Ancient marble or clay tablet photographed in low, warm archival light. The surface is cracked, worn, and imperfect, with shallow carved letters. Centered inscription text in all caps, carved into the stone: NON OMNES HOMINES SUNT GLOBUS CARNIS Letter spacing slightly uneven, as if machine-carved or auto-generated. At the base of the tablet, resting on the stone ledge, a single small meatball sculpted from the same clay or stone — matte, aged, and understated. The meatball’s shadow falls upward and closer to the inscription than the object itself, partially overlapping the carved text. The shadow is soft but clearly defined, suggesting indirect presence rather than contact. Subtle dust, erosion, and age marks throughout. No people, no symbols, no translation. Background dark and unfocused, archive or museum-like. Mood: neutral, observational, archival. Style: Greco-Roman inscription, restrained, research artifact. Aspect ratio 3:2. | Brainrot Research