Guest Submission by Solo Amerigo: When Rabbit Holes Work: The Arcturus Project and the Value of Disciplined Speculation
When Rabbit Holes Work: The
Arcturus Project and the Value of Disciplined Speculation
By Solo Amerigo
June 7, 2026
Chicago, Illinois. May 27, 1933. 9:15 p.m.
The lights of the Chicago World’s Fair suddenly sprang to life. The crowd let
out a collective gasp of amazement. Light harvested from the star Arcturus had
turned on the lights that fateful Chicago night at exactly 9:15 p.m. on May 27,
1933, to open the Century of Progress World’s Fair. The idea sprang from
the brain of Edwin Brandt Frost, the second director of Yerkes Observatory in
Williams Bay, Wisconsin. To Frost, the symbolism was irresistible. The
harvested light had begun its journey from Arcturus forty years earlier, around
the time Chicago celebrated its first World’s Fair, the 1893 Columbian
Exposition. What appeared to be a simple lighting ceremony became a
demonstration of astronomy, engineering, imagination, and human ingenuity, all
working in harmony.
From a Lions Share perspective, Edwin
Frost was an interesting character. In the first article of this series here,
the Yerkes Observatory transformed from a failed solve into a workable
instrument that made the observatory a shortcut pointing to the real solve
instead of being the solve itself. The Yerkes solve was built on clues
harvested from all 23 chapters of There’s Treasure Inside, and Edwin
Frost was the glue holding it all together by way of Chapter Four where the
Robert Frost quote opened the chapter with “the road not taken.” Robert Frost.
Edwin Frost. Not only did the names match, but the spirit of the quote matched
Edwin Frost’s life.
By the time of the 1933 World’s Fair,
Frost had spent years directing Yerkes Observatory despite having lost his
eyesight. Many people would have viewed his blindness as the end of an
astronomical career. Frost did not. Instead, he adapted, persevered, and
concluded his career by orchestrating one of the most memorable public
demonstrations in American astronomical history, the lighting of the World’s
Fair using light from the star Arcturus.
Sometimes what appears to be the end
of a path is actually the beginning of a different one. That is Edwin Frost’s
story in a nutshell. That is also the lesson of the failed Yerkes Observatory
solve where the destination had failed but the clues did not fail. I found the
story of Edwin Frost’s successful lighting experiment through researching the
connection Yerkes Observatory had with Mt. Wilson Observatory from page 164 of
the book. In the solve, Mt. Wilson was not the star of the show, Yerkes was,
and Yerkes failed as a solve. Does that make the Yerkes Observatory a rabbit
hole? How much imagination is okay for treasure hunters to use when studying clues?
When Jon Collins-Black invited readers to do more research when their “spidey
sense tingles”, how many orders of magnitude can you go into the weeds before
your clue has gone too far?
Recently, Low Rents, at lowrentsresearch
tackled rabbit holes in a twelve-article series The Architecture of
Confidence wherein he demonstrates how treasure hunts happen in two phases,
the clue interpretation phase and the boots-on-the-ground (BOTG) phase. The journey
the treasure hunter experiences in these two phases goes off the rails when imagination,
which is necessary during phase one, goes wild. The series argues that treasure
hunts require imagination, speculation, and a willingness to follow unusual
ideas into unfamiliar territory. Undisciplined imagination, however, results in
“overfit“
defined loosely as trying to stuff a clue into a predetermined shape. Low Rents
argues the only way to identify an overfit is by going boots-on-the-ground and
discovering the treasure is not there.
It begs the question. Does unmasking a rabbit hole require a physical field
search? It seems that, ideally, a rabbit hole should be unmasked while you are still
at home. But how do we judge between a potential solve and a misleading rabbit
hole? What we need is a way to test rabbit holes before going out in the field.
Joy’s Serenade also leans toward that idea:
“Use will’s straight edge, as the turning square or any arc may align at a
proper point.”
Somehow, we need a way to test clues
while we are still in the research stage at home. After searching Yerkes and
failing to find the treasure, I decided to try an experiment. In the first
paper, I used the straight-edge-turning-square-arc clue by successfully turning
the Yerkes Observatory into a compass. Then we mapped the compass out to 100
miles and 1,000 miles using Yerkes as the origin point. By the end of the first
paper, I had plotted five population density circles onto the map and felt
quite confident Yerkes was the right origin. Then again, I had only run two
tests before running out of options. At best, all I really had was a weak
positive. I needed another way to test Yerkes, and in this paper decided to try
using the same data but with a different navigation device, a sailor’s sextant.
