Natural philosopher & autodidact | Founding Member @BSCNews | Crypto since 2017 | From crypto and history to quantum mechanics, and everything in between | NFA
๐๐ปโโ๏ธ Hi, I'm Rich. I live in the Netherlands, in the southern province of Limburg.
You might know me from my work at BSCN, where I write about cryptocurrencies and blockchain tech, among some other things. I've been into crypto since 2017 and writing about it since 2020.
But crypto isn't all that catches my interest. I have a broad range, from history, linguistics, and myths, to quantum physics, time mechanics, and the universe. I'm a philosopher in the original sense of the word, a natural philosopher.
In my spare time, I write down what I notice. When something seems off, I write about it and try to explain why. My theories do not claim to be the truth. They claim to be questions worth asking.
Every theory I publish is built on observable evidence, primary sources, and common sense. Where the evidence is strong, I say so. Where it is weak, I say so. Where contradictions exist, they are left visible.
I am not an academic. I am not an institution. I am a man from Limburg who pays attention and asks the questions that the qualified people forgot to ask, or chose not to
If a theory survives your scrutiny, good. If it doesn't, also good. The goal was never to be right about everything. The goal was to make you look at the painting instead of trusting the label.
If you liked my work, or want to buy me a coffee โ, or better, a pizza ๐ (I love pizza ๐), here's my EVM wallet:
๐ธ0x2BB58256D84a399A78f4D40b0a67FC3ed7Af86f8
This post will become a thread. Every new theory gets added as a reply, building an archive.
55 institutions, including Visa, DTCC, Nasdaq, Chainlink, and Circle, governing Canton's shared coordination layer without sharing underlying transaction data.
@BSCNews' @CryptoRich74 details how the Super Validator structure works, who's in it, and why it matters.
๐๐ปโโ๏ธ Hi, I'm Rich. I live in the Netherlands, in the southern province of Limburg.
You might know me from my work at BSCN, where I write about cryptocurrencies and blockchain tech, among some other things. I've been into crypto since 2017 and writing about it since 2020.
But crypto isn't all that catches my interest. I have a broad range, from history, linguistics, and myths, to quantum physics, time mechanics, and the universe. I'm a philosopher in the original sense of the word, a natural philosopher.
In my spare time, I write down what I notice. When something seems off, I write about it and try to explain why. My theories do not claim to be the truth. They claim to be questions worth asking.
Every theory I publish is built on observable evidence, primary sources, and common sense. Where the evidence is strong, I say so. Where it is weak, I say so. Where contradictions exist, they are left visible.
I am not an academic. I am not an institution. I am a man from Limburg who pays attention and asks the questions that the qualified people forgot to ask, or chose not to
If a theory survives your scrutiny, good. If it doesn't, also good. The goal was never to be right about everything. The goal was to make you look at the painting instead of trusting the label.
If you liked my work, or want to buy me a coffee โ, or better, a pizza ๐ (I love pizza ๐), here's my EVM wallet:
๐ธ0x2BB58256D84a399A78f4D40b0a67FC3ed7Af86f8
This post will become a thread. Every new theory gets added as a reply, building an archive.
There is a stone structure sitting on the floor of Lake Michigan that raises far more questions than answers.
Inside it is a table sized boulder bearing what the discovering archaeologist, Mark Holley, identified as a carving of a mastodon.
Mastodons disappeared from North America more than 11,000 years ago.
If the carving is genuine, whoever made it lived in a world where these creatures still walked the earth.
The site was discovered in 2007 during a routine sonar survey for shipwrecks in Grand Traverse Bay.
What appeared on the scan was extraordinary.
Two concentric stone rings roughly 40 and 20 feet across connected to a serpentine line of stones stretching for over a mile across the lakebed.
๐นStone circle 40 feet below surface
๐นLocation kept secret at tribal request
๐นBuilt on dry land before water levels rose
๐นTwo concentric rings and mile long stone line
๐นApparent mastodon carving on central boulder
๐นMapped with advanced sonar and ROV surveys
At the time this was constructed, the lakebed was dry land. The shoreline looked completely different to today, then the water came and swallowed it.
The exact location remains confidential at the request of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, who consider the area sacred.
This pattern keeps appearing across the world.
Ancient sites built on landscapes now hidden beneath the sea.
What do you think is sitting on continental shelves around the world that we have never looked at?
The mysterious YONAGUNI Underwater Monument, Japan ๐ฏ๐ต
For the following reasons, no, I do not think that this is a product of "natural" tidal erosion...๐๐ฟ