Tony_Wood wrote:Ivoryman wrote:Carving a few faces on these Walrus teeth. Thought I'd throw a knife in there so I could post it.
That piece at the bottom of the last pic...chocolate creme....very nice.
Thanks Tony. They get these out of Eskimo Middens, garbage dumps, they had so much ivory in tusks they threw the teeth away. Now they dig them up and they are weathered, stained, mineralized for hundreds or thousands of years and hence the color. The longer they were burried in soil, the deeper the color goes through. Some are colored brown or black all the way through. That usually takes thousands of years. A shallow surface color, or color that only goes in a little way is much younger usually. Burrial conditions and soil composition obviously has some to do with it too, but time mostly.
"It's what people know about themselves inside that makes them afraid." -No Name, High Plains Drifter