The first two on the top row are a Washita and an old Turkish; would be good for SRs (I assume this is 'straight razor'?) but perhaps not as finishers, ditto an unpictured old Norton hard/trans I have. The 7th stone on the top row is a Maruoyama Shiro Suita that would probably be good if worked without too much slurry. The coticule for sure. And also the 4th stone on the top row is a very dense slate type stone, I think probably a Thuringian, which is very fine but also surprisingly quick - that'd be great for them too.
Got any closer pictures of your possible turkey stone or thuringian - folks here can help confirm/deny. Especially sides and saw marks on the thuri. Your turkey stone looks more like a black ark in that pic but it is not very focused.
Washitas are not great razors stones….but they can be used for early stage work. My opinion is that they don’t make the best bevel. Your hard/trans however, tend to be excellent razor finishers. Turkey stones are also navaculite like arks and some can be razor stones while others maybe more suited for knives.
As you know, knives and razors are just different beasts on stones. Pressures, steels, angles, methods etc etc. What’s good for razors is not always great for knives and vice versa. I have coticules I use with knives that are rubbish with razors and my best razor coticules would be poor choice for knives. My knife cotis are not good for all my knives either, they just don’t perform well with much hardness. But the right carbon steel knife on a coticule can make a crazy sharp knife for sure and quickly. I don’t want to get on a knife tangent as this is the wrong place for that, but want to reiterate that razor-stone info does not completely equate to knife-stone work.
That said, if you are here for stones then you might want to check out Henk Boz “Griniding and Honing” - good stuff.