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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,429
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A few unusual materials spring to mind - I have seen clubs from Gran Chaco (Paraguay) that use horse bones lashed to wooden handles, sawfish bills from probably Micronesia, as swords, swordfish bills used as daggers in Hawaii. Whale teeth ivory has been used as decorative infill to Fijian clubs, along with sometimes human teeth. Rhino horns were made into knobkerries in Africa, on occasion.
I've read somewhere about human skulls of defeated enemies having been used as drinking cups in Fiji in days of old... Whalebone and jade were used as short clubs by the Maori. I'll try to think of more examples.... Regards |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 385
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Not all maces and clubs were made to defeat armor. They have been around since long before armor. A whale tooth would handily defeat flesh and bone, with no ill effect to the tooth.
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oahu, Hawaii
Posts: 166
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And let's not forget petrified bone and teeth. I seen petrified whalebone here in Hawaii used for jewelry and mounted into clubs. As well petrified mammoth teeth used for scabbards and handles on keris in Thailand.
Dan |
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