So let's say you put your bitcoins in a brain wallet.
In your next life you could visit a psychic and get in touch with your past life to remember your phrase and recover your funds.
Or maybe it's hard to remember words from a past life,
so better you write them somewhere long term, like a stone wall. Then you just have to conjure up the location from your past life.
The only way to take your savings with you when you die?
No one today is likely old enough but maybe in ten years we'll hear stories of someone having a seance and discovering the phrase that unlocked their riches.
He he he.
That explains why someone would bother to build the stonehenge, gotta be some great wallets from atlantiscoin there, too bad they seem to have suffered the 51% attack
No seriously, give them to your children, if you don't have any, some of your family tree does. What kind of world do you wanna wake up in, if you share they'll likely remember you for generations to come (the same applies if you don't)
Gobekli Tepe fits more with the atlantiscoin idea. It was buried so that upon reincarnation 12k years later all the engravings and statuary would trigger ancient memories of brainwallet keys.
Göbekli Tepe Turkish: [ɡøbe̞kli te̞pɛ][2] ("Potbelly Hill"[3]) is a Neolithic hilltop sanctuary erected at the top of a mountain ridge in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey, some 15 kilometers (9 mi) northeast of the town of Şanlıurfa (formerly Urfa / Edessa). It is the oldest known human-made religious structure.[1][4] The site was most likely erected by hunter-gatherers in the 10th millennium BCE...
The advent of agriculture and animal husbandry brought new realities to human life in the area, and the "stone-age zoo" (as Schmidt calls it) depicted on the pillars apparently lost whatever significance it had had for the region's older, foraging, communities. But the complex was not simply abandoned and forgotten to be gradually destroyed by the elements. Instead, each enclosure was deliberately buried under as much as 300 to 500 cubic meters (390 to 650 cu yd) of debris consisting mainly of small limestone fragments, stone vessels, and stone tools; many animal, even human, bones are also found in the burial refuse.[26] Why the enclosures were backfilled is unknown, but it preserved them for posterity.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6bekli_Tepe