ivory bones - meaning and definition. What is ivory bones
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What (who) is ivory bones - definition

CARVING OF ANIMAL TOOTH OR TUSK BY USING SHARP CUTTING TOOLS
Ivory Carving; Ivory carvings; Carved ivory; Ivory sculpture; African Ivories
  • Casket, ivory and silver, Muslim Spain, 966
  • [[Chinese puzzle ball]] with openwork and a series of twelve smaller balls, ivory, 19th century
  • Anglo-Saxon]] ivory cross reliquary of [[walrus]] ivory
  • The [[throne of Maximianus]], c. 550, made in [[Constantinople]]
  • full images]]</ref>}}
  • Idol of Goddess Durga carved out of Ivory from 19th Century - Displayed in Murshidabad Museum, India
  • [[Benin ivory mask]], 16th century
  • Meiji period]]. [[Khalili Collection of Japanese Art]].
  • Islamic Spain]], 968
  • [[Romanos Ivory]] on display at the [[Cabinet des Médailles]] of the [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]] in Paris
  • ''[[Siege of the Castle of Love]]'' on a mirror case, Paris, 1325–1350
  • [[Indian art]] found its way into [[Pompeii]], within the context of [[Indo-Roman trade]]: in 1938 the ivory [[Pompeii Lakshmi]] was found in the ruins of Pompeii.
  • Ivory headrest of [[Tutankhamun]], 1330s BC
  • The [[Venus of Brassempouy]], about 25,000 BP

Ivory (color)         
  • Ivory-colored ''[[Cymbidium]]'' orchid
  • Ivory gull
OFF-WHITE COLOR THAT RESEMBLES IVORY
Ivory (colour)
Ivory is an off-white color named after, and derived from, the material made from the tusks and teeth of certain animals, such as the elephant and the walrus. It has a very slight tint of yellow.
fossil ivory         
  • Cylindrical ivory casket, Siculo-Arabic, [[Hunt Museum]].
  • An elaborately carved ivory tusk in [[Sa'dabad Palace]], Iran
  • An ivory [[tabernacle]] featuring the Madonna of Caress, France
  • 1900}}
  • A depiction of the [[Blessed Virgin Mary]] and the [[Child Jesus]] crafted in elephant ivory
MATERIAL DERIVED FROM THE TUSKS AND TEETH OF ANIMALS
Elephant and mammoth ivory; Elephant and Mammoth ivory; Elfenbein; Mammoth ivory; Ivory board; Elephant & mammoth ivory; Elephant ivory; List of animals that produce ivory; Fossil ivory; Synthetic ivory
¦ noun ivory from the tusks of a mammoth.
Ivory         
  • Cylindrical ivory casket, Siculo-Arabic, [[Hunt Museum]].
  • An elaborately carved ivory tusk in [[Sa'dabad Palace]], Iran
  • An ivory [[tabernacle]] featuring the Madonna of Caress, France
  • 1900}}
  • A depiction of the [[Blessed Virgin Mary]] and the [[Child Jesus]] crafted in elephant ivory
MATERIAL DERIVED FROM THE TUSKS AND TEETH OF ANIMALS
Elephant and mammoth ivory; Elephant and Mammoth ivory; Elfenbein; Mammoth ivory; Ivory board; Elephant & mammoth ivory; Elephant ivory; List of animals that produce ivory; Fossil ivory; Synthetic ivory
·noun Any carving executed in ivory.
II. Ivory ·noun Teeth; as, to show one's ivories.
III. Ivory ·noun The tusks themselves of the elephant, ·etc.
IV. Ivory ·noun The hard, white, opaque, fine-grained substance constituting the tusks of the elephant. It is a variety of dentine, characterized by the minuteness and close arrangement of the tubes, as also by their double flexure. It is used in manufacturing articles of ornament or utility.

Wikipedia

Ivory carving

Ivory carving is the carving of ivory, that is to say animal tooth or tusk, generally by using sharp cutting tools, either mechanically or manually. Objects carved in ivory are often called "ivories".

Humans have ornamentally carved ivory since prehistoric times, though until the 19th-century opening-up of the interior of Africa, it was usually a rare and expensive material used for small luxury products. Very fine detail can be achieved, and as the material, unlike precious metals, has no bullion value and usually cannot easily be recycled, the survival rate for ivory pieces is much higher than for those in other materials. Ivory carving has a special importance to the medieval art of Europe because of this, and in particular for Byzantine art as so little monumental sculpture was produced or has survived.

As the elephant and other ivory-producing species have become endangered, largely because of hunting for ivory, CITES and national legislation in most countries have reduced the modern production of carved ivory.