#menilite
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vugnasmineralblog · 1 year ago
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Opal var. Menilite | Galera, Granada, Andalusia, Spain
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 2 years ago
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Aviraptor vs Cryptogyps
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Factfiles:
Aviraptor longicrus
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Artwork by @otussketching, written by @zygodactylus
Name Meaning: Long-legged Bird Thief
Time: 30 to 31 million years ago (Rupelian stage of the Oligocene epoch, Paleogene period) 
Location: Jamna Dolna, Menilite Beds, Carpathian Flysch Zone, southeast Poland 
Birds of prey are fascinating - there are many different kinds, doing many different things, and their radiation is poorly understood. Aviraptor helps put together some pieces of the puzzle by being the first raptor known adapted for eating birds as prey - essentially, capturing (larger) flying animals in the air, a not-easy feat. It was very similar to modern diurnal raptors, with a short beak, large laws, and long slender legs. That said, with those proportions it was very small - similar in size to living sparrowhawks and tiny hawks. It didn’t have a particularly hooked beak, but a straighter one similar to the harrier-hawks. It was similar, overall, to living birds that hunt early birds - and as such, it is the earliest known bird we know of to hunt other birds (oh bird on bird crime). Living alongside a variety of other birds, including passerines and hummingbirds, it probably fed on smaller avifauna in its area - and Aviraptor itself may have evolved in response to the radiation of many small birds in the early Oligocene. In addition to early modern-hummingbirds and crown passerines, Aviraptor lived alongside hoopoe-hornbill relatives, chickens, fish, and turtles. 
Cryptogyps lacertosus
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Artwork by @otussketching, written by @zygodactylus
Name Meaning: Powerful Hidden Vulture 
Time: 770,000 to 55,000 years ago (Chibanian to Tarantian stage of the Pleistocene epoch, Quaternary period) 
Location: Throughout Australia, including Kalamurina, the Wellington Caves, and the Nullarbor Plain 
Today, there are no vultures in Australia. In fact, until recently, it seemed fairly clear that no vultures had lived in Australia - but now, we know they did! Originally thought to be an eagle, Cryptogyps was on the small size for a vulture, only bigger than the living Hooded Vulture - though it was about the size of the wedge-tailed eagle. However, it was proportioned similarly to other vultures, and between that and its great range across the entirety of Australia, it is logical to conclude that it lived similarly to other vultures, feeding primarily on carrion and going great distances to find it. It did not have the right musculature to be an active hunter like eagles and hawks. As such, Cryptogyps was a vital part of its environment, reducing the spread of disease and recycling nutrients and energy back into the food web like vultures today. Cryptogyps lived alongside a wide variety of weird megafuana present in Australia during the last ice age, including marsupial lions, giant demon-ducks (mihirungs), giant hippo-sized wombats, sheep-sized and fossorial echidnas, short-faced kangaroos, giant koalas, thylacines, giant maleefowls, huge monitor lizards, large crocodilians, and giant pythons - as well as cassowaries, regular kangaroos, emus, and other large animals that remain today. It was a weird place of which Cryptogyps was a small and important part, and would have been a regular sight in the skies to the first Indigenous Australians to settle on the continent!
DMM Round One Masterpost
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adraelfineminerals · 5 months ago
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FOR SALE - Opal Var Menilite - Price: 4️⃣€
Locality: Gypsum Outcrop, Baza, Granada, Andalusia, Spain
Size: 3.3 × 1.5 × 1.1 cm
Weight: 4.0 grs.
Shipping Information
Postage Area Price
Spain: 7️⃣€
Europe: 8️⃣€
Worldwide: 9️⃣€
Description:
Beautiful opal specimen of the Menilita variety, from the city of Baza, a whitish piece with an earthy luster and perfectly rounded shapes. A piece to keep in mind.
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bijoux-et-mineraux · 7 years ago
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Opal var. Menilite (”Liver Opal”) - Paris, Ile-de-France, France   
 Menilite is a greyish-brown form of opal. It is also known as “liver opal” or "Leberopal" (German), due to its color. It is called menilite because it was first described from Ménilmontant (Paris), France, where it occurs as concretions within bituminous early oligocene menilite shales. The specimen features strange stalactitic and "flown" forms, like wax, which run out from a candle.