If the two navigation instruments produce the same model that reduces the
search field, then, I reasoned, Yerkes would stand stronger as a waypoint and
not a rabbit hole.
In the past, sailors used sextants to figure out if they were still on course. A
sextant measures the angle between a celestial object and the horizon and
narrows the possibilities of where the ship is located. Multiple observations
narrow it further. The process is one of reduction rather than revelation. In
this paper I will attempt the same experiment that I did in the first paper,
but will use a sextant. I will use the
Yerkes Observatory coordinates, the star Arcturus, and I will use the only date
in the entire book that has a time stamp, 10 a.m., from the opening sentence of
Chapter 11, which reads, Montevideo, Uruguay July 2, 1752, 10 a.m. The origin
will not be Montevideo, it will be Yerkes Observatory.
Test Number 1. For the sextant
reading, I used 10 a.m., plus the coordinates of Yerkes Observatory, plus the
star Arcturus (because of Edwin Frost). The test returned an unexpected result.
At the Yerkes location, on that date at that time, Arcturus was below the
horizon. A navigator standing at Yerkes could not have physically seen the star
to use a sextant at that moment. The test failed. At least, it failed as a
practical celestial observation. I tried again. In today’s computer world, it is
possible to calculate where the star would have been in the sky even if it was
below the horizon. The math returned a northeast bearing right where one of the
density circles sits, but fair is fair. If the star is below the horizon,
sextant-wise, it should be out of play, even if we can force a solve. Test one:
fail.
For test two, I tried using the date and time of the opening-night ceremony of
Chicago’s Century of Progress World’s Fair. I googled the date and the exact
time when the lights came on and then repeated the sextant calculation using
the same Yerkes coordinates and Arcturus. This time Arcturus was visible above
the horizon, high in the southeastern sky.
For a brief moment, it felt as though the model might be onto something until I
considered the evidence. If test one failed because Arcturus was below the
horizon, was test two any more reliable? Yes, Arcturus was above the horizon,
but I had to google the date and the time, and I was using both Yerkes and
Arcturus which are not mentioned in the book. So, even though Arcturus was
above the horizon and returned a bearing southwest toward a population density
circle, with no actual book clues engaged, there is no other way to put it.
Test Two: fail.
It was time to set navigation aside and try something else. I gathered all the
dates in the book. After collecting all explicit dates from the twenty-three
chapters, I curated years that appeared in more than one chapter. Most dates
occurred only once except for six years that appeared multiple times across
otherwise unrelated sections of the book: 1848, 1882, 1917, 1963, 1996, and
2017.
The year 1848 appeared in Chapter 12 and Chapter 18. In Chapter 12,
it marked the discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill, California’s transfer to the
United States, and President Polk’s announcement of the Gold Rush. In Chapter
18, 1848 marked Andrew Carnegie’s migration from Scotland to Pittsburgh. Taken
together, these references suggest themes of movement, opportunity, wealth
creation, expansion, and transformation.
The year 1882 appeared in Chapter 14 and Chapter 22. In one
chapter, Chester Arthur commissioned Tiffany to decorate the White House. In
the other, Pablo Picasso was born. The connection is less geographic and more
thematic, linking artistic creation, craftsmanship, and cultural influence.
The year 1917 appeared in Chapter 3 and Chapter 18. In Chapter 3,
the Imperial Egg disappeared during the Russian Revolution. In Chapter 18, the
Hooker 100-inch telescope was erected at Mount Wilson Observatory. One event
concerns the loss of an object. The other concerns a dramatic expansion in
humanity’s ability to observe and discover. This was the only repeated year in
the dataset that directly intersected the astronomy framework with what was
already present elsewhere in the data.
The year 1963 appeared in Chapter 8 and Chapter 10. Charles Loloma
traveled to Paris and President Kennedy was assassinated. Both events represent
significant cultural transitions, although the connection appears more thematic
than geographic.
The year 1996 appeared in Chapters 15 and 16. Both chapters revolve
around the Atlanta Olympics and the Nigerian soccer team’s historic
performance. This repetition appears intentional but remains largely confined
to the athletics framework.
The year 2017 appeared in Chapters 2, 19, and 22. The year marked
the publication of the Arts of Asia story about the 100 rings, the
discovery of a meteorite, and the beginning of Jon Collins-Black’s family life.
