] Oklahoma "time capsule" Plymouth

Robert Duquette robertduquette at sympatico.ca
Mon Jun 25 11:01:10 MDT 2007


Car buried in time capsule provides important find for dating gasoline spills
Published: Monday, June 25, 2007 | 12:27 PM ET
Canadian Press
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - The Plymouth Belvedere buried in a time capsule was rusty
and undriveable but gasoline cached with the car could have scientific value.

The people who put together the time capsule 50 years ago in Tulsa included
two containers of gasoline in case fuel was no longer available for the
Plymouth when the vault was unsealed this year.

For Paul Philp, a professor of petroleum and environmental geochemistry at the
University of Oklahoma, the gas is valuable on its own.

"We're going to begin fingerprinting the gasoline and compare it to modern day
gasolines," he said.

Philp, who specializes in environmental forensic work, hopes researchers will
be able to use the comparison of old and new gas as a reference to determine
the age of gasoline spills that have leaked into the ground.

"There aren't many of these age-related samples available," he said.

Philp took the two jars of gasoline, along with four others believed to
contain motor oil, to his laboratory at the university's Sarkeys Energy
Center.

The time capsule, a concrete vault buried under the lawn of the Tulsa County
Courthouse, was unsealed June 15.

Although the Belvedere had been sealed in protective wrapping, water
penetrated the vault and the two-door hardtop was covered with rust.

) The Canadian Press, 2007


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