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beadsofparadisenyc · 3 years ago
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At first glance, these looked a little like freehand meringue cookies to me. But! They are, in fact, “Fairy Stones” aka, Menilite Opals from Morocco, and are composed of calcium carbonate. They are formed when there is an accumulation of seafloor sedimentary mud rock, mineral accretions, and fossilized crystal deposits of plant and animal remains in areas of ancient glacial deposits.Overflowing with Devine Feminine Energy, they are also sometimes called Goddess Stones, and the soft, smooth and perfect for holding comfortably in your hand stones are said to be excellent for meditation and energetically providing grounding, acceptance, flexibility, generosity and increases tolerance for self and others. ($48 - 78) #fairystone #goddessstone #menilite #meniliteopal #divinefeminine #meditationstone #grounding #acceptance #crystals #minerals #opals #calciumcarbonate #uniquecrystals #lookslikecandy #shop #nyc #unionsquare #beadsofparadise (at Beads of Paradise NYC) https://www.instagram.com/p/CTGIgJzHvZH/?utm_medium=tumblr
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vugnasmineralblog · 4 years ago
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Opal Var Menilite Embalse de Camarillas, Agramón, Albacete, Castilla La Mancha, Spain
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 5 years ago
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Eurotrochilus
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By Scott Reid
Etymology: European Hummingbird
First Described By: Mayr, 2004
Classification: Dinosauromorpha, Dinosauriformes, Dracohors, Dinosauria, Saurischia, Eusaurischia, Theropoda, Neotheropoda, Averostra, Tetanurae, Orionides, Avetheropoda, Coelurosauria, Tyrannoraptora, Maniraptoromorpha, Maniraptoriformes, Maniraptora, Pennaraptora, Paraves, Eumaniraptora, Averaptora, Avialae, Euavialae, Avebrevicauda, Pygostaylia, Ornithothoraces, Euornithes, Ornithuromorpha, Ornithurae, Neornithes, Neognathae, Neoaves, Strisores, Daedalornithes, Apodiformes, Trochilidae
Referred Species: E. inexpectatus, E. noniewiczi
Status: Extinct
Time and Place: Between 31 and 28 million years ago, in the Rupelian of the Oligocene 
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Eurotrochilus is known from the Menilite Formation, the Bott-Eder Grube Unterfeld, and Le Grand Banc locations across Poland, Germany, and France 
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Physical Description: Eurotrochilus is a bird that is remarkable precisely because, to us, it is utterly unremarkable. Put in a clearer way, Eurotrochilus is almost identical to living Hummingbirds - but it’s thirty million years old. An extremely small bird, Eurotrochilus had wings shaped like hummingbirds - small, triangular, and built for hovering flight. It was about nine centimeters in length, making it as big as living hummingbirds like the Ruby-Throated Hummingbird. In addition to having small, triangular wings, Eurotrochilus had tiny legs, like living Hummingbirds, and a very long beak. So, its identical nature to living hummingbirds points to the hummingbird body plan as an ancient one, that hasn’t been improved upon much during the Cenozoic era. Still, it wasn’t a true hummingbird yet - aka in the group that contains modern hummingbirds and those more closely related to one sort than the other - because it still had long finger bones, and smaller connections between those bones. So, while the general hummingbird shape was present for thirty million years, it still had some modifications left to go.
Diet: With its very long, specialized bill, Eurotrochilus would have fed on nectar, like living hummingbirds.
Behavior: We can be fairly confident that Eurotrochilus was capable of hovering, and did so with some regularity; it would hover near flowers and rarely perch on them while gathering nectar up with its long beak. The beak would go into the center of the flower to draw up nectar, and in the process Eurotrochilus would pick up pollen. Then, upon going to the next flower to drink more nectar, Eurotrochilus would drop off the pollen, thus helping the flowers to reproduce. It would have spent most of its time hovering, and when not hovering would rest on branches or in more foliage-filled areas. It would have been a fairly active animal, and loud as well, making a variety of chirps and calls to one another. They probably would have been very brightly colored, like living hummingbirds, and the males probably wouldn’t have been very involved in nest care. 
