Jump to content

Adolf Peretti

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Draft:Adolf Peretti)
Adolf Peretti
Born1957 (age 66–67)
Switzerland
EducationDoctor of Philosophy[1]
Alma mater
Occupations
  • Gemologist
  • mineralogist
TitleCEO of GRS Gemresearch Swisslab[2]

Adolf Peretti (born 1957) is a Swiss gemologist, mineralogist, and collector of minerals, amber, and fossils.[3] He discovered the eponymously named mineral Perettiite-(Y) and the holotype specimen of the prehistoric amphibian species Yaksha perettii, making Peretti the only living person to have both an animal and a mineral named after him.[4] Perettiite is also the name of a mineral group comprising Perettiite-(Y) and Badakhshanite-(Y).[5]

Early life and education

[edit]

Adolf Peretti was born in Switzerland in 1957.[6] He and his twin brother were raised in Cazis and Chur, in Grisons.[4][7] Peretti began collecting minerals in his youth, accompanying his father on trips to mountains and rivers and using a small hammer to break stones. In the sixth grade, his teachers asked him to exhibit his collection of quartz from Calanda. In 1979, he was recognized by the Swiss Youth Research Foundation (SJf) for his work on minerals in the shist lustre of the Grisons.[3]

Peretti attended the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), where he was awarded the title Doctor of Sciences (Dr. sc. ETH Zurich).[8][9] His field research was focused on the areas of the Forno Glacier, Grisons, and the Muretto Pass, and he visited Puschlav and Valtellina Malenco (Italy) to study ore formations in serpentine minerals for his doctorate.[3] He received scholarships from the Swiss National Science Foundation in 1983 and 1985.[3]

Career

[edit]

Peretti is a gemologist, mineralogist, and researcher who collects amber and fossils.[10][11] He discovered the mineral Perettiite-(Y) in Momeik, Myanmar,[12] as well as the prehistoric amphibian species Yaksha perettii (which are named after him)[13] and two new species of lizards.[14] He and other scientists identified the new mineral pezzottaite[15] and corrected the crystal structure of painite and johachidolite.[16][17]

In 2023, he was the only living person to have both an animal and a mineral named after him.[4][18] Peretti was also involved discovery of the specimen of extinct lizard species Oculudentavis naga,[14] and was among the authors of the papers describing the lizard species Retinosaurus hkamtiensis and Electroscincus zedi.[19][20]

Peretti heads GRS laboratories, including GRS GemResearch Swisslab AG, GRS (Thailand) Co., Ltd., GRS Lab USA LLC, GRS Lab (Paris) SAS and GRS Lab (Hong Kong) Limited, private laboratories that specialize in determining the origins and treatment of gems and precious stones.[21] In 2020, he founded and continues to serve as director of the Dr Peretti Museum Foundation,[22] a nonprofit organization in Meggen that showcases Peretti's collection of approximately 2,000 fossils, gems, and minerals,[23][24] including the holotypes of the lizards Retinosaurus hkamtiensis,[19] Oculudentavis naga,[14] Electroscincus zedi,[20] and the amphibian Yaksha perettii, (all of which originate from amber found in northern Myanmar, all except Retinosaurus being from Burmese amber)[13] and minerals such as pezzottaite,[15] painite,[16] johachidolite,[17] and Perettiite-(Y).[25]

