"Following the herd to the Arctic as of 9 July, 2009" Off to the field and villages of the 'Chuckchi and Bering.' Will be back to the studio carving again for my good clients with more photos and experiences of camping on the trails of the ancient Mammoth" Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Monday, June 15, 2009
"Out of a eroded subterranean house of the "Thule" Eskimo." "Age of nine hundred years.""Walrus Ivory and a child's toy" "The story that it may hold, as a toy handed down from generation to generation until left behind, perhaps as the family moved on to another area for a different game quest, different season for caribou, instead of seal along the beach. While the family was out the house collapsed during a powerful Siberian storm front and all of it's contents buried and never recovered. Centuries later the storms found their way again to the old house along the beach and eroded it's foundations of whale bone and driftwood. The doll was found...
Sunday, June 14, 2009
"Ancient Hunter's Tent Foundation Stones" Not an uncommon site used by ancient nomads of the Arctic, evident of a group constantly on the move. The proximity of the dwelling to the sea is within view yet far enough away to maintain a stealthy position. The white objects are marine mammal bones left at this site and although this is an ancient site, both bones and ivories have a lengthy longevity due to the temperatures and angle of the sun. I have discovered a partially buried child's wood bow far out from the beach on the tundra and in good shape even after perhaps hundreds of years lost there...
"Pleistocene Mammoths" The big bulls often supported sixteen foot long tusks from the base of the tusk to the tip. The weight of such tusks, tipped the scales at two hundred pounds and some tusks are still white in color after thousands of years in frozen sand. If bones and ivory are deposited in a dark humus soil rich in a soup of vegetable detritus then staining occurs, however the river sand deposits are lacking much in the way of coloring agents as the ivory slowly and permanently freezes...
"Arctic Alaska Tundra Permafrost melting into the Sea" "Global Warming" although rather controversial, there is and has been permafrost dissipation that does expose frozen land mass to reveal a 'time machine' of sorts by the fossils it contains and releases into a river, or in this case, the Beaufort Sea. The 'slick' looking surface of the displaced mass is frozen land and will eventually thaw away into the beach. Often times a mammoth's tusk will be broken in half as the permafrost land mass calves off the parent tundra. Many occasions I have discovered tusks still frozen in permafrost with a section snapped off...
Saturday, June 13, 2009
"Out of Place" A Tree branch or a whale bone from an ancient dwelling on the river, or perhaps an old grave marker. Curious to look closer and discover why a piece of wood stands out so dramatically on a tundra where there are not trees for hundreds of miles to the south from the Arctic circle. Why bring a piece of wood so far inland and leave here. As I sit beside the piece as my boat waits on the river bank, I test it's surface and it's eroded layers that count back centuries, the seasons that froze it and thawed it to the cycles around the sun to number ten thousand years and perhaps longer. A Mammoth tusk as it lay, in the tundra where it has fallen and perhaps the last mammoth...
Orange and unmistakable, dark green lines running along the beam and the center just under the moss. A religion to look closely this tusk in its natural place and placed there buy unknown currents as the same current takes me farther downstream and up to the Arctic...
"Arctic North Slope, Alaska" "This is where it is, this is what it looks like, the area where ancient Woolly Mammoth fossils are found . The place where the land speaks to those that listen and the definition of 'self' is discovered. It is the location where we can be in the present and the past at the same time. This is where were were before the great change and where this change moved us away. To go back and be with the 'Land' and what I consider 'Home.'
"Ancient Walrus Ivory Walrus Harpoon Projectile" "Old Bering Sea Period following the Okvik tradition discovered on St. Lawrence Island Alaska." Beautifully engraved, this detaching harpoon was made with precision and sensitivity to long standing traditions to (Shamanistic) spiritual concepts extending from the coastal regions of Siberia. All objects of this ivory or bone material have been preserved by permanently frozen conditions called permafrost...
Ancient 'Okvik' Eskimo harpoon shaft ornament. The Yupik culture of St. Lawrence Island have produced the most important prehistoric Shamanistic expressions known in the circumpolar region of the world. These ornaments have function and are often referred to as "Winged Objects." Constructed of walrus ivory and carved, engraved with a rodent's tooth, and polished with volcanic sands while weathering winters in subterrainial houses under a whale blubber fueled stone lamps. Okvik age (+-) 3000 years...
Friday, June 12, 2009
Thursday, June 11, 2009
"On the beach and a rough landing from the Bering Sea during a storm from Siberia." While camped on the beach sometimes for days waiting for better weather, I made the best of things and combed the beaches. Found and being moved by the surf and shifting sand and gravels, buried and uncovered again until I pass it during a time when it was visible. Many times I passed this spot and nothing was visible as the tusk was under surf and sand with forty knot offshore gales.
Both handle and blade found together with a replacement wood pin added to re-attach the blade to the handle. Rare find and very significant artifact attributed to the ancient Eskimo. Elaborate fantastic animal form (unidentifiable) as perhaps a shaman vision deity. "Note bottom photo for a closer view of the animal form."
Woolly Mammoth Ivory of a color very rare, I refer to this shade as "Pumpkin" and unfortunately this is from a fairly small section discovered in a river. Uncommon color and sculpted on the reverse as well, by William SIdmore
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