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By Ripley Cook
Ecosystem: Eurotrochilus primarily lived in forested areas, near lagoons, lakes, and estruary-filled areas. These lush habitats were filled with a variety of flowering plants for Eurotrochilus to feed on, and the forests were densely populated with birches, oaks, cypresses, conifers, palms, roses, asterids, and beeches. Eurotrochilus was a common site in these environments, which featured a variety of birds that resembled living forms and yet, were not quite like their modern counterparts. In the Bott-Eder environment of Germany, a coastal bay area, Eurotrochilus lived with birds such as the barbet Rupelramphastoides, the buttonquail Turnipax, the tody Palaeotodus, the mousebird Oligocolius, the trogon Primotrogon, the loon Colymboides, the seabird Rueplornis, and the songbird Wieslochia. This is a notable environment with a variety of transitional tree and ocean going birds, making it a fascinating habitat in which to study the evolution of dinosaurs in the Cenozoic. There were also sea cows, bats, and a Hyaenodont Apterodon, though Eurotrochilus would have been so small its unlikely that the Hyaenodont would have posed a problem for it. In the dense lake environment of Menilite, Eurotrochilus lived with the passerines Jamna, Resoviaornis, and Winnicavis, as well as the woodpecker Picavus. Here there was an extensive amount of thermal activity, which would negatively affect the ecosystem with gas bubbles and oil wells. In the lagoon environment of Le Grand, there was also Primotrogon, the early cuckoo Eocuculus, the crane Parvigrus, and the stem-passerine Zygodactylus.
Other: As the oldest representative of a proper, nectar-eating hummingbird shape, Eurotrochilus is vital for our understanding of the evolution of hummingbirds. In fact, its presence points to the idea that flowers pollinated by birds co-evolved with hummingbirds in the Eastern Hemisphere, even though hummingbirds aren’t present on that side of the globe today. Hummingbirds like Eurotrochilus, however, disappeared from that half of the globe during tropical climate collapse in Europe and the effects of the ice age. Interestingly enough, they were replaced in the Eastern Hemisphere by Sunbirds, a group of passerines that convergently evolved similar adaptations for hovering and nectar-eating, and also brightly colored feathers.
Species Differences: The two species of Eurotrochilus mainly differ on the proportions of the limbs, with E. noniewiczi having longer upper arm bones than E. inexpecattus, but shorter lower arm bones. They lived at the same time and fairly close to each other, so this difference is important in telling apart the varying kinds of these early hummingbirds.
~ By Meig Dickson
Sources Under the Cut 
Bochenski, Zygmunt; Bochenski, Zbigniew (19 December 2007). "An Old World hummingbird from the Oligocene: a new fossil from Polish Carpathians". Journal of Ornithology. 149 (2): 211
Bochenski, Zbigniew M.; Tomek, Teresa (10 December 2013). "A review of avain remains from the Oligocene of the Outer Carpathians and Central Paleogene Basin". Proceed. 8th Internat. Meeting Society of Avian Paleontology and Evolution.
Louchart, Antoine; Tourment, Nicolas; Carrier, Julie; Roux, Thierry (27 September 2007). "Hummingbird with modern feathering: an exceptionally well-preserved Oligocene fossil from southern France". Naturwissenschaften. 95 (2): 171–175.  
Mayr, Gerald (7 May 2004). "Old World Fossil Record of Modern-Type Hummingbirds". Science. 304 (5672): 861–874.
Mayr, Gerald (March 2005). "Fossil hummingbirds in the Old World". Biologist. 52 (1): 16.
Mayr, Gerald (25 July 2006). "New specimens of the early Oligocene Old World hummingbird Eurotrochilus inexpectatus". Journal of Ornithology. 148 (1): 105–111.
Mayr, Gerald (8 September 2009). "New specimens of the avian taxa Eurotrochilus (Trochilidae) and Palaeotodus (Todidae) from the early Oligocene of Germany". Springer. 84 (3): 387–395.  
Mayr, G. 2009. Paleogene Fossil Birds. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
Mayr, G. 2017. Avian Evolution: The Fossil Record of Birds and its Paleobiological Significance. Topics in Paleobiology, Wiley Blackwell. West Sussex.
