Sometimes the universe hands you a plot twist even when you're knee-deep in mud. Such a surprise discovery happened when construction crews in Thailand expected a routine drainage dig, but hit a jackpot when they found a time capsule from 1,300 years ago, in the form of glittering gold, silver, and bronze artifacts hidden beneath a massive reclining Buddha.
It's the kind of discovery that turns history buffs into kids at Christmas, revealing ancient artistry and devotion that remained hidden away for centuries. In a world chasing shiny new technology, these relics remind us that the past holds treasures worth celebrating, blending faith, craft, and mystery in ways that still dazzle today.
Pot full of precious treasure
While working on a drainage system at Wat Thammachak Sema Ram temple in Phimai, Thailand, workers hit gold and quite literally. Digging over four feet under a famous sandstone reclining Buddha statue, they discovered a ceramic pot holding 33 ancient ornaments made of gold, silver, and bronze, according to Thailand’s Fine Arts Department.
The haul included gold rings, silver earrings, and rare bronze hoop earrings matching Dvaravati period styles from around 657 A.D., making this Thailand's longest (43 feet) and oldest such statue. The site, known as Phra Non, quickly became an archaeological hotspot as teams kept digging.

Photo: Fine Arts Department, Thailand
There are more additions to the treasures
Further excavations helped find hammered metal sheets made up of the repoussé technique, in ancient metalworking, where designs are hammered from the reverse side.
One of the most important ones among them was a 3x5-inch gold sheet showing a seated Buddha as a teacher, with spiral curls, a large halo, elongated earlobes, and a robe over one shoulder. A top corner hole suggests it was hung as jewelry or decor.
According to a Popular Mechanics report, Phanombutr Chantrachot, Fine Arts Department director-general, said it "could have either been worn or used as decoration." Another lead-tin alloy sheet (4.5x6 inches) depicted a standing Buddha in an arched frame with two attendants, one possibly Brahma in Thai style, though damage obscured the other.
These artifacts represent the Daravati period
These artifacts hail from the Dvaravati period (6th–11th centuries CE), when the Mon kingdom fused Indian artistic traditions with distinctive Thai styles. The reclining Buddha, representing ultimate enlightenment, likely concealed these devotional offerings, buried as sacred tributes during its construction or consecration.