- Hornbill ivory
Hornbill ivory (also called "golden jade") is a precious ornamental material derived from the
Helmeted Hornbill ("Buceros vigil"), a large bird of theMalay Peninsula ,Sumatra , andBorneo .Many
hornbill species have "casques", decorative growths on the upper mandible of the bill. In most, the casque has a spongy structure, but in the Helmeted Hornbill it is solidkeratin . This material, hornbill ivory, has a texture suggestingivory but is softer. As it grows it is golden yellow, but the bird rubs its casque on its preen gland, whose oily secretion tints the surface of the casque bright red.Native peoples in the Helmeted Hornbill's range, such as the
Kenyah andKelabit , have long carved the casques. In Malaysia, hornbill-ivory rings were said to change color when near poisonous food. [http://www.ivoryhound.com/articles_hornbill_ivory.htm] The Chinese encountered the material in the14th Century and it soon became an important trade item atBrunei . During theMing dynasty , the Chinese valued hornbill ivory above true ivory orjade . They carved the casques, or they made them into sheets, colored them with the secretion of the preen gland, and made them intobelt buckle s for high officials. They called hornbill ivory "hèdǐng" (Wade-Giles "ho-ting"), which is said to be their approximation of an indigenous name [http://www.ivoryhound.com/articles_hornbill_ivory.htm] (but means "crane head", and thus many Chinese thought the substance came from a crane rather than a hornbill). TheJapan ese also carved imported hornbill ivory into such objects as "netsuke ".By the early
20th Century , the Helmeted Hornbill became rare because it was slaughtered for its casque. Now legal trade in hornbill ivory is limited to certified antiques, and hornbill-ivory carvings are more valuable than those of any true ivory. [http://www.acstones.com/gemofmonth/2005/gemofmonth.03.05.html]References
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External links
* [http://www.ivoryhound.com/articles_hornbill_ivory.htm Page from the Ivoryhound]
* [http://www.acstones.com/gemofmonth/2005/gemofmonth.03.05.html Page from Gem of the Month]
* [http://www.tribalartsdirectory.com/ArtAreas/home.nsf/Item/NT00001F76!OpenDocument&Click= Photographs and description of a Bornean carving from ArtAreas] showing the red rim colored by preen-gland secretions
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