Truffle Smoky Chalcedony Rough, Grey Botryoidal Agate, Womb Balls, Panda Agate

Grape Agate is a specific type of Chalcedony that you may use for a variety of spiritual applications. This gemstone is beneficial for deep concentration and meditation. Grape Agate promotes spiritual equilibrium, wisdom, and calmness. It also promotes self-assurance and safety.
Grape Agate is also known as Botryoidal Chalcedony. Said to also encourages lucid dreaming for prophetic messages. When Grape Agate is near you while you sleep it stimulates your crown chakra and provides vivid messages and dreams. As a whimsical gemstone it holds a great deal of energy which is quickly tapped into, and can facilitate long, intense connections during meditation. The gemstone offers you a unique perspective and encourages you to look within for answers to life and situations. Grape Agate is also a wonderful gemstone for activating the inner goddess and working with goddess energies.

These specimens are from Manakarra, Indonesia.
Known as many things all over the world.

Natural Truffle Chalcedony Grey Botryoidal Agate, Womb Balls, Panda Agate Rough.
The one show is the one you receive.
60 x 55 x 30mm 

Truffle Chalcedony, also known as Womb Stone, Chalcedony Nodules, Panda Agate and Chalcedony Balls, are rare botryoidal Chalcedony clusters only found in Morocco. They usually range in color from white to tan and to an even darker brown that almost looks “burnt”.
 A rare Moroccan pseudomorph of a spiral 
Turritella-like snail shell that has been replaced by chalcedony.
Chalcedony ( /kalˈsɛdəni/) is a cryptocrystalline form of silica, composed of very fine intergrowths of quartz and moganite. These are both silica minerals, but they differ in that quartz has a trigonal crystal structure, while moganite is monoclinic. Chalcedony's standard chemical structure 
(based on the chemical structure of quartz) is SiO2 (silicon dioxide).
Chalcedony has a waxy luster, and may be semitransparent or translucent. It can assume a wide range of colors, but those most commonly seen are white to gray, grayish-blue or a shade of brown ranging from pale to nearly black. The color of chalcedony sold commercially is often enhanced by dyeing or heating. The name chalcedony comes from the Latin chalcedonius (alternatively spelled calchedonius).