The common theme appears to be beginnings and new phases rather than any
obvious geographic relationship.
Several patterns emerged from these repeated years. First, every
repeated year marked some form of transition. Migrations, discoveries,
commissions, disappearances, births, breakthroughs, and beginnings appeared
repeatedly throughout the dataset. Second, movement was nearly universal.
People moved, objects were lost and found, discoveries occurred, institutions
expanded, and opportunities emerged. Third, the repeated years frequently
clustered around moments of creation and transformation. Wealth was created,
artistic careers began, scientific capabilities expanded, cultural changes
occurred, athletic barriers were broken, and families were formed.
Notably, the repeated years did not appear to identify locations.
Instead, they identified intersections between otherwise independent clue
systems. The strongest example was 1917, as already discussed. The astronomy
theme, however, is present all across the book.
This suggests the value of the dates may not lie in the years
themselves but in revealing which clues go together. Same dates in different
chapters. Matching years in different chapters, might suggest a way to test for
rabbit holes before committing to boots-on-the-ground searches.
Other Patterns in the Collected Dates Dataset
Next, I
explored several additional ways the dataset might be organized. One
possibility was that the dates themselves might function as celestial
observations. Could I use a sextant on other dates? I tested this idea using the
thirteen dates that only occur once in the book:
April 19, 1879
July 21, 1920
December 28, 1920
May 20, 1932
May 21, 1937
June 11, 1937
November 22, 1963
January 24, 1848
April 30, 1844
October 16, 1859
November 27, 1790
December 14, 1799
July 2, 1752
Using the singleton dates with the Yerkes coordinates and Arcturus would work
except that I still needed a time of day. None of the singletons had a clock
time, I decided to reuse 10 a.m., because it is the only time connected to a
date in the entire book. The test returned six dates where Arcturus was above
the horizon.
|
Date |
Reference |
Altitude |
Bearing / Azimuth |
Horizon |
|
July 2, 1752 |
Ch. 11 — Shipwreck narrative |
-19.0° |
37.1° |
Below |
|
November 27, 1790 |
Ch. 17 — Washington in Philadelphia |
67.3° |
186.5° |
Above |
|
December 14, 1799 |
Ch. 17 — Washington dies |
61.7° |
221.0° |
Above |
|
April 30, 1844 |
Ch. 14 — Thoreau fire |
-24.3° |
333.8° |
Below |
|
January 24, 1848 |
Ch. 12 — Sutter’s Mill |
34.8° |
264.0° |
Above |
|
October 16, 1859 |
Ch. 14 — Harpers Ferry |
50.1° |
112.8° |
Above |
|
April 19, 1879 |
Ch. 5 — Mary Elizabeth Williams born |
-19.7° |
323.3° |
Below |
|
July 21, 1920 |
Ch. 5 — Cuba to New York |
-10.2° |
51.9° |
Below |
|
December 28, 1920 |
Ch. 7 — Amelia air show |
53.6° |
240.2° |
Above |
|
May 20, 1932 |
Ch. 7 — Solo Atlantic flight |
-27.9° |
353.7° |
Below |
|
May 21, 1937 |
Ch. 7 — Around-world attempt |
-27.8° |
354.6° |
Below |
|
June 11, 1937 |
Ch. 7 — Amelia disappears |
-27.2° |
16.5° |
Below |
|
November 22, 1963 |
Ch. 10 — JFK assassination |
66.3° |
172.9° |
Above |
|
April 8, 1973 |
Ch. 22 — Picasso dies |
-14.5° |
314.3° |
Below |
Next, I compared the results to the population density, great
circle map from the first article and discovered:
Great Lakes circle: no results returned
Mid-Atlantic / D.C. circle: no results returned
Southeast / Gulf circle: 172.9°
Texas / South-central circle: 221.0°
West Coast circle: no results returned
Only two bearings landed on circles, and both placed Arcturus above
the horizon:
·
November 22, 1963, chapter 10, JFK
assassination, bearing 172.9 degrees, above horizon, Texas/South Central
population density circle
·
December 14, 1799,
Chapter 17, Washington dies, bearing 221.0 degrees, above horizon, Southeast
population density circle.
This was a viable test. Moreover, JFK died in the Texas circle. The sextant
test matched the chapter content. Coincidence? Same for Washington. He died in
the Southeast circle. The great circle, population density map reduced from
five circles to two circles. Geographic reduction is what we are looking for,
but the rabbit hole problem was not completely gone. I still had to rely on 10
a.m. which is not from the dates’ chapters, and we still have Yerkes
Observatory as a derivative of Mt. Wilson. Whether these matches represent
meaningful signal or coincidence remains unclear, but they were sufficient to
justify further examination of the date dataset.
