Featured Kudos to anyone who knows what this is made from!

Discussion in 'Jewelry' started by spartcom5, Sep 27, 2022.

  1. spartcom5

    spartcom5 Well-Known Member

    I have had this pendant for a couple of years now and have never known what it was. However, while at an antique store I stumbled into another similar piece and it was revealed to me what it was! My pendant is wrapped in 10k gold. Does anyone want to guess what it might be?

    20220926_224623.jpg 20220926_224630.jpg
     
  2. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    some animals tusk..?
     
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  3. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    What komo said, or claw or horn. Something organic rather than mineral.
     
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  4. Lacto

    Lacto Member

    A plectrum ... or maybe an ancient burnishing tool? In the past I have used a bone burnisher when assembling a stained glass panel.
     
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  5. antidiem

    antidiem Well-Known Member

    Is it a filed down and polished animal tooth?
     
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  6. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Despite the colors, I'm hoping it's not tortoise shell.
     
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  7. Happy!

    Happy! Well-Known Member

    Tortoise or turtle?
     
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  8. kyratango

    kyratango Bug jewellery addiction!

    Agree with organic:cyclops:
    A big bird’s beak?
    Ostrich nail?
     
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  9. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    Mookaite jasper?

    If not, can we have a little more information please? Is it cool to the touch? Any hint as to vintage? - things you could tell about it before you were told what it is.
     
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  10. Lacto

    Lacto Member

    Bezoar stone!? :jawdrop:
     
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  11. terry5732

    terry5732 Well-Known Member

  12. Frank

    Frank Well-Known Member

    I'll go against the grain, as I don't think it's shell, tooth, or tusk. But, it doesn't look like a mineral. Just a wild guess, but it looks like something solidified by heat, a by-product of some process or other.

    But heck, what do I know?
     
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  13. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

  14. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Not ambergris for certain. Something organic though. Not amber. Fossil of some sort?
     
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  15. spartcom5

    spartcom5 Well-Known Member

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  16. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    well, that's pretty much a tusk...then
    but I have my reservations...

    AND.... how would you add any more age to a fossil ?
     
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  17. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    I considered fossilized walrus ivory, but it doesn't look quite right to me. The center of your piece looks simply pitted, rather than the characteristic crystalline appearance of walrus ivory.
     
  18. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    I have the same reservation.

    Walrus_bobcat_A.jpg

    I know it is the term used, but I also have reservations about calling material like this 'fossilized', as to me that means once living tissue has been replaced by minerals or left an impression in a soft material that became hard over time. Fossils are rock. Material like this has been preserved by natural processes involving some combination of cold, dryness, protection from oxidation & exposure to a natural preservative, such as tannin. To my way of thinking, if you can recover DNA from it, it ain't fossilized.
     
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  19. all_fakes

    all_fakes Well-Known Member

    I have that same feeling also. Possibly if it were sliced so as to show almost none of the center, which has often been described as looking rather like oatmeal. But the normal slice for any walrus ivory is straight across, and shows a lot of that crystalline-looking center part, which as several have noted, yours does not.
    Looks to me more like some other type of "fossilized" ivory, such as mastodon - which is in itself a double misnomer, as that material is neither mastodon nor truly fossilized - it is usually just very old wooly mammoth ivory.
    But what do I know.....
     
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