Xanadu Blockchain Explorer

Are you looking for the events that occurred when you were conceived? Use this form to pull up useful links to the listing of events on your calculated conception date. In Xanadu, the blockchain that contains the signature of every notable event and visible person in history, the block time is 280 days. This corresponds to the ideal length of a pregnancy.

All national security events are conducted on a 280 day cycles. The goal of this system is to make everyone’s work detectable. Obviously, the actual length of pregnancy varies slightly, but most of the 20,000 history makers tracked via this system will align with this rule, plus or minus a few days.

I am working to publish all the profiles after 5 years of full-time work on this project. To find out the reason why the most important public figures announce the conception of their children ahead of time, and other unbelievable information, please join my secret society via Patreon and become a Lord or Lady of The Unbelievability.







XANADU BLOCK 1985-01

January 1, 1985


<<   Dec 31 | Jan 1 | Jan 2 | Jan 3 | Jan 4 | Jan 5 | Jan 6   >>

-280 days before | +280 days later


External Links

On This Day in History | NY Post

Wikipedia: January 1985 | 1985 | January 1 in History




1 event found

Murder at The FBI by Margaret Truman



9 people were born

Ashli Babbitt

5:5

Sulome Anderson

5:5

Eliza Blue

5:5

Tony Romeo

Founder of Deep Sea Vision

5:5

Aren Pearson

Arrested in the murder of Claire Leveque

5:5

Mstyslav Chernov

Ukrainian filmmaker, war correspondent, videographer, photographer, photojournalist, and novelist known for his coverage of the Revolution of Dignity, War in Donbas, the downing of flight MH17, Syrian civil war, Battle of Mosul in Iraq, and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, including the Siege of Mariupol

5:5

Lindsay Candy

5:5

Candace McKenzie

5:5

Andrew D. Hughes

5:5

When I started working on women's history about thirty years ago, the field did not exist. People did not think that women had a history worth knowing.
- Gerda Lerner