Other dataset patterns proved equally interesting. A noticeable concentration
of nineteenth-century references repeatedly cluster around the period between
the 1840s and the 1890s, including 1844, 1848, 1851, 1859, 1860, 1879, 1880,
1882, 1889, 1892, and 1896. Whether or not the cluster was intentional, it is
hard to dismiss the nineteenth century center of gravity in the dataset.
The dataset also produced an unexpected astronomy result. Before
collecting the data, I expected astronomy to dominate the framework. Instead,
only one repeated year, 1917, directly intersected astronomy through the Hooker
Telescope at Mount Wilson Observatory. Most repeated year dates were associated
with history, exploration, art, politics, migration, entrepreneurship, and
cultural change rather than celestial observation.
Another surprise was the emergence of 1848 as perhaps the strongest repeated
year in the dataset. Gold was discovered. California changed hands. Carnegie
emigrated from Scotland to Pittsburgh. Wealth, opportunity, migration,
expansion, and transformation all converged within the same year. Unlike 1917,
where the repeated references clustered around a single observational framework
centered on astronomy and discovery, 1848 produced a dense network of
connections across multiple unrelated domains.
At this point, a second reduction framework popped into view. The
first paper identified a pattern of geographic reduction where broad areas
narrowed into progressively smaller ones: Continent → Country → Region → State
→ Locality
Here in this paper, we have the same thing with time: Era → Century → Decade → Year → Date → Time
Finally, July 2, 1752, at 10:00 a.m., remains the most precise
timestamp in the entire dataset. Unlike every other date collected, it contains
a year, month, day, and time, however, both sextant tests failed to move Yerkes
Observatory entirely out of the rabbit hole category.
Taken together, these observations suggest that the dates may not
function as destinations. Instead, they appear to function as organizing
mechanisms. Their greatest value lies not in where they point, but in what they
connect. By identifying clusters, intersections, and patterns of reduction, the
date framework yields another method for evaluating speculative rabbit holes
before committing to a boots-on-the-ground search. A location supported by
multiple independent frameworks deserves further attention. A location
supported by only one or two becomes much easier to set aside.
Conclusion
When I began this paper, I thought I was testing whether Yerkes
Observatory could function as a sextant. Here at the conclusion, I realize I
was actually testing something much larger. I was testing a rabbit hole. The
Arcturus Project did not produce the result I expected. The tests generated
bearings and interesting observations and even a few geographic coincidences
worth noting, yet the evidence never became strong enough to justify treating
the sextant model as a reliable method of reduction. By that standard, the
experiment failed.
That failure, however, turned out to be surprisingly productive. The
dataset revealed patterns I was not looking for when I started. Repeated years
emerged. Intersections emerged. A second form of reduction emerged. The
investigation gradually shifted away from Arcturus and toward something more
useful. In other words, the rabbit hole produced information even though it
failed to produce a solution thereby changing the way I have been thinking
about treasure hunting for the past year.
Many searchers treat a failed solve as a dead end. Once the
treasure is not there, the instinct is to throw everything away and start over.
I now think that approach discards some of the most valuable information
available. A failed solve is not necessarily evidence that the work was wrong. It
could simply be that the work was incomplete. In this case, the Arcturus
experiments suggest the clues in the book might be pointing toward a process
rather than a destination, at least during the early to middle stages of
research.
Take the Yerkes Observatory in the first paper. The destination
failed, but the clues survived and produced a working instrument onto which we
mapped the population density circles. That led to the Arcturus Project in this
second paper, which also failed while the data survived. The surviving data then
revealed patterns in the date framework that would never have been discovered
otherwise.
Every test removes possibilities. Every failure removes
assumptions. Every surviving clue becomes more valuable because it has survived
one more attempt to disprove it. This is what Low Rents meant when he argued
that imagination must be disciplined by constraint. Constraint is not the enemy
of imagination. Constraint is the mechanism that allows imagination to become
useful. A theory must be allowed to fail. When it does, the goal is not to
defend it, but to instead examine what remains standing after the failure.
Rabbit holes do not lead us astray; they reveal what survives the catastrophe
of being wrong. In the end, the question is not which clue is correct. Which
clue refuses to die? In the next paper, we will attempt to reuse the dataset
one more time in a Venn diagram.
