Tucson Prehistoric Human Bones Found in Cave System Show Signs of a Lost Civilization’s High-Tech Surgery
A routine archaeological dig in a Tucson cave system has turned up a trove of prehistoric human bones that are challenging everything we thought we knew about ancient Americans. The bones, dated to over 10,000 years old, contain perfectly circular drill holes that appear to be made by a tool that shouldn’t exist in the Stone Age. What’s more, the skeletons were arranged in a geometric pattern that mimics a circuit board, with the skulls positioned at exact 33.3-degree angles—a mathematical constant found in modern computer engineering. “We’re seeing evidence of a procedure that looks like early neurosurgery, but the precision is impossible for hand tools,” said lead researcher Dr. Elena Vance. “It’s as if someone scanned these bones with a laser.” Locals are calling it the “Matrix Glitch” of the desert, sparking viral theories that a lost civilization with advanced tech once thrived here—and left behind a cryptic message in the bone code.