Archive for May 31st, 2006

Alaska woolly mammoth ivory excavated for jewelry, scrimshaw

Alaska woolly mammoth ivory excavated for jewelry, scrimshaw
Pravda

In Anchorage’s downtown ivory shops, alongside whale baleen baskets and walrus tusk statuettes, are souvenirs made from the fossils of shaggy Ice Age beasts that died on the tundra thousands of years ago.

The bones, teeth and giant curving tusks of woolly mammoths can be found in abundance in Alaska, and the fossils of the elephant-like beasts are routinely, if not always legally, turned into jewelry and other curios.

As the warmer weather and round-the-clock daylight of summer draw tourists to Alaska, ivory shop owners anticipate the inevitable questions from visitors about mammoth ivory.

“Most people don’t even know about it until they come up here, and then they see it in the store and go, `Hmmm, mammoth ivory?”‘ said Barbara Lynd, owner of Alaska Arts and Ivory. A few customers have asked where they can go to see a live mammoth.

“They’re not really clued in to the fact that they’re extinct,” Lynd said.

The woolly mammoth died out more than 10,000 years ago, killed off either by humans or climate warming, according to the main theories debated by scientists.

At Lynd’s store, a piece of tusk in front of her cash register is engraved with an image of a herd of mammoths. She said the scrimshaw, as engraved ivory is called, will sell for about $4,500 (Ђ3,505). Necklaces of polished mammoth-ivory beads sell for $100 (Ђ78) to$400 (Ђ312).

Woolly mammoth ivory can legally be taken from private land with the owner’s consent, then sold and carved.

The removal of mammoth ivory from state or federal land is banned in Alaska. But with mammoth fossils spread over hundreds of thousands of square miles of sparsely populated land, law enforcement cannot protect them all.

And because mammoths are extinct, the ivory, unlike hundreds of other wildlife products, can be taken across nearly any border in the world without fees or permits, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Dale Guthrie, professor emeritus at the Institute of Arctic Biology in Fairbanks, said many scientists fear that trafficking in mammoth ivory could lead to the taking of even rarer fossils, and “we could lose the story of our past.” Researchers use the tusks to learn about mammoth growth rates, eating and drinking patterns and migration trends.

Alaska contains the largest caches of mammoth remains in the United States. Mammoth fossils, which look like large pieces of driftwood, are often exposed by shifting rivers and eroding coasts, reports AP.

O.Ch.

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3 Weeks After Shooting Jewelry Store Owner Works Again

3 Weeks After Shooting Jewelry Store Owner Works Again
KETV.com

OMAHA, Neb. — An Omaha jewelry storeowner who was shot in the head three weeks ago is now back to work.
Larry Gilinsky lost his left eye in the shooting, but he told KETV NewsWatch 7 that he’s not going to let it hold him back. Gilinsky is back doing what he said he loves — selling jewelry — at his Bergman’s Jewelry store near 94th and F streets.

“I just feel tremendously fortunate,” Gilinsky said.
Gilinsky was shot twice the afternoon of May 9. The bullets landed in his leg and his head.

Police identified the shooter from store surveillance cameras as Steven Berentson, 56. Gilinsky said his employee yelled as the suspect fled from the store.
“She screamed, ‘Larry, he’s got our rings,’ and I was here and I saw him run out the door and I foolishly chased after him,” Gilinsky said.
Gilinsky said he knows he should not have run outside after the robber, but he said it was instinct to try to figure out where the man was going.
“It’s a gut reaction. He was violating us. He was taking goods that belong to us,” Gilinsky said.
It was then, Gilinsky said, that the man pulled a gun and shot.
“I think I’ve been very fortunate. No hangover from the incident. No nightmares, no second thoughts,” Gilinsky said.
Gilinsky said he knows the shot to his head could have been fatal, but the bullet just took the sight in his left eye.
“How lucky is that? It’s incredible,” the grateful businessman said. “It’s a blip on our radar screen and go forward.”
Omaha police are still searching for Berentson. An arrest warrant has been issued. If you know where Berentson is, call Crime Stoppers at 402-444-STOP.

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