enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ivory trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivory_trade

    Ivory trade in Ghana, 1690. Elephant ivory has been exported from Africa and Asia for millennia with records going back to the 14th century BCE.Transport of the heavy commodity was always difficult, and with the establishment of the early-modern slave trades from East and West Africa, freshly captured slaves were used to carry the heavy tusks to the ports where both the tusks and their ...

  3. The Multifaceted Role of Elephant Tusks: Tools, Weapons, and ...

    www.aol.com/multifaceted-role-elephant-tusks...

    While the sale of ivory products was banned in 2017, the rising young and wealthy generation recognizes the appeal of ivory as a status symbol. Can An Elephant Survive Having Its Tusks Removed?

  4. Ivory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivory

    11th-century Italian carved elephant tusk, Louvre. Cylindrical ivory casket, Siculo-Arabic, Hunt Museum. Ivory is a hard, white material from the tusks (traditionally from elephants) and teeth of animals, that consists mainly of dentine, one of the physical structures of teeth and tusks.

  5. Ivory carving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivory_carving

    Ivory from Africa came from one of two types of elephant in Africa; the more desirable bush elephant with larger and heavier tusks or the forest elephant with smaller and straighter tusks. [32] Ivory tusks as well as ivory objects such as carved masks, salt cellars, oliphants and other emblems of importance have been traded and used as gifts ...

  6. African ivories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kongo_ivories

    Ivory from Africa came from one of two types of elephant in Africa; the more desirable bush elephant with larger and heavier tusks or the forest elephant with smaller and straighter tusks. [2] Ivory tusks as well as ivory objects such as carved masks, salt cellars, oliphants and other emblems of importance have been traded and used as gifts and ...

  7. Conservation and restoration of ivory objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation_and...

    Elephant and mammoth ivory comes from the two modified upper incisors. Tusks of some male African elephants can grow up to 2 meters (6 ½ feet) and weigh up to 45 kilograms (100 pounds). The tusks have a pulp cavity where the root and soft tissues attach to the jaw and that extends for approximately one-third of the tusk.

  8. How Heavy Poaching Has Led to Tuskless Elephants - AOL

    www.aol.com/heavy-poaching-led-tuskless...

    Tusks are continuously growing incisors. Typically, adult elephant teeth comprise 12 premolars, 12 molars, and two tusks. These twin teeth are composed of four layers, the outermost being the enamel.

  9. DNA testing of elephant ivory reveals tactics of criminal ...

    www.aol.com/dna-testing-elephant-ivory-reveals...

    The illegal ivory trade, along with habitat loss, climate change and other factors, has destroyed the two elephant species in Africa. Tusks from a seizure in Malaysia in 2012 (Malaysia Department ...