NEW AMULET STONE- BUFFALO MOUNTAIN MINERAL-RARE AMULET STONE-FROM LAOS

Stone Type : Amulet Stone
Amulet Stone Name : Buffalo Mountain Mineral
Mineral Name : Limonite pseudomorph after pyrite
Origin : Buffalo Mountain, Laos
Believe: Protect dangers.



6 Gong Stone TOP ASIAN AMULET


There is one piece of gong stone starting bid $ 9.99. Seeing the details at  http://stores.ebay.com/STOMULET-Shop/Gong-Stone-/_i.html?_fsub=3825274016&_sid=312829166&_trksid=p4634.c0.m322

New Promotion!!!! Discount 10-25% + FREE SHIPPING for all fix price items.


Sale Name # of Listings Start Date End Date Discount Shipping
10%+FREE SHIP 115 08/01/13 08/04/13 10% Off Free
15%+FREE SHIP 75 08/01/13 08/04/13 15% Off Free
20%+FREE SHIP 5 08/01/13 08/04/13 20% Off Free
25%+FREE SHIP 701 08/01/13 08/04/13 25% Off Free


9 BIG RARE TURTLE STONE FROM LAOS

 

BIG SIZE 600g-2kg and Discount Sale 25%

Turtle Stone (Thai Language- Hin Tao) looks like a tortoiseshell very much. It is made of nature, and is believed that it is a stone which has been in this world for a long time. Although Turtle Stone is very strong from outside feature, it has gentle sense inside itself. With this reason, these stones are truly hard to discover. Therefore, we have got a few of them from Laos, and they are called “Ku Tao” by Laotian. If we talk about the land of Laos, this country is still a land of secret and it may not understand such as Buffalo Mountain where is located on a hidden area until normal person cannot arrive.
Turtle Stone is believed that it is holy stone because, the power of stone can protect all dangers. After we have checked feature of stone, we found that Turtle Stone has multi layers as if a shell which is strongly sculptured within the mineral layer. Some of Turtle Stone has similar to some parts of turtle like head, tail and legs to beetle. Definitely, it is not the turtle fossil but, it is similar to a tortoiseshell patterns and flat shapes.
Some people used to worship in pairsto protect their house and commercial to appeal of finance.
We would like to offer exotic and rare stones which are shaped like a turtle from Laos. Moreover, these stones are believed that they are a sacred stone, and you can not find it easily. Even in Laos or Thailand,Turtle Stone is taken to be strange and rare of stone collection.




Coming Soon.Gong Stone came from Laos country.


ABOVE: A large sample 120 kilograms Gong Stone
(Diameter of about 80 cm .)
Gong Stone came from Lao country; it looks perfect stone. This stone is look like a stone’s gong or UFO and the natural stones are very old. Someone would say that be the element. And there are many people who visit at our store said it was a great fortune, a lot of good energy, which is quite rare.

Auction a lot stones on our ebay store.

73ct. BALL FACETTED TEKTITE CUT -GEM (METEORITE)#sa586-stomulet



 Start $0.99 Time left:  (Jul 29, 2013 19:07:54 PDT)

And Other Auction List

 

417g Original GREAT Glossy LEKLAI Koh Larn US $219.99 Sale 39% -27-30June2013

Code : sb749
Stone Name : LekLai Koh Larn
Stone Type : Thai Amulet Stone
Weight : 417.5grams
 Dimension : 124 x 77 x 90 mm.
Stone Quantity : 1 Pc (s)
Origin : Koh Laan, Pattaya Thailand
Color : Glossy black colour

What is Lailai Koh Larn?
Go to This Item

Nice Rainbow LekLai on Auction-Time left:Jul 01, 2013 20:16:24 PDT

19.8g Rainbow LekLai(fluid metal)Thai Amulet-Umklum Mountain#sb259-stomulet

 Time left:Jul 01, 2013 20:16:24 PDT

Code : sb259
Stone Name : Rainbow LekLai ( 7 colored Lek Lai )
Stone Type : Thai Amulet Stone
Weight : 19.8 grams
Dimension : 27 x 22 x 19 mm.(1.05"x0.85"x0.74")
Stone Quantity : 1 Pc (s)
Origin : Umklum Mountain in Umklum Mountain in Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand
Color : Multicolored

