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  2. 'Antiques Roadshow:' See a whale tooth worth more than $150K

    www.aol.com/news/2015-04-28-antiques-roadshow...

    Now, sperm whales are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act. So, in order to sell the animal's tooth, it must be over 100 years old, and the owner has to know where it's been since the ...

  3. Scrimshaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrimshaw

    Scrimshaw is scrollwork, engravings, and carvings done in bone or ivory. Typically it refers to the artwork created by whalers , engraved on the byproducts of whales, such as bones or cartilage. It is most commonly made out of the bones and teeth of sperm whales , the baleen of other whales , and the tusks of walruses .

  4. Folk art of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folk_art_of_the_United_States

    Whale bone was easy to carve into, and was plentiful as it was generally not a product that was taken back and sold the way whale oil and meat was. Whalers generally had lots of free time in between whale sightings, so scrimshaw carving was one creative pursuit they found to fill that time. It was most commonly done by New England whalers. [27]

  5. Bone carving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_carving

    The Anglo-Saxon Franks Casket is a whale bone casket imitating earlier ivory ones. [4] Medieval bone caskets were made by the Embriachi workshop of north Italy (c. 1375 –1425) and others, mostly using rows of thin plaques carved in relief. [5] A face carved on a piece of curved bone. The face is framed by hair and part of a winged head-dress ...

  6. Charles W. Morgan (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_W._Morgan_(ship)

    Charles W. Morgan 2022 in Mystic. Charles W. Morgan (often referred to simply as "the Morgan") was a whaling ship named for owner Charles Waln Morgan (1796–1861). He was a Philadelphian by birth; he moved to New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1818 and invested in several whalers over his career. [8]

  7. Sperm whale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sperm_whale

    Scrimshaw was the art of engraving on the teeth of sperm whales. It was a way for whalers to pass the time between hunts. The sperm whale's ivory-like teeth were often sought by 18th- and 19th-century whalers, who used them to produce inked carvings known as scrimshaw. 30 teeth of the sperm whale can be used for ivory. Each of these teeth, up ...

  8. Tabua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabua

    Tooth of a sperm whale. A tabua (Fijian:) is a polished tooth of a sperm whale that is an important cultural item in Fijian society. They were traditionally given as gifts for atonement or esteem (called sevusevu), and were important in negotiations between rival chiefs.

  9. Netsuke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netsuke

    Baleen: the sperm whale has teeth running the whole length of its enormous lower jaw. Those in the middle tend to be the largest, often obtaining a length of more than six to eight inches. These larger ones are often used by carvers of scrimshaw. Whale's bone: all bones are hollow, the cavity being filled with a spongy material. Cuts across ...