RAW DATA
Introduction
Date References
- American Revolution → 1776
(inferred historical anchor)
- Over 1,000 years (Alexander
influence)
- Over 2,000 years (Christian
influence)
Chapter 1 — The 120 Carat Sapphire
Subtitle: A Plan that Changed the World
- 1975 California, San Francisco
Bay Area
- 1971 Bill Fernandez, Steve Jobs,
Steve Wozniak
- 1975 Menlo Park, California,
Homebrew Computer Club, Apple I
- 1977–1981 Mike Scott captained
Apple
- 1980 Apple went public
- 1981 Mike Scott stepped down as
Apple CEO
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Chapter 2 — The 100 Gold Rings of Tuyet Nguyet
Subtitle: Don’t Wing It
- 1970 Nguyet and husband founded
Arts of Asia
- July 2017 Arts of Asia published
100 Rings article
- Pre-Angkor period between 1st and
8th century AD
- 200–300 BC gold jewelry dates
back to
- 250 AD India people traveled
westward
- 2nd century AD maritime Champa
culture
- 8th century–1431 Khmer reign
- 1145 AD Champa succumbed to Khmer
- 1146 AD Champa navy overthrew
Khmer
Anomaly Note
- Book associates Angkor with
filming of Raiders of the Lost Ark.
- Actual filming association
appears to be Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001).
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Chapter 3 — A Puzzle Box, A Magnifying Glass & The Mysterious Egg
Subtitle: Joy is in the Details
- 2015 JCB goes to Japan
- May 22, 1860 Michael Perkhin born
- Age 16 worked with local
blacksmith
- Age 26 earned work master title
- Easter 1886 Tsar Alexander III
commissions Imperial Egg
- 1917 egg lost
- 2024 egg found in Midwest USA
- 1917–2012 ownership history
uncertain
Collection Notes
- 1860 + 16 = 1876
- 1860 + 26 = 1886
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Chapter 4 — The 96 Carat Chivor Emerald
Subtitle: Blaze the Path
- 300 million year old sandstone
- Early 1980s rock and mineral
collecting hobby
- 1474 story shifts from Europe to
New World
- 1492 Columbus approaches Queen
Isabella
- 1537 Chivor mine discovered
- 1675 Pope ends holy war and
mining stops
- 200 years Chivor lost to jungle
- 1880 Chivor rediscovered
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Chapter 5 — Masterworks by Art Smith
Subtitle: An Exercise in Faith
- April 19, 1879 birth of Mary
Elizabeth Williams
- July 21, 1920 Mary and husband
sail from Cuba to New York
- 1934 there were no commercially
successful black artists in the USA
- October 1935 New York World’s
Fair Corporation created
- 1930s engineering one of the few
prestigious professional tracks available to black men
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Chapter 6 — Rubies to Wear
Subtitle: Inspiration is Welcome
- Over the past ten years JCB found
inspiration in meditation
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Chapter 7 — Amelia’s Autograph
Subtitle: Explore More
- December 28, 1920 Amelia attends
air show
- 1928 first woman to fly across
Atlantic
- May 20, 1932 solo Atlantic flight
- May 21, 1937 around-the-world
attempt
- June 11, 1937 disappearance
Historical Anchor Note
- Frank Borman quote
- Apollo 8 launch date researched
separately as December 21, 1968
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Chapter 8 — Beauty’s Bespoken Treasures
Subtitle: Know the Past, See the Future
- 1830 Indian Removal Act
- 500 BC Hopi migrated north from
Mexico
- 1921 Charles Loloma born
- Age 20 recognized as mural artist
- 1962 bracelet incorporating
ironwood
- 1963 Paris
- 1964 necklace gifted to Queen of
Netherlands
- 2,500 years ago Hopi migrated
north
- Late 1800s Hopi land seized
Special Artifact
- Hopi Lunar Calendar pictured in
book
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Chapter 9 — The Golden Chalice
Subtitle: Confirmation Bias
- 600–1000 BC gold vessel made
- 900 BC ChavÃn de Huántar
- Christmas Eve story (December 24)
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Chapter 10 — Jackie Onassis’ Diamond Sapphire Brooch
Subtitle: Welcome the Good and the Bad
- November 22, 1963 assassination
of John F. Kennedy
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Chapter 11 — Treasures from a Famous Shipwreck
Subtitle: The Temptress Greed
- July 2, 1752 at 10:00 AM
Montevideo narrative
- 1993 wreck discovered
