Block Explorer allows users to view and track transactions on blockchain networks. This is a search engine that provides a user-friendly interface to access details about blocks in the blockchain, including their associated addresses, times, etc.
This tool is tailored to specific cryptocurrencies. This means that users should choose the appropriate explorer based on the digital currency they are interested in.
What is Block Explorer?
Block explorers provide detailed information about individual blocks in a blockchain. This information includes:
- Network statistics: Total number of transactions, average or median transaction fees, current price of the cryptocurrency.
- Block details: Block height, hash, timestamp of the block, block status (confirmed or not), miner or mining pool that mined the block, number of transactions in the block, block reward, difficulty when mining, and block size.
- Detailed transaction details: Latest transaction, transaction ID, sender and recipient addresses, transfer amount, transaction timestamp, transaction fee.
- Historical data: Historical block and transaction data, previous address activity.
Each blockchain network has its own block explorer. For example, Ethereum transactions require an Ethereum-centric block explorer like Etherscan. Since each blockchain has unique features and data structures, this specialization is critical for accuracy and relevance.
Why use Block Explorer?
Once a transaction is made, you can receive confirmation from the block explorer and track it in real time. This provides users with a reliable means to monitor the progress of their transactions.
Block explorers also allow people to analyze blockchain activity for suspicious behavior. Users may want to know whether a transaction was processed successfully on-chain or may want to monitor the movement of funds between addresses.
Block Explorer can also provide relevant information about historical or other notable blocks. For example, during the fourth Bitcoin halving, users showed interest in block 840,000, which ushers in the fifth Bitcoin mining era.
Disclaimer: This article was written with the help of OpenAI’s ChatGPT 3.5/4 and has been reviewed and edited by our editorial team.
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About the author
MK Manoylov has been a reporter for The Block since 2020, joining just before Bitcoin surpassed $20,000 for the first time. Since then, MK has written nearly 1,000 articles for publications covering all cryptocurrency-related news, preferring NFTs, metaverse, web3 games, fundraising, crime, hacking, and cryptocurrency ecosystem stories. MK holds a graduate degree from New York University’s Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program (SHERP) and has also covered health topics for WebMD and Insider. X You can follow MK at @MManoylov and on LinkedIn.