Maxwell, Erin E. (1 December 2016). "The Rauenberg fossil Lagerstätte (Baden-Württemberg, Germany): A window into early Oligocene marine and coastal ecosystems of Central Europe". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 463.  
Prum, Richard O.; Berv, Jacob S.; Dornberg, Alex; Field, Daniel J.; Townsend, Jeffrey P.; Lemmon, Emily Moriarty; Lemmon, Alan R. (2015). "A comprehensive phylogeny of birds (Aves) using targeted next-generation DNA sequencing". Nature. 526: 569–573.
Reddy, Sushma; et al. (2015). "Why do phylogenomic data sets yield conflicting trees? Data type influences the avian tree of life more than taxon sampling". Systematic Biology. 66 (5): 857–879.
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thierrytillier-blog · 7 years ago
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Opale menilite d'Agramón
Agramón, Albacete, Castilla La Mancha, Spain Dimensions :  5.6 x 3.6 x 2.8 cm Specimen with traces of fossils. Collected 2000.
Collection Thierry Tillier
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ask-redeemed-jasper · 7 years ago
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Menilite: (Wanders around Beach City.) "Uggghh... I'm bored..! If only there was someone who can challenge me, Menilite, the fastest Gem alive on a race. (Senses a nearby presence.) Ahh..! A taker..! Well, how about it?"
Jasper smirks "You sure ya wanna go pal? I'm a veteran war general."
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gemsonacritiquehub · 8 years ago
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Any ideas for a corrupted Menalite?
Okay, it took me some hunting, but there’s something you need to know about “menalite”. “Menalite” is not an official name used by mineralogists or gemologists. It seems to be used by some crystal healing sites that got out of control. I was very confused because I thought you were referring to menilite, which an opal variety. This is, in fact, a concretion or glacial concretion. Concretions are a hard compact mass of matter formed by the precipitation of mineral cement within the spaces between particles, and is found in sedimentary rock or soil. The one you’re referring to is a calcium carbonate disc concretion, which is formed in fine sand and clay. They go by many other names like “Fairy Stone”, “Mud-babies”, “clay dogs”, and some others. 
With that said, let’s move on to suggestions. This is a creative and manifestation stone which enhances divination, forecasting, and boosting intuition. They could be a small pixie or fairy-like monster that has the ability to multiple on its own. The more they multiple, the stronger they are together. Another idea is that they could be a clay molding of a dog. I’m reminded of the monster from the Dark Cloud games: the clay dog, when not active, looks like a regular boulder or rock and can blend into its surroundings. When you approach them, they will assemble themselves and attack. Another name it has been given is “Goddess Stone”. The corrupted form could be a giant clay-like figure. I can also see a mud monster working too. This stone is also said to protect owners from evil spirits as well as help one move forward after the death of a loved one  or the fear of death itself. They could take on the form of a ghostly phantom that can turn itself (but not its “gem”) invisible, fly, and hard to land a blow on. 
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euforiamall · 6 years ago
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Trening din catifea cu tinte, Gri - S. ✅ Trening din catifea cu tinte, Gri - S - Produs din sectiunea Imbracaminte Dama, categoria Topuri dama, subcategoria Hanorace dama la pretul de 120 Lei; Producator: Menilit Fashion https://www.euforia-mall.ro/trening-din-catifea-cu-tinte-gri-s-2021-21918.html
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 5 years ago
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Jamna szybiaki
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By José Carlos Cortés
Etymology: From Jamna Dolna
First Described By: Bocheński et al., 2011
Classification: Dinosauromorpha, Dinosauriformes, Dracohors, Dinosauria, Saurischia, Eusaurischia, Theropoda, Neotheropoda, Averostra, Tetanurae, Orionides, Avetheropoda, Coelurosauria, Tyrannoraptora, Maniraptoriformes, Maniraptora, Pennaraptora, Paraves, Eumaniraptora, Averaptora, Avialae, Euavialae, Avebrevicauda, Pygostylia, Ornithothoraces, Euornithes, Ornithuromorpha, Ornithurae, Neornithes, Neognathae, Neoaves, Australaves, Psittacopasserae, Passeriformes
Status: Extinct
Time and Place: Between 31 and 30 million years ago, in the Rupelian of the Oligocene 
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Jamna is known from the Pakiet E site of the Menilite Formation in Poland 
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Physical Description: Jamna was another early, fairly generalistic passerine, and a small one at that. So, in a lot of ways, it was very similar to yesterday’s Wieslochia. About the size of a dipper or a skylark, it probably didn’t get bigger than 18 centimeters, so a little bit larger than Wieslochia, but not by much. It had short, broad, rounded wings; and a short and rounded tail. With very long and skinny legs, it was able to run fast along the ground, and hop as well. It had a straight, long beak, much like living thrushes. It was a very fluffy bird, like its living relatives, and showcases how perching birds were already doing what they are adapted to do as early as the Oligocene. It had three toes going forward, and one backward - the typical perching form of a passerine. Its sternum was rod-liked and more solid than in its contemporary Wieslochia, and it had broad fingers that gave its wings stronger muscle attachment sites.
