Eric Nguyen
Logic Lapse Mutation
CLASSIFICATION: Bioresearch Codex Entry
AUTHOR: ID #E2C0C2A6CAN
VERSION: 4052.04.25-03:32:14-1.001.02
OVERVIEW: Specimen is a human brain from the turn of the century, circa 2500 CE. Material integrity is in the 100th percentile of its subcategory of archaeological findings. Visual analysis indicates the specimen's volume, density, and gyrification match the profiles of other human brains recovered from that period. Dissection reveals a characteristically large cerebral ventricular cavity. Volumetric ratio of white matter to ventricle is roughly 5% compared to 95% only a few centuries prior, during the evolutionary transition in primary neocortex function from analytical reasoning to vibe prompting. Residing within the ventricular cavity are 4 large, unidentified masses, composed primarily of gray matter with a pronounced concentration of neuron somas within the sulcus gyrations. It is likely that masses have not previously been discovered due to deterioration, erosion, and decay in all prior brain specimens.
REMARK: Reroute from [G]eneral [F]indings repository to [S]pecial [C]onsiderations. Further analysis required on the 4 unidentified masses. The quality and integrity of the specimen suggest that great care was taken in its preservation and conservation. No similar findings were uncovered at the site. Priority: identify human individual. Cross-check via all known methods, including but not limited to: DNA sampling, local geological sampling, radiometric dating, demographic logs, historical surveillance records.