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elephant tusk: differences?
19 December 2007, 03:17
Marioelephant tusk: differences?
I'm writing an article in my magazine "CACCIARE A PALLA" about the possibilities of taking big tuskers today and specially where. Ther'is a question that is not clear for me: what's differences the'are between the tusks of the elephants in east and in southern africa?
It's correct that the southern ivory is stronger ans shorter?
mario
19 December 2007, 03:57
ivan cartermario,
volumetrically the ivory from the botswana gene pool, southern zimbabwe and eastern namibia is denser i.e. weighs more per volume ...and yes , generally is shorter thicker ivory ..
today the longest ivory (on the whole) comes from tanzania , and thats also genetic ...longer thinner tusks coming from smaller bodied elephants ...
then the zambezi valley ivory is somewhere in between ..
19 December 2007, 04:17
Willquote:
volumetrically the ivory from the botswana gene pool, southern zimbabwe and eastern namibia is denser i.e. weighs more per volume ...and yes , generally is shorter thicker ivory ..
It that reaaly true? I am somewhat skeptical that you guys drop a tusk in a bucket of water to measure its volume. They indeed look like greater density but I suppose that is because they are heavy but stumpy.
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19 December 2007, 04:55
ivan carterbill , i have done exactly that , like you , i was sceptical , so we rigged a big blue plastic drum (actually the one i use for baiting) and i have , over the years managed to measure this on about 20 different tusks , all from all ages of bulls , what i found was that actually the older bulls seem to have slightly denser ivory , but certainly the hwange/bots ivory is a bit heavier ... interesting stuff ..
actually a good buddy of mkine has a client who wants to shoot 100 elephant , they are measureing the tusk length and thickness and weight of each animal , as well as front and back foot , and also recording the ages ..
it will be interesting what they find , they basically are just hunting zim though ...
nothing that hasnt already been measured i am sure however those records are hard to get ones hands on ...
19 December 2007, 05:06
ShowbartAnd aren't the biggest still in N. Kenya? Too bad.
19 December 2007, 06:48
ivan cartershowbart , i think you are right as far as length goes , but as far as weight , i think the kruger genetics still win on that one and there are remnannts of that genetics (the kruger), though now not joined, in northern mozambique
19 December 2007, 13:50
ShangaanMario, just out of interest, what is seen as a big tusker? I know 100+ lb is Mecca but realistically when an article is written about chances of getting a big tusker, whats the ball park most folk will think of.
19 December 2007, 17:56
JTHuntI was told by one of the top Tanzanian outfitters that when he was a youngster and hunting Kenya and Tanzania, he and his father eventually carved two identical cubes of ivory, an inch x an inch x an inch. One cube was taken from a NFD, Kenya bull, and the other from a Selous game reserve bull. He told me that the Selous cube weighed 19% less than that of the Northern kenya bull, giving credence to the density theory.
Having hunted both Zim and Selous elephant in some quantities - the above story rings very true to me.
20 December 2007, 00:45
GraftonSorry for hyjacking this thread, but could any of you give me a weight estimate on the ivory of this Kruger bull I photographed in 2005? Thanks.
20 December 2007, 01:58
MarioIvan very interesting to know that the southern ivory is denser, a real surprise for me.
Shangaan, you have reason. Today a 100 pouder is a "chimera". I think as big tusker nowadays can be seen an elephant over 60 pound.
mario