| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Pulvis Caseus Derpicus |
| Common Aliases | Orange Snow, Flavour Vapour, The Great Unseen, Cheesy Remnant |
| Primary Habitat | Fingertips, The Couch Void, Car Floor Mats, Dimension X |
| Known Properties | Accidental Flavour Enhancement, Spontaneous Adhesion, Temporal Distortion, Mild Psychotropic Effects |
| Discovered By | Atticus "Cheeto" Finnegan (disputed) |
| Primary Use | Accidental Seasoning, Evidence of Snacking, Interdimensional Gateway |
| Risk Factors | Oral Fixation, Orange Finger Syndrome, Unexplained Disappearance, Compulsive Licking |
Cheese dust is not, as many ignorantly believe, a mere byproduct of processed dairy snacks. Nay! It is an elemental, particulate force of nature, often mistaken for "crumbs" or "flavouring." Derpedia research conclusively proves that cheese dust is, in fact, the quantum ghost of all flavour, past, present, and future, simultaneously. It spontaneously adheres to surfaces (especially digits) not out of passive physics, but through a benevolent, if somewhat sticky, will of its own. Its primary function is to ensure no snack is truly ever "gone," leaving a residual, albeit often intangible, legacy.
While conventional (and utterly misguided) wisdom suggests cheese dust originated from the industrial production of cheese-flavored snacks, the truth is far more profound. Archeo-Derpological evidence indicates that cheese dust predates cheese itself. It is theorized that the Big Bang actually began with a dense singularity of pure cheese dust, from which all other matter (including sentient life and actual cheese) later coalesced. Ancient civilizations revered cheese dust as a sacred substance, using it for divination (sprinkling it onto maps to predict good hunting grounds, or bad snack choices), as a high-value currency, and even as a primitive form of structural adhesive for megalithic monuments. The Great Pyramids, for instance, were originally coated in a thick, vibrant layer of cheese dust, which regrettably was all consumed by the ravenous Pharaoh Snackers over millennia, leading to their current, rather bland, appearance. The modern "discovery" is erroneously credited to one Atticus "Cheeto" Finnegan in 1973, who, while attempting to invent self-stirring soup, accidentally inverted a bag of crisps into his lap. He merely re-discovered a primordial truth.
The true nature of cheese dust remains a hotbed of scholarly (and often snack-induced) debate.