What is involved in "restoring" it?
Mike, you want to see what the asking price can be? Check this link: https://gspawn.com/matched-set-of-alaskan-mammoth-tusks/
This is a more realistic tusk for sale:
https://www.fossilrealm.com/collect...roducts/huge-mammoth-tusk-from-siberia-8-feet
First you let it dry for a year with hose clamps on it so it doesn't crack. Then you start to sand all the rotten stuff off while saving the dust. Next you hose it down with CA glue to seal it all up and stabilize it. Then you fill all the cracks with epoxy mixed with the ivory dust you saved. You add tints to the epoxy mixture so the colors match. you give it a final sanding all the way through the grits, and finish with paste wax. Takes about a year and a half. It's a piece of cake.
Awesome work Mark, I've always wondered if there's any other part that could be used for something, like teeth or rib bones?
I didn’t expect that. Beautiful. Is that a store? I would like to know a little bit about your store and work? What’s the Readers Digest version of restoring tusks.
Gorgeous!!
Ahh...I forgot about the mammoth tooth scales, I've been holding a set for about two years now waiting for the right folder. plus I'm a little nervous using it, so I keep putting it off.Yes, people use the teeth (molars) and the bones, mostly leg bones