If one look outside the typical poultry world and more into other forms of poultry there are a ton of types of grits and grit mixes.
Now the pigeon world has grit down to a fine science and more and more chicken breeders are using pigeon grit because it's so much better than the typical granite grit. Here is one grit mix that's for pigeons in the breeding season.
Redstone, Granite, Charcoal, Oyster Shells, Sea Shells, Anise Oil, Zinc Oxide, Manganese Oxide, Ferrous Carbonate, Copper Oxide, Iron Oxide, Calcium Iodate, Cobalt Carbonate etc.
edited to correct error about RonP:
Fascinating. I had no idea. I wonder what the pigeon world has on chickens? I also think it was from @RonP that I first learned there is such thing as insoluble grit. Different terms for the same thing, from folks from different regions.
Not being from the South (southeastern USA), I was once told by someone who had traveled there that generally, if you go to a restaurant and ask for a "Coke", the waitperson will ask you, "What kind?" Meaning, do you want a 7-Up, Orange Crush, Pepsi, Coca Cola, etc. Where I'm from, the waitperson would ask no questions and just bring you a Coca Cola.
Back to calcium and eggshells...I notice if we feed our chickens only crushed eggshells (chunks much larger than crushed oyster shell) plus their non-layer feed, the resulting eggshells are thinner. Thinner than if I feed only the oyster shells. No broken eggs or anything like that, but I'd like the shells to be a bit stronger, just as a preventative against broken eggs. My guess is because the crushed eggshells are so brittle, they get pulverized into a finer mash in the gizzard and being then a much smaller particle size, the calcium in them is not absorbed as well. I like to recycle the eggshells, so I think I may just start mixing the oyster and eggshells together.
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