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EXPENSIVE IVORY.

SALES AT £2OOO 2V TON.

CEMETERIES IN THE JUNGLE.

A two days’ sale of ivory was held in the London Commercial Sale, Rooms, Mincing Lane, recently. Men had travelled from all parts of Europe and America, to purchase the ivory,, which had been brought from the tropical jungles of East Africa and the Congo. There were 381’2 tons of it to be sold, and the prices realised averaged about £2OOO a ton. Not a single piece of ivory, however, was seen in the rooms. The entire cargo lay packed in the docks, where it had been on view for days befoichand—the great tusks, which measure 9ft. or more in length, in canvas, and the smaller “points,” for. billiard balls, which come from the female elephant, in small cases.

There were, in addition to the elephant tusks, rhinoceros horns, narwhal horns, seahorses’ teeth, and boars’ tusks, all to be sold. The buyers watched the offering of the lots with unfailing care. Each man knew whether the particular kind of ivory was suitable for the articles he had to manufacture, which ranged from the backs of their liair brushes to bead necklaces.

Prices were good, and slightly above those realised at previous sales. Billiard ball points realised £133 the hundredweight, and solid tusks £lO3. Bidding for seahorses’ teeth was not so brisk.

An interested spectator stood in one corner of the sale rooms, where he had attended these ivory sales for the past 42 years. He was Mr Smith, a representative of the firm of importers who were selling the ivory. “The supply and demand or ivory has been firm for the past 40 years. ’ said Mr Smith.

“ One must not think that these tusks being sold are the result of the wholesale slaughter of wild beasts. The natives organise expeditions to wander through the jungle until they find, elephant cemeteries. These are places, where elephants, roaming in search of food and water, have died.

“ The discovery of a cemetery means a good haul of ivory. The tusks remain sound and good, except in damp or swampy regions, for many years after the death of the elephant.”

Experts themselves find it hard to tell the difference between soft and hard ivory, but usually East Africa produces soft ivory and the west coast hard. The natives used, at one time, to attempt to increase the weight of the tusks by filling them with stones and sand, but so often was the trick discovered that they have patiently stopped resorting to it.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HPGAZ19270523.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 5129, 23 May 1927, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
420

EXPENSIVE IVORY. Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 5129, 23 May 1927, Page 1

EXPENSIVE IVORY. Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 5129, 23 May 1927, Page 1

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