In 1972, workers testing uranium from a mine in Oklo, Gabon noticed something that looked impossible: the uranium had less uranium-235 than it should.
That “missing” isotope was the clue. Scientists eventually realized the deposit had once behaved like a nuclear reactor, completely naturally.
About 2 billion years ago, uranium ore in the ground contained a higher percentage of uranium-235 than it does today. When groundwater seeped through the deposit, it slowed neutrons enough to keep a fission chain reaction going. As the water heated and boiled away, the reaction shut down. When the rock cooled and water returned, it started again.
No control room. No engineers. No glowing sci-fi core. Just geology, water, and physics lining up in exactly the right way.
Nature built the reactor before humans even built bones.