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Bitcoin block
Here is a snapshot of a Bitcoin block:
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/E47F05/19470384001518506/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/3f94607d-8a5a-4eb1-8fc7-cff8657ac9ea.png?sign=1739239184-tRQrBozomf9WELJp163NAyRtx3k20may-0-46370d52978e373653f27bd9a2804160)
Both Bitcoin and Ethereum are PoW chains; let's look now at a Proof of Stake (POS) ecosystem: Bitshares.
Here is some data from a Bitshares block:
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/E47F05/19470384001518506/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/6525103e-543e-42ff-a8c0-74ce8793c69f.png?sign=1739239184-XN464DOE7ZlQDiyWDRcO5svLTVXQNjRT-0-fefbc3a0f7615e1a3ce7758550d86931)
Despite a radically different architecture, the fundamentals remain: references to a previous block, Merkle root, and network metadata. In Bitshares, you can also see that there is a Witness Signature. As a PoS blockchain, Bitshares has validators (they are called witnesses). Here, we see the witness and signature of the computer responsible for calculating this block.