Footprints in the Sands of Time?












12















I'm searching for a sci-fi short story. Back in about 1978, I read a story I'd swear was called "Footprints in the Sands of Time." I'm pretty sure it was written earlier, since it was in a class on classic science fiction. I think it was in a collection of short stories too. I've googled this and similar titles, but no luck.



The plot involves someone going back in time and leaving a capsule of radium behind to prove they made the trip. Time was described as a "coiled spring," where the successive turns were separated by 60 million years (I think).










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  • Reminds me of a quote by Jo Ryan: "You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?"

    – zzzzBov
    16 hours ago
















12















I'm searching for a sci-fi short story. Back in about 1978, I read a story I'd swear was called "Footprints in the Sands of Time." I'm pretty sure it was written earlier, since it was in a class on classic science fiction. I think it was in a collection of short stories too. I've googled this and similar titles, but no luck.



The plot involves someone going back in time and leaving a capsule of radium behind to prove they made the trip. Time was described as a "coiled spring," where the successive turns were separated by 60 million years (I think).










share|improve this question









New contributor




JAM is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Reminds me of a quote by Jo Ryan: "You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?"

    – zzzzBov
    16 hours ago














12












12








12


1






I'm searching for a sci-fi short story. Back in about 1978, I read a story I'd swear was called "Footprints in the Sands of Time." I'm pretty sure it was written earlier, since it was in a class on classic science fiction. I think it was in a collection of short stories too. I've googled this and similar titles, but no luck.



The plot involves someone going back in time and leaving a capsule of radium behind to prove they made the trip. Time was described as a "coiled spring," where the successive turns were separated by 60 million years (I think).










share|improve this question









New contributor




JAM is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I'm searching for a sci-fi short story. Back in about 1978, I read a story I'd swear was called "Footprints in the Sands of Time." I'm pretty sure it was written earlier, since it was in a class on classic science fiction. I think it was in a collection of short stories too. I've googled this and similar titles, but no luck.



The plot involves someone going back in time and leaving a capsule of radium behind to prove they made the trip. Time was described as a "coiled spring," where the successive turns were separated by 60 million years (I think).







story-identification short-stories






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JAM is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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Check out our Code of Conduct.









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edited yesterday









user14111

99.9k6388499




99.9k6388499






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asked yesterday









JAMJAM

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  • Reminds me of a quote by Jo Ryan: "You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?"

    – zzzzBov
    16 hours ago



















  • Reminds me of a quote by Jo Ryan: "You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?"

    – zzzzBov
    16 hours ago

















Reminds me of a quote by Jo Ryan: "You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?"

– zzzzBov
16 hours ago





Reminds me of a quote by Jo Ryan: "You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?"

– zzzzBov
16 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















16














This is P. Schuyler Miller's "The Sands of Time", published in Astounding Stories, 1937



This link, provides information that matches one of your clues:




A young man travels back to dinosaur era, & brings back souvenirs to prove it. He even buries a lead box containing radium in that period so someone can dig it out today as ultimate proof of his visit!




If this is the right answer, it's a duplicate of this question. If you read the answer there, you'll see that the story does indeed refer to time as "coiled".



According to its ISFDB page, it's been published in a few anthologies over the years, any of which could be where you read it.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

    – user14111
    22 hours ago






  • 2





    I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

    – Kevin
    15 hours ago











  • @Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • @Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

    – Kevin
    14 hours ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

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active

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16














This is P. Schuyler Miller's "The Sands of Time", published in Astounding Stories, 1937



This link, provides information that matches one of your clues:




A young man travels back to dinosaur era, & brings back souvenirs to prove it. He even buries a lead box containing radium in that period so someone can dig it out today as ultimate proof of his visit!




If this is the right answer, it's a duplicate of this question. If you read the answer there, you'll see that the story does indeed refer to time as "coiled".



According to its ISFDB page, it's been published in a few anthologies over the years, any of which could be where you read it.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

    – user14111
    22 hours ago






  • 2





    I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

    – Kevin
    15 hours ago











  • @Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • @Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

    – Kevin
    14 hours ago
















16














This is P. Schuyler Miller's "The Sands of Time", published in Astounding Stories, 1937



This link, provides information that matches one of your clues:




A young man travels back to dinosaur era, & brings back souvenirs to prove it. He even buries a lead box containing radium in that period so someone can dig it out today as ultimate proof of his visit!




If this is the right answer, it's a duplicate of this question. If you read the answer there, you'll see that the story does indeed refer to time as "coiled".



According to its ISFDB page, it's been published in a few anthologies over the years, any of which could be where you read it.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

    – user14111
    22 hours ago






  • 2





    I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

    – Kevin
    15 hours ago











  • @Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • @Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

    – Kevin
    14 hours ago














16












16








16







This is P. Schuyler Miller's "The Sands of Time", published in Astounding Stories, 1937



This link, provides information that matches one of your clues:




A young man travels back to dinosaur era, & brings back souvenirs to prove it. He even buries a lead box containing radium in that period so someone can dig it out today as ultimate proof of his visit!




If this is the right answer, it's a duplicate of this question. If you read the answer there, you'll see that the story does indeed refer to time as "coiled".



According to its ISFDB page, it's been published in a few anthologies over the years, any of which could be where you read it.






share|improve this answer















This is P. Schuyler Miller's "The Sands of Time", published in Astounding Stories, 1937



This link, provides information that matches one of your clues:




A young man travels back to dinosaur era, & brings back souvenirs to prove it. He even buries a lead box containing radium in that period so someone can dig it out today as ultimate proof of his visit!




If this is the right answer, it's a duplicate of this question. If you read the answer there, you'll see that the story does indeed refer to time as "coiled".



According to its ISFDB page, it's been published in a few anthologies over the years, any of which could be where you read it.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









MoriartyMoriarty

3,7481633




3,7481633








  • 2





    Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

    – user14111
    22 hours ago






  • 2





    I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

    – Kevin
    15 hours ago











  • @Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • @Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

    – Kevin
    14 hours ago














  • 2





    Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

    – user14111
    22 hours ago






  • 2





    I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

    – Kevin
    15 hours ago











  • @Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

    – Jenayah
    14 hours ago











  • @Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

    – Kevin
    14 hours ago








2




2





Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

– user14111
22 hours ago





Sixty million years also matches: “That’s all there is to it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth’s history lies next to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time — present time — future time, side by side. Only it’s not two years, or three, or a hundred. It’s sixty million years from now to then, the long way around!"

– user14111
22 hours ago




2




2





I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

– Kevin
15 hours ago





I don't think the other counts as a duplicate as the details remembered are significantly different. Two questions can have the same answer and not be duplicate questions

– Kevin
15 hours ago













@Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

– Jenayah
14 hours ago





@Kevin Our policy on story-id dupe-closing is to close as duplicates (with the more complete Q/A as the target) when both have accepted (through checkmark or comment) the same work.

– Jenayah
14 hours ago













JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

– Jenayah
14 hours ago





JAM, if this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both Moriarty and you with some reputation :)

– Jenayah
14 hours ago













@Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

– Kevin
14 hours ago





@Jenayah I think that's kind of silly, but if that's the policy then I guess this is a duplicate

– Kevin
14 hours ago










JAM is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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