Research on Burmese amber has attracted controversy due to the involvement of the Burmese army and (historically) armed rebel groups like the Kachin Independence Army in its procurement. Peretti has defended collecting Burmese amber in contrast to groups like the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology who have called for a partial moratorium on research on amber collected after 2017 (when the Burmese army took control of the area containing the amber mines), arguing that the amber production collapsed after the Burmese army took over the area, the profits obtained by the Burmese army and rebel groups from amber are limited, and that restrictions only hurt the local miners.[26]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Curry, Claire. "Ancient History". Villanova Magazine.
  2. ^ "Dr. A. Peretti". GemResearch Swisslab.
  3. ^ a b c d "Peretti findet Perettiite" (PDF). Bündner Tagblatt. 4 September 2015. pp. 1, 7.
  4. ^ a b c Reich, Julian (2023). "Sein Name Wird Bleiben: Der Geologe und Gemmologe Adolf Peretti" [His Name Will Remain: The Geologist and Gemologist Adolf Peretti]. Terra Grischuna (in German): 13–17.
  5. ^ Pautov, Leonid A.; Mirakov, Mirak A.; Cámara, Fernando; Sokolova, Elena; Hawthorne, Frank C.; Schodibekov, Manuchekhr A.; Yu. Karpenko, Vladimir (May 2020). "Badakhshanite-(Y), Y2Mn4Al(Si2B7BeO24), a new mineral species of the perettiite group from a granite miarolic pegmatite in Eastern Pamir, the Gorno Badakhshan Autonomous Oblast, Tajikistan". The Canadian Mineralogist. 58 (3): 381–394. Bibcode:2020CaMin..58..381P. doi:10.3749/canmin.2000003.
  6. ^ Belakovskiy, Dmitriy I.; Cámara, Fernando (31 July 2016). "New Mineral Names". American Mineralogist. 101 (8). doi:10.2138/am-2016-NMN101815.
  7. ^ "Bündner ersteigert 68 Millionen Jahre alten T-Rex-Zahn". Die Südostschweiz. Südostschweiz Mediengruppe. 20 April 2023. ISSN 1424-7518. OCLC 806845559.
  8. ^ "Peretti, A. (1983): Geologie und Petrographie der Fornoserie. Piz dei Rossi. Unpublished diploma thesis ETH Zürich. Erdwissenschaftliche Sammlung, ETH Zurich, Naturwissenschaften, Gesteine, BS Dipl. Peretti, Adi, 1983, Belegsammlung – Diplomarbeit, NO-B44-72-03:06 and NO-B44-72-03:06".
  9. ^ "Peretti, A. (1988): Occurrence and Stabilities of Opaque Minerals in the Malenco Serpentinite (Sondrio, Italy), PhD thesis, No. 8740, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland".
  10. ^ Greshko, Michael (13 August 2020). "The smallest known dinosaur is actually a peculiar ancient lizard". National Geographic.
  11. ^ Estermann, Florian (21 April 2023). "Meggen: ein Blick in ein Land vor unserer Zeit". Pilatus Today.
  12. ^ "ADLIGENSWIL: Luzerner Firma identifiziert neues Mineral". Luzerner Zeitung. 19 August 2015. ISSN 1421-7430. OCLC 605736113.
  13. ^ a b "Briefings". American Scientist. 109 (1). Sigma Xi. January–February 2021. ISSN 0003-0996.
  14. ^ a b c Oculudentavis naga:
  15. ^ a b Pezzottaite:
  16. ^ a b Armbruster, Thomas; Döbelin, Nicola; Peretti, Adolf; Günther, Detlef; Reusser, Eric; Grobéty, Bernard (2004). "The crystal structure of painite CaZrB[Al9O18] revisited" (PDF). American Mineralogist. 89 (4): 610–613. Bibcode:2004AmMin..89..610A. doi:10.2138/am-2004-0415. OCLC 01480430. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016.
  17. ^ a b Johachidolite:
  18. ^ "In der Schatzkammer des Dr. Peretti". Die Südostschweiz. 19 April 2023.
  19. ^ a b Čerňanský, Andrej; Stanley, Edward L.; Daza, Juan D.; Bolet, Arnau; Arias, J. Salvador; Bauer, Aaron M.; Vidal-García, Marta; Bevitt, Joseph J.; Peretti, Adolf M.; Aung, Nyi Nyi; Evans, Susan E. (2022). "A new Early Cretaceous lizard in Myanmar amber with exceptionally preserved integument". Scientific Reports. 12 (1): 1660. Bibcode:2022NatSR..12.1660C. doi:10.1038/s41598-022-05735-5. PMC 8803969. PMID 35102237.
  20. ^ a b Daza, Juan D.; Stanley, Edward L.; Heinicke, Matthew P.; Leah, Chuck; Doucet, Daniel S.; Fenner, Kelsey L.; Arias, J. Salvador; Smith, Ru D. A.; Peretti, Adolf M.; Aung, Nyi Nyi; Bauer, Aaron M. (2024). "Compound osteoderms preserved in amber reveal the oldest known skink". Scientific Reports. 14 (1): 15662. Bibcode:2024NatSR..1415662D. doi:10.1038/s41598-024-66451-w. OCLC 732869387. PMC 11231356. PMID 38977836.
  21. ^ Joel, Lucas (11 March 2020). "Some Paleontologists Seek Halt to Myanmar Amber Fossil Research". The New York Times.
  22. ^ Daza, Juan D.; Stanley, Edward L.; Bolet, Arnau; Bauer, Aaron M.; Arias, J. Salvador; Čerňanský, Andrej; Bevitt, Joseph J.; Wagner, Philipp; Evans, Susan E. (6 November 2020). "Enigmatic amphibians in mid-Cretaceous amber were chameleon-like ballistic feeders". Science. 370 (6517): 687–691. Bibcode:2020Sci...370..687D. doi:10.1126/science.abb6005. PMID 33154135.
  23. ^ "This tiny amphibian that outlived the dinosaurs provides the earliest example of a rapid-fire tongue". The Conversation. 5 November 2020. ISSN 2201-5639.
  24. ^ Stockton, Carol M. (2020). "Peretti Museum Foundation". The Journal of Gemmology. 37 (4): 343. doi:10.15506/JoG.2020.37.4.343.
  25. ^ van Hoose, Natalie (5 November 2020). "Earliest example of a rapid-fire tongue found in 'weird and wonderful' extinct amphibians". Florida Museum of Natural History.
  26. ^ Peretti, Adolf (December 2021). "An alternative perspective for acquisitions of amber from Myanmar including recommendations of the United Nations Human Rights Council". Journal of International Humanitarian Action. 6 (1): 12. doi:10.1186/s41018-021-00101-y. ISSN 2364-3412. S2CID 235174183.
[edit]