How Big Are Mammoth Ivory Tusks Actually?
The extinct woolly mammoth of the Alaskan and Siberian areas have long been gone. Gone for at least 10,000 years now, but their very well preserved remains have started currently a huge trade and collector’s market of the captivating artworks of mammoth ivory. Due to the cold and iced over areas where the woolly mammoth is known to have roamed, continues to be excavated for ivory to be hand crafted into a numerous variety of useful and artistically collectibles, alike. With every one ton to two tons, the yearly rounds of legal excavated mammoth ivory, there is currently a good size of amounts to go around, if you have the money to fork out for your purchasing. Although these yearly harvest collections don’t include the archaeological woolly mammoth excavations specifically for educational studies, the sizes of harvests are so far, quite good, but still very expensive within the overall excavation costs. Just as anything else, the prices do trickle down the exclusively trained hand-craf