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Native Made in USA
Genus and species: Odobenus rosmarus. Wild.

Each gallery item is unique. You get the exact gallery item shown when you order this item.

Seal Claw with Carving

Artist: Unknown

Community: Savoonga, St. Lawrence Island, Alaska

Length: 3.25"

Weight: 11 grams.

Materials: Bearded seal claw with walrus tooth carving and baleen divider and eyes.

Gallery Item
Theme:
Trading Post
Indigenous Made Items:
Indigenous Made
North American Aboriginals:
Yup'ik
Please read the Note about Stock Types
Price: $320.89 for this gallery item
    Order Code: 1000-G11-B (Y3K)
    Availability: In Stock
    Usually ships In 1 to 5 business days
    Availability Note: If we are Out of Stock or do not have enough of an item, please call or email us to confirm! Online quantities do not include merchandise that just arrived or may be enroute. If currently not available, we can also add you to our wish list to be notified when available.

    Quantity:

    These carvings were purchased by Paul Crosby directly from Yup'ik carvers in the Alaskan village of Savoonga on St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea during February 2007.

    All of the carvings are made from fresh walrus ivory that was taken from subsistence hunting activities. Many have eyes or trim using baleen and are often set on fossilized walrus ivory bases. Savoonga is known as the "Walrus Capital of the World." The walrus are hunted for meat--a number of the carvers had just returned from a successful walrus hunt on the day I was buying carvings. The tusks are carved to supplement the income of the hunters. The villagers also hunt whales for the meat. Many of the carvings have baleen eyes or trim used in them.

    It is legal for the Eskimo in Alaska to carve ivory and use other marine mammal parts so long as there is a significant transformation of the item. It is illegal for non-Natives to own the raw, unworked ivory tusks or other marine mammal parts.

    The carvings cannot be shipped outside of the United States under any circumstances because of prohibitions under the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act.