Go to this Item >> 19.8g Rainbow LekLai #sb259

SPA MASSAGE STONE-RARE BLACK FUSULINIDS FOSSIL


Code :sc499
Stone Name :Black Fusulinids polished for spa massage
Stone Type :Fossil
Age :315 to 250 million years ago
Weight :498 gram.
Dimension :108 x 73 x 40 mm.~(4.2"x2.8"x 1.5")
Stone Quantity :1 Pc (s)
Origin :Thailand
Color :Black
>>>See This item




Description: Fusulinids were small, marine organisms that were common inhabitants of the world's seas during the Pennsylvanian and Permian Periods, from about 315 to 250 million years ago. The earliest fusulinids occur in rocks deposited during the late Mississippian Period, more than 320 million years ago. Fusulinids became extinct during the mass extinction at the end of the Permian Period, about 250 million years ago.
Their shells resemble a grain of rice, with respect to both size and shape. Unlike multicellular animals, which accomplish basic life functions (such as locomotion, feeding, digestion, and reproduction) through a wide range of specialized cells, fusulinids and other single-celled organisms have to carry on these same functions within the confines of a single cell. As a result, the cell is highly complex.
These Pennsylvanian fusulinids belong to the genus Triticites, which gets its name from the Latin word for wheat. Triticites is a common fossil in Thailand rocks.
In fusulinids, this complexity is evident in the structure of the hard calcium carbonate shells, called tests. Internally, the tests, which are made up of calcium carbonate, are divided into a series of chambers. By studying living relatives of the fusulinids (a group called the foraminifera), scientists know that the tests were secreted by the protoplasm, the living material within the cell. As fusulinids grew, the test coiled around itself, adding chambers along its longitudinal axis.
 
This cutaway view of a fusulinid test shows the complex structure of these single-celled organisms. The prominent line on the outside of the text, the antetheca, was the growing surface, where new chambers were added (drawing by Roger B. Williams, KU Paleontological Institute).
The earliest fusulinids were minute, smaller than the head of a pin, and somewhat spherical in shape. During their 80 million years on earth, fusulinids evolved rapidly, typically becoming progressively longer and narrower. By the late Permian Period, some forms were over two inches long, an amazing size for a single-celled organism.
As fusulinids evolved, the internal test walls also became increasingly complex, with more ornate subdivisions of their internal chambers. Fusulinids look fairly similar from the outside. In order to identify them, scientists usually examine a cross section of the fossil test under a microscope.
 Cross section of the common fusulinid Triticites, showing the distinctive internal structure of its chambers (drawing by Al Kamb, KU Natural History Museum, Invertebrate Paleontology).
Because of their rapid evolution and their occurrence in the rocks from around the world, fusulinids are extremely useful in correlating the ages of sedimentary rocks from different parts of the earth. By matching the kinds of fusulinids contained within sedimentary rock formations, geologists can show that far-flung rock strata--as widely separated as Kansas and Russia--were deposited at approximately the same time.
By studying the rocks in which fusulinids are found, geologists can determine what kind of environment they lived in. Apparently, fusulinids preferred a clear-water, offshore environment and may have been reef dwellers. The mass extinction at the end of the Permian Period decimated the world's reefs and their occupants.
Stratigraphic Range: Upper Mississippian to Upper Permian.
Taxonomic Classification:Fusulinids belong to the Kingdom Protoctista, Phylum Protozoa, Order Foraminiferida, Suborder Fusulinina, Family Fusulinidae.
Sources
Buzas, Martin A., Douglass, Raymond C., and Smith, Charles C., 1987, Kingdom Protista; in, Fossil Invertebrates, R. S. Boardman, A. H. Cheetham, and A. J. Rowell, eds.: Boston, Blackwell Scientific Publications, p. 67-106.
Moore, Raymond C., Lalicker, Cecil G., and Fischer, Alfred G., 1952, Invertebrate Fossils: New York, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 766 p.
Williams, Roger B., 1975, Ancient Life Found in Kansas Rocks--An Introduction to Common Kansas Fossils: Kansas Geological Survey, Educational Series 1, 42 p.
Text by Liz Brosius, Kansas Geological Survey. Unless noted otherwise, illustrations by Jennifer Sims, Kansas Geological Survey; photographs by John Charlton, Kansas Geological Survey.