Costa Rica banana drainage exposed polished stone spheres, but their true purpose still baffles archaeologists

Workers found spheres measuring nearly 2.6 meters
In Costa Rica’s Diquís Delta, banana plantation drainage and land clearing in the 1930s and 1940s accidentally unearthed giant, highly polished stone spheres buried for centuries. UNESCO says the finds were not isolated sculptures but part of a larger chiefdom settlement network, including paved areas, mounds, burials and habitation zones. Many spheres are strikingly mathematically accurate, yet their exact purpose remains unknown. The same landscape reshaping that revealed them also led to plundering and damage to nearby archaeological sites.
- Spheres were discovered in southern Costa Rica during the 1930s to 1940s
- They were unearthed amid banana plantation drainage and land clearing
- The largest sphere reportedly measured 2.57 meters across
- UNESCO links the spheres to a wider Diquís Delta settlement network
- The spheres’ mathematical accuracy contrasts with unclear cultural purpose
- Site exposure also enabled plundering and demolition of nearby remains
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
