
Forget your dentist. The Maya were drilling teeth and embedding jade gems over 1,000 years ago, and somehow their work is still holding.
Picture this.
A Mayan craftsman, no electric drill, no novocaine, carefully boring a perfect circle into someone's front tooth.
Then sliding in a polished disc of green jade.
And here's the part that breaks your brain: those gems are still locked in place today.
The cement they used wasn't just sticky. Researchers found it had antibiotic properties, packed with plant resins and compounds that actively fought infection in the mouth.
Modern dental cement only dreams of that kind of resume.
This wasn't crude body modification either. It was status. It was art. It was a flex.
Skulls pulled from ancient burial sites still flash those tiny green stones like the wearer just walked out of the appointment.
A thousand years later, the seal hasn't cracked.
Makes you wonder what else we've forgotten that they already figured out.

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