Prehistoric Engineers Of The Huge Ancient Tunnels In South America Identified And They Are Not What We Expected

Ellen Lloyd  – MessageToEagle.com – The world beneath our feet is sometimes full of surprises. South America has hundreds of kilometers of weird tunnels and peculiar caves. The ancient builders of this subterranean world have long remained unidentified.

Scientists admit they’ve seen anything like this before, but the mystery seems to have been solved. Today we know the prehistoric engineers of these unusual tunnels and caves are not quite who or what we expected.

Prehistoric Engineers Of The Huge Ancient Tunnels In South America - Identified

Credit: Amilcar Adamy

In 2010, Amilcar Adamy learned about a strange cave in southern Brazil. When researchers started investigating, they eventually discovered a way to a gaping hole on a wooded slope a few miles north of the Bolivian border. It soon became obvious the cave and tunnels were not the result of a natural geological process.

A different, equally peculiar cave, located about 1,700 miles to the southeast, was discovered by Heinrich Frank, a professor at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul.

Prehistoric Engineers Of The Huge Ancient Tunnels In South America - Identified

Claw marks are clear signs from the engineers who dug the tunnel. (Courtesy: Heinrich Frank)

Professor Frank crawled inside, and he noticed it was a single shaft, about 15 feet long. All over the ceiling were claw marks. Unable to identify any natural geological explanation for the cave’s existence, he eventually concluded that it was a “paleoburrow,” dug, he believes, by an extinct species of giant ground sloth.

“I didn’t know there was such a thing as paleoburrows,” says Frank. “I’m a geologist, a professor, and I’d never even heard of them.”

Similar underground passages roughly four feet wide, 65 feet long, and lined with claw marks were found elsewhere.

The original burrow responsible for the construction must have been about 250 feet long.

“There’s no geological process in the world that produces long tunnels with a circular or elliptical cross-section, which branch and rise and fall, with claw marks on the walls,” says Frank. “I’ve [also] seen dozens of caves that have inorganic origins, and in these cases, it’s very clear that digging animals had no role in their creation.”

According to paleontologist Anthony Martin, the earliest evidence for burrowing goes back 550 million years. “Burrowing has shaped the environments we see today, from the ocean floor to high mountaintops,” Martin says. “Burrowing strategies are also key to the survival of many species – beyond just the burrowers themselves.”

Burrowing enabled animals to make it through the worst that Earth threw at them – or even the worst that the solar system threw at them. Many animals, for example, lived after a large asteroid impact killed off the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. Why did they survive? They were in their bunkers! It’s likely there were other factors, but burrowing is definitely an advantage when you get a giant space rock dropped on you.

Outside the entrance to a paleoburrow. (Courtesy: Heinrich Frank)

Professor Heinrich Frank has documented at least 1,500 paleo burrows so far. In Santa Catarina, just to the north, he’s found hundreds more and counting.

The strange cave in Rondonia was one of the largest ever measured, with branching tunnels altogether about 2,000 feet in length. Since the main shafts were enlarged by erosion – they were originally more than six feet tall and three to five feet wide; an estimated 4,000 metric tons of dirt and rock were dug out of the hillside to create the burrow.

“This wasn’t made by one or two individuals,” says Adamy. “It was made by many, over generations.” Frank describes it as an exciting, though not particularly surprising, discovery.

“We knew that there could be burrows this big,” he says. “This huge one in Rondonia simply confirms that they do exist.”

Some of the discovered Devil's Corkscrews are fifteen feet long and about 15 to 30 million years old!

Some of the discovered Devil’s Corkscrews are fifteen feet long and about 15 to 30 million years old! Credit: University of Nebraska

Not all intriguing underground structures are man-made. The Devil’s Corkscrews in the Sioux Country of Nebraska has long been regarded as a scientific puzzle that was impossible to solve.

Who carved these remarkable spirals with a precision that a mathematical formula might express?

Some are fifteen feet long and about 15 to 30 million years old! Later investigation revealed something quite startling and yet very logical. The Devil’s Corkscrews’ unknown creator was a prehistoric beaver called Palaeocastor!

Written by – Ellen Lloyd  – MessageToEagle.com 

Expand for references