Diet: Jamna was probably an omnivore, eating either insects or fruit, given the shape of its beak.
Behavior: The short wings and round tail of Jamna allowed it to bob and weave between trees and shrubs, making it a very maneuverable bird and active. Its long legs and general hopping demeanor means it was just as energetic on the ground too, and it would have been a very hyper bird in its environment. Jamna would have also used its energetic nature and well-adapted limbs to escape predators as fast as it could. It probably spent most of its time foraging both on the ground and in the trees, searching for bugs and fruit wherever it could reach - in tree cavities, under leaf litter, and on the undersides of branches. It probably took care of its young, and it is uncertain if it was particularly social.
Ecosystem: Jamna lived in a fairly dense forest environment, farther away from the coast than that of the contemporary Wieslochia. The Menilite Formation surrounded extensive lake systems, which routinely underwent rapid burial that would suffocate and bury many animals at once. It was filled with a variety of algae and cyanobacteria within the lake itself; and there was a lot of thermal activity going on in the area at the time - including gas bubbles emerging and oil reaching the surface, which negatively affected the local ecosystem. Many different kinds of fish were present here, especially ray-finned fish, which populated the lake system. Other dinosaurs were here too, including the early hummingbird Eurotrochilus, the woodpecker relative Picavus, and another potential passerine, Winnicavis.
Other: Despite their similarities, Jamna and Wieslochia were quite different, with significant changes in the sternum and other bones that indicate they weren’t particularly closely related. This indicates that there was a wide diversity of perching birds in Europe as early as the Oligocene, and that the fossil record potentially does not well record or reflect that diversity. Whether or not passeriformes reached levels of species richness we see today is another question, and potentially an unanswerable one.
~ By Meig Dickson
Sources under the Cut 
Bocheński, Z. M., T. Tomek, M. Bujoczek, K. Wertz. 2011. A new passerine bird from the early Oligocene of Poland. Journal of Ornithology 152 (4): 1045 - 1053.
Bocheński, Z. M., T. Tomek, E. Świdnicka. 2014. The First Complete Leg of a Passerine Bird from the Early Oligocene of Poland. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 59 (2): 281 - 285.
Bochenski, Z. M., T. Tomek, K. Wertz, JHapp, M. Bujoczek and E. Swidnicka. 2018. Articulated avian remains from the early Oligocene of Poland adds to our understanding of passerine evolution. Palaeontologia Electronica 21.2.32A:1-12
Kosakowski, P., Y. V. Koltun, G. Machowski, P. Poprawa, B. Papiernik. 2018. THE GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE OLIGOCENE – LOWER MIOCENE MENILITE FORMATION IN THE POLISH AND UKRAINIAN OUTER CARPATHIANS:  A REVIEW. Journal of Petroleum Geology 41 (3): 0 - 18.
Mayr, G. 2017. Avian Evolution: The Fossil Record of Birds and its Paleobiological Significance. Topics in Paleobiology, Wiley Blackwell. West Sussex.
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gemsonacritiquehub · 8 years ago
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Finally gems for nom nom and Charlie then? Charlie's I think would be a Quartz of some kind
For Nom Nom, maybe Menilite or Silver. For Charlie, I wouldn’t make him a quartz. I’d go for something like Stibnite or Magnetite. 
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