A gaggle of children came across a human skull they innocently mistook for deer bones while playing near a South Carolina creek on Sunday.

The kiddos were playing near the base of a creek in Homeland Park in Anderson County, when they came across what they assumed was part of a dead deer.

“I digged it up. I thought it was just a piece of rock,” one of the boys told FOX Carolina.

Two boys standing in a wooded area, with a news chyron reporting "HUMAN REMAINS FOUND NEAR CREEK".
A group of children found a human skull while they were playing near a creek in South Carolina.FOX Carolina
“But then you flipped it over and you saw this thing’s eye sockets,” his brother added.

So, the curious kids picked up the skull and carried it over to their horrified parents.

One of the children’s mothers called the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office, which — with assistance from the county’s coroner’s office — determined that the bone they discovered was actually a human skull, WHNS reported.

As officials continued to comb the scene, they dredged up another 50 human bones that the coroner surmised had been there for “10 plus years” based on how the roots had coiled around them, the outlet reported.

Two young boys investigating near a culvert pipe.
The children carried the skull back to their horrified parents, who called authorities.FOX Carolina
“That’s still a guess,” the coroner admitted, noting that the bones were “pretty weathered.”

The coroner estimated that the remains belonged to someone between the ages of 15 and 25 whose body likely floated downstream at some point, WSPA reported.

The skull itself was in pristine condition with no visible fractures.

It’s still not clear who the bones may have belonged to. A full adult human body is made up of 206 bones.

Yellow "CRIME SCENE DO NOT CROSS" tape is strung through a wooded area.
Authorities dug up 50 more human bones at the site.FOX Carolina
Officials were back at the scene searching for more bones on Monday.

The Anderson County Coroner’s Office and the sheriff’s office are still investigating the discovery. It’s still too soon for either party to determine if foul play was involved in the victim’s death.

On Thursday, a severed leg that washed ashore in California in 2022 was linked to a banker who was reported missing in 1999.

The missing man, 59-year-old Walter Karl Kinney, was originally declared dead in 2003, four years after one of his legs was found on a beach.