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Miners from Satoshi era of January 2009 move their 50 Bitcoin (BTC) rewards

CryptopolitanCryptopolitan2024/09/19 16:00
By:By Hristina Vasileva

Share link:In this post: Miners with wallets created as early as 29.01.2009 moved their 50 BTC block rewards to CoinJoin addresses. The transactions happened within one hour, moving coins possibly mined in competition with Satoshi Nakamoto’s blocks. The wallets still contain their BCH, one address never claimed the hard fork coins.

Some of the oldest mining wallets have awakened. Several early miners from the first stage of Bitcoin mining have moved their 50 BTC block rewards. 

In a rare whale event, several long-dormant wallets have started moving their holdings. The coins were a part of the 50 BTC mining reward from the very early days of the Bitcoin network. 

While it is not rare to see an old wallet move their coins, this time, as many as five entities have shifted their balances from known addresses. 

All the addresses became active in the span of an hour, then moved to new CoinJoin address formats. Each of the transactions 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 and 5 moved exactly 50 BTC minus fees into brand-new wallets. 

One of the wallets was last active on 02.02.2009, coinciding with the time when only a few miners produced blocks, together with Bitcoin’s founder, the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto. Three of the addresses were created on January 31, and the oldest is from January 29, 2029. 

For the last time, Satoshi era BTC was transferred about nine months ago, ending up in a hot wallet that now sits empty . But the recent transfer is the first series of transactions coming from several different addresses, created at different times. The addresses have not been flagged as wallets belonging to Satoshi Nakamoto, but may be linked to Hal Finey or other very early miners. 

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The BTC moved are different from Satoshi Nakamoto blocks

The early miner wallets solved BTC from the first 3,000 blocks, at the time when Satoshi Nakamoto was active and remained one of the biggest block producers. 

One of the wallets, for instance, produced block 2,486, which deviates from the block header pattern noted on Satoshi’s mining. Satoshi was active with diminishing block production until block 50,000, leaving known blocks that have not moved their coins. The holdings are effectively diminishing the total supply of BTC.

The early miners that moved their rewards are not Satoshi Nakamoto, based on block header patterns. | Source: Satoshi Blocks

Competitive miners already appeared in the fist few hundred blocks, though not all have been identified. 

The miner coins moved just hours after another old wallet with a 13-year history moved 59 BTC. The coins were split into multiple transactions, with the latest one sent to Coinbase. 

Miner wallets left BCH balances

The old coins are not the only bounty from the early miners. Since their coins were recorded in the history of Bitcoin, they were also eligible to receive the Bitcoin Cash (BCH) hard fork. 

The last miner that sent out coins still retains the 50 BCH block reward, valued at $16,992.51. All the addresses retain the forked assets, with no attempts to split the coins or move them. Theoretically, those same BTC addresses could receive other hard forks, which are now mostly worthless. 

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Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

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