Newbie to Bottles, Is this old?

metaldetectingtaylor

Full Member
Mar 21, 2011
155
120
Massachusetts
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
Minelab Explorer SE Pro
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting

Attachments

  • P5080217.jpg
    P5080217.jpg
    42.4 KB · Views: 319
  • P5080214.jpg
    P5080214.jpg
    64.8 KB · Views: 329
  • P5080219.jpg
    P5080219.jpg
    54.6 KB · Views: 321
Harry ~

Please don't think I'm following you around, as that is not my nature or intent. But I just happened to see this post and decided to comment on it myself. Of course you already nailed this one to a "T" :icon_thumleft:

The following is copy/pasted from a website (with a slight bit of editing) and focuses on the little bumps around the base of the bottle, which are commonly referred to as "Stippling." (Note: I didn't know what "terminus post quem" meant the first time I came across it either- so I looked it up and basically it means ... "Proof based on extensive research - with no other logical explanation to refute it." [ or something like that ] :icon_scratch:

SBB

It is not precisely certain when stippling first originated, although it likely first appeared in 1940 on bottles produced by the Owens-Illinois Glass Company when they began using their proprietary "Duraglas" bottle making process (Toulouse 1971). This likely terminus post quem is supported by date codes noted by the author and others on bottles made by that company (Lockhart 2004d; empirical observations). So if one has a machine-made bottle with a stippled base one can be quite certain that it dates from 1940 or later.

P.S. ~ Stippling was invented to allow the hot bottle to be slightly raised when it came out of the mold, thus allowing it to cool "slower" than if placed on a solid steel surface. The slower cooling prevented cracking that sometimes occurred during earlier processes.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top