- 1750 coin references
- Gold disk stamped XIV on one side
and XX on the other
Anomaly Note
- Book says Montevideo, Brazil
- Montevideo is in Uruguay
Additional Note
- Wreck reportedly found fifty
miles from Montevideo Bay
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Chapter 12 — Massive Gold Rush Nugget
Subtitle: Make Good Choices
- 1562 California named by Spanish
explorers
- 1821 Mexican War of Independence
- January 24, 1848 gold discovered
near Sutter’s Mill
- 1848 California transferred to
United States
- December 1848 Polk announces gold
- 1849 approximately 90,000
prospectors
- 1850 approximately 189,000
prospectors
- 1850 migration surge
- 1850 immigrant miner fee
- 1852 large mining groups dominate
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Chapter 13 — The Best of its Class Michael Jordan Rookie Card
Subtitle: Be Like Mike
- 1982 NCAA championship
- 1986 Fleer Rookie Card
- 1990s Michael Jordan commercials
![]()
Chapter 14 — Tiffany’s Furnace and Thoreau’s Fire
Subtitle: Fail Forward
- 1900 Tiffany Glass Iris
- 1882 Chester Arthur commissions
Tiffany
- 1892 Favrile technique developed
- 1900 Paris presentation
- 13th century BC Egyptians used
enameling
- 1933 Tiffany discontinued
enameling
- April 30, 1844 Thoreau fire
- 1851 journal page written
- October 16, 1859 Harpers Ferry
quote
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Chapter 15 — 1960 Rome Olympic Gold Medal
Subtitle: Don’t Give Up
- 1960 Rome Olympics
- 1896 first modern Olympics
- 1956 Melbourne Olympics
- 1950s social norms
- 1984 Muhammad Ali diagnosed with
Parkinson’s Disease
- 1996 Atlanta Olympics
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Chapter 16 — 1996 Atlanta Olympics
Subtitle: Defy Expectations
- 1996 Atlanta Olympics
- 1863 England men’s national
soccer team founded
- 1949 Nigerian men’s national
soccer team formed
- 1996 Olympic qualification
discussion
- 1996 Sunday Oliseh joins team
- 1996 Brazil reference
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Chapter 17 — George Washington’s Jelly Glass
Subtitle: Share Your Story
- Late June 1778 Battle of Monmouth
- November 27, 1790 Washington
residence in Philadelphia
- December 14, 1799 Washington dies
at Mount Vernon
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Chapter 18 — Andrew Carnegie’s Emerald
Subtitle: The Science of Giving
- 1848 Carnegie moves from Scotland
to Pittsburgh
- 1889 Gospel of Wealth
- 1901 steel company sold to J.P.
Morgan
- 1904 Carnegie funds Mount Wilson
Observatory
- 1917 Hooker Telescope erected
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Chapter 19 — Moon Rocks & Meteors
Subtitle: The Next Frontier
- September 28, 1987 – May 23, 1994
Star Trek: The Next Generation
- 2024 science fiction becoming
reality
- 2021 moon rock meteor purchase
- 2017 Sahara meteorite
- 1969 moon voyage reference
- 2019 Aguas Zarcas meteorite
- 1969 Murchison meteorite
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Chapter 20 — The Six-Figure Birthstone
Subtitle: Choosing a New Perspective
- No dates identified
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Chapter 21 — Antiquities of Alexander
Subtitle: Make it Make Sense
- 336 BC Alexander becomes king
- 776 BC inaugural Olympic Games
- 100 BC–100 AD bracelet period
![]()
Chapter 22 — Picasso’s Pendant
Subtitle: A Love Story
- 1882 Picasso born
- 1956 pendant made
- April 8, 1973 Picasso dies
- April 1973 Picasso death
reference
- 2013 JCB met wife
- 2017 family began
Collection Note
- Age 91 relationship confirms 1973
death year
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Chapter 23 — Sing Your Own Special Song
Subtitle: Finding Treasures Along the Way
- 1000 BC faience bead necklace
reference
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Current Anomaly List
- Angkor associated with Raiders of
the Lost Ark rather than Lara Croft: Tomb Raider.
- Montevideo listed as Brazil
rather than Uruguay.
- Roman numerals XIV and XX on
shipwreck artifact remain unexplained.
- Hopi Lunar Calendar preserved for
separate analysis.
- Only explicit date-and-time entry
in entire collection:
- July 2, 1752 — 10:00 AM.
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