Resource Chest #69488 (24/25)
Crayfish chitin has various medicinal and magical purposes, including making plasters that minimize the severity of scars.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
These are some steel shards from a well-worn fighting blade.
While a gorgon's head can still turn you to stone, this claw merely smells bad and can give you a bad scratch if mishandled.
Apparently someone saw red, and then smashed whatever this was.
Jute is the second most valuable fabric fiber, behind cotton, due to its versatility. This is a ball of it.
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This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
These blue glass shards were part of some kind of blue glass festival, long ago.
You wonder if the owner of this molar is still alive, and if so, whether they are missing it.
You wonder where the rest of this very tiny skeleton ended up, leaving behind only the head.
This pine stake has been burned in some kind of magical fire.
This powder is a residue leftover from Rainbow Sprites as they frolic in the forest.
This pollen is a delicious seasoning and can also be used to fertilize the stamens of rockrose flowers, if that's your thing. Source: Wild Knoll
This oak bead looks very old, and you wonder what civilization produced it.
This piece of sheet music glows with a reddish light, and you get the feeling you don't want to hear the music on it.
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
This is a donut, except instead of a jelly filling it has an eye-jelly filling!
This delicious strudel is a bit sticky, partly because it's made from giant spider silk.
This is a board milled from an Oak Log.
Angels make the finest harps, and then leave them behind when they decide to ditch their halos for horns.
Why did they name them Silver Berries when they are clearly red? We'll never know.
This aluminum plating could be useful in making armor or repairing various metal household objects.
It's like a human ribcage, only smaller.
A sedimentary rock that is often composed of the skeletal fragments of marine organisms such as coral, foraminifera, and molluscs.