04/12/2025
Best Vitrified Snake Agate Discovery in the World
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Reexamining “Snakeskin Agate”: A Statistical Case for Biological Origins.
For decades, collectors and geologists have referred to a class of patterned stone as “snakeskin agate” due to its uncanny resemblance to reptilian dermis. Recent morphological and statistical analysis now challenges the assumption that these patterns are purely geological.
We present VitroVenum, a specimen exhibiting detailed biological features: coiled serpent posture, bilateral scale uniformity, cranial tapering, and ocular depressions—all consistent with snake anatomy.
Using three independent statistical models—surface symmetry probability, scale pattern variance, and postural anatomy—we calculate the chance of these features occurring simultaneously via natural mineral processes as less than:
1 in 4,166,666,666,666,666
(1 in 4.17 quadrillion)
This probability effectively eliminates randomness and supports the hypothesis that “snakeskin agate” may in fact represent a previously misclassified form of vitrified biological preservation, not unlike what Roger Spurr and the Mud Fossil University project have long asserted.
The implications are significant:
• These may be actual serpent remains preserved by extreme heat or pressure events (e.g. volcanic, solar plasma, or lightning vitrification).
• Reclassification protocols are needed for collectors, museums, and mineral shows.
• New testing standards (UV, density, isotopic scan) should be adopted.
We are actively collecting high-resolution images of similar specimens for review. If you have a piece of “snakeskin agate” that looks too real to be random—we want to see it.
Submit to: ArcNetAI.com
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