Tablet of the Dreamer

$100.00

A new addition to our ever growing Miskatonic University shadow box collection

A faux green stone artifact depicting Cthulhu that glows with eldritch dread! Comes mounted in a red velvet lined black shadow box with custom Miskatonic University museum style catalog tag. (Measures 8" x 10")

Miskatonic University Special Collections Department Item# 441-C13

Tablet of the Dreamer

Recovered in 1908 by Professor Webb during an ethnological expedition off the coast of Greenland, this enigmaticly carved tablet of green stone bears a winged figure with cephalopodic features surrounded by an array of unidentified glyphs. Though the imagery corresponds disturbingly with later descriptions of the so-called “Great Dreamer,” no cultural origin has ever been identified. Geological analysis indicates a greenstone composite with unusual luminescent properties, unknown in any terrestrial sample. The artifact continues to resist definitive classification, its provenance and significance remaining subjects of speculation.”

A new addition to our ever growing Miskatonic University shadow box collection

A faux green stone artifact depicting Cthulhu that glows with eldritch dread! Comes mounted in a red velvet lined black shadow box with custom Miskatonic University museum style catalog tag. (Measures 8" x 10")

Miskatonic University Special Collections Department Item# 441-C13

Tablet of the Dreamer

Recovered in 1908 by Professor Webb during an ethnological expedition off the coast of Greenland, this enigmaticly carved tablet of green stone bears a winged figure with cephalopodic features surrounded by an array of unidentified glyphs. Though the imagery corresponds disturbingly with later descriptions of the so-called “Great Dreamer,” no cultural origin has ever been identified. Geological analysis indicates a greenstone composite with unusual luminescent properties, unknown in any terrestrial sample. The artifact continues to resist definitive classification, its provenance and significance remaining subjects of speculation.”