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Costa Rican Diquis Stone Spheres Stone Spheres from the Diquis Valley Region Visit McGuinnessPublishing for more of our outstanding websites!
Get the facts on one of the world's great mysteries of archaeology!
The enduring mystery of the near perfect Pre-Columbian Stone Balls of Costa Rica's Diquis Valley and Isla del Cano!
Diquis Sphere Photo Gallery Facts & Information about the Costa Rican Stone Balls
The History about the Stone Spheres
How the near perfect Stone Balls were made, based upon first hand experience
More information about the Costa Rican stone spheres
Stone Sphere Links
Presented by Dr. Tim McGuinness, Archaeologist & Anthropologist, who explored the Diquis Region extensively during the 1970's
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Cryptoarchaeology.com The Official Cryptoarchaeology Forum The Lost Cities of Ancient America Archaeology Glossary & Information Ancient America Pre-Columbia The Guide To Precolumbia Museums Archaeological News & Information
The Spherical Facts
In Southern Costa Rica, there are a vast number of unusual spherical stone artifacts!  These Giant Stone Spheres ranging in size from mere inches to yards (or meters) in diameter. Hundreds of these have been found, and many more likely remain buried beneath the jungle to this day!  No one has an exact number of those that have been found and unearthed, but certainly they were in the hundreds, or how many remain.
Of all the existing remnants of Costa Rica's Precolumbian cultures, none are more mysterious than these stone spheres!  Principally because we have few clues of their origin, and fewer still of their intended use.
They are generally found in the Diquis Delta region, which covers the southern half of Costa Rica.  These near perfectly shaped spheres of granite, some as large as a tall person and others as small as a grapefruit, were dotted throughout the area.
Relocated or looted spheres can be seen today in the Museo Nacional and various parks and gardens in San José, as well as throughout the entire country.
In addition to the Diquis region, some have been found, undisturbed for centuries, on the Isla del Caño island, 20 kms west of Costa Rica's southern Pacific coast.
Who carved these enigmatic orbs? What was their purpose? How did they get to Isla del Caño?  Some of these answer are fairly well known, yet other answer remain elusive.
No one has the answers to all of these questions. The puzzling granite spheres of southern Costa Rica serve to underscore how little we know and understand the Precolumbian cultures of the region.
It is believed, based upon contextual information, that the spheres are to product of the Diquis culture, during their period of from 500 CE to 700 CE (AD).  However, as these artifacts are of stone, and there is the possibility of relocation, and other environmental factors, proper dating for their creation is somewhat speculative.  There are others who speculate that the age of the spheres extends back as far as 4,000 years and the products of a much older culture.

Palmar Sur & Palmar Norte are where most of the spheres have been found,
along with Isla del Caño

click for a close up

Isla del Caño

Many spheres are over two meters in diameter, yet are nearly perfectly spherical and very only a  few centimeters.  They are uniformly crafted from granite, andesite, and some even of sedimentary stone, and weighing up to between 13 and 16 tons (depending upon estimates).
Some spheres found in the Diquis Delta were apparently rafted and hauled to their present location from places many miles (kilometers) distant.
The spheres have been found in various alignments on the surface, with some placed on mounted cobbled platforms, presumably to be more visible from a distance, or safe from flooding. Although no burial remains have been found beneath them, there have been found pot shards, and the spheres are often grouped in the vicinity of a Diquis cemetery zone.


Palmar Norte - Rio Terraba

At least 300 spheres have been recorded in the literature. Surely many more were destroyed and others remain undiscovered.  No immediate local source exists for the granite (where the stones were found); and no stone-working tools have been found near the spheres.  "The best spheres are perhaps the finest examples of precision stone carving in the ancient world." The maximum circumference error in one 6-foot, 7-inch diameter sphere in only 0.5 inch, or 0.2% (see how this might have been done here).  The spheres are often grouped, but no general system or alignment mode seems to exist. "One very disturbing mystery emerges in examining the Diquis culture. The superb stone-carving skill necessary for the creation of the spheres was not applied to any other object."  click here for more >>

MysterySpheres.com
A Ancient America Archaeology Site presented by McGuinnessPublishing
by Tim McGuinness, Ph.D., member of the Society of American Archaeology
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