Misena
near Sala not far from Aldenberg and also below the fortress of
Motestha; on Gargano a mountain of Apulia; and in Taphiusa near
Leu-cadia, Cyprus. They are also found in Arabia, India and Africa.
They are usually found when torrents, due to heavy steady rains, wash
away the earth. The name aetites comes either from the
similarity of color to that of the eagle with a white tail, as Pliny
believes, or because it is found in the nest of eagles for it is found
built into the nests of four kinds of eagles according to Pliny. It is
either white, as that from Taphiusa; the color of a gall-nut or light
red as some from Arabia; or a very dark red as that from Misena which
is found near Aldenberg. The material from Apulia shows a variety of
colors being whitish, yellowish, light reddish brown and of more than
one color, for example, part yellow, part a dark color. The Hildesheim
material may be stained with ochre and that from Misena smells like
violets because of the moss which adheres to it. When this moss is
removed the odor disappears. This is not the only material which smells
so agreeably for the rocks found in fragments in Calenberg near
Aldenberg and the flint on Mt. Berninger on the border of Misena and
Bohemia may sometimes have just as pleasant an odor. Although commonly
round, the material from near Sala, Misena, is irregular. That from
Arabia is disk shaped as is some from near Aldenberg, Misena. Some are
angular but these are rarer. Aetites varies more in size than
in shape. It may be the size of Armenian, Persian, Phoenician or Nile
apples. The African material is very small, that from Cyprus larger
while the Motestha mineral is the largest. The Arabian, whitish Apulian
and the Misenian mineral which they call "male" is hard, the Cyprian
and African material they call "female" is soft and friable. Much of
the Apulian material is smooth while that found in Misena near Sala is
rough. In the concave interior, just as in the stomach, one finds
earth, sand or stone. Only those that contain earth are called gaeodes. This
earth is either white as in the African stones, of a pale shade as in
those stones found near Aldenberg, Misena, or yellow as in those from
Hildesheim. Sand is found in some of our stones and in those from
Apulia and Cyprus. When they contain stones they either contain one as
those from Taphiusa and Arabia or a number as those from Cyprus and
Apulia. All of these contain small free and loose grains and when the aetites is
shaken vigorously they make a noise. However the material from Sala,
Misena, Motescha and Hildesheim has these grains attached to the walls
and so gives no sound when shaken. The material found in the mountains
near Sala has grains adhering to the inside wall that are small and
white and sparkle like quartz while the grains in the material from
Motescha are of different colors and similar to gems although soft.
The very small pebbles in the Hildesheim material are stained with
ochre. Among the filled aetites certain ones have both earth and small stones together in the center, as those from Hildesheim. Aetites from Cyprus has both sand and small stones and perhaps some have earth and