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  1. Erik the Red (5731 bytes)
    6: ...modities such as seal (used for rope), ivory from tusks, and beached whales if they happened to be so luc...
  2. Tooth (14790 bytes)
    140: * [[Elephant]]s' tusks are specialized incisors for digging food up and ...
  3. Ivory (4783 bytes)
    1: ...The word "ivory" was traditionally applied to the tusks of [[elephant]]s.
    5: ...rectly be used to describe any mammalian teeth or tusks of commercial interest which is large enough to b...
    7: ==Teeth and tusks==
    9: ...uctures adapted for food [[chewing|mastication]]. Tusks, which are extremely large teeth projecting beyon...
    11: Teeth and tusks have the same physical structures: [[pulp]] [[cav...
  4. Mammoth (4333 bytes)
    14: ...t genus of [[elephant]], often with long curved [[tusks]] and, in northern species, a covering of long ha...
    28: ...ers recount the [[hunting]] of mammoths for their tusks by local tribesmen. However, no solid evidence ex...
  5. Babirusa (849 bytes)
  6. Mastodon (1620 bytes)
  7. Elephant (13277 bytes)
    31: ...ge teeth coming out of their upper jaws. Elephant tusks are the major source of [[ivory]], but because of...
    48: ...r African climate). Female African elephants have tusks, while female Asian Elephants do not. African ele...
    55: ...nce of mating to elephants with small tusks or no tusks at all. The propagation of the absent-tusk gene h...
    56: ... spar with one another for mating rights. Without tusks, elephant behavior could change dramatically. [ht...
    75: ...ng order through jousting contests using head and tusks, where strength and temperament are as important ...
  8. Walrus (6653 bytes)
    24: ...[[Latin]] means "turning apart", referring to the tusks.
    39: ...s which they suck from their shells. The walrus's tusks serve to pry out shellfish from their beds.
    42: ...ng and for display. Humans use [[ivory]] from the tusks for carving. The natives call the [[penis]] bone ...
    44: ...rus legally. The law prohibits the export of raw tusks from Alaska, but walrus-ivory products may come o...
  9. Warthog (4196 bytes)
    15: Warthogs are identifiable by the two pairs of tusks protruding from their mouth, which are used as we...
    22: ...es inflicting significant and serious wounds with tusks.
  10. Hyrax (4875 bytes)
  11. Aphrodite (14648 bytes)
    40: ...ot the tree with an arrow or when a boar used its tusks to tear the tree's bark off.
  12. Asian Elephant (3677 bytes)
    17: ...le African Elephants, female Asian Elephants lack tusks.
    37: ...ian peninsula. Most males of this subspecies have tusks.<br>
    38: ...e upper trunk. It is rare to find even males with tusks. Males can reach a height of 3.5 metres at the sh...
    40: ...It has larger ears, a longer tail, and straighter tusks. Genetic tests in 2003 found that its ancestors s...
  13. Even-toed ungulate (4197 bytes)
  14. Forest Elephant (2234 bytes)
  15. Incisor (921 bytes)
  16. Asian Elephants (3912 bytes)
    17: ...le African Elephants, female Asian Elephants lack tusks.
    36: ...ian peninsula. Most males of this subspecies have tusks.<br>
    37: ...e upper trunk. It is rare to find even males with tusks. Males can reach a height of 3.5 metres at the sh...
    39: ...It has larger ears, a longer tail, and straighter tusks. Genetic tests in 2003 found that its ancestors s...
  17. Narwhals (5962 bytes)
    21: ...age:Narwhal_tusk.jpg|150px|thumb|left|Two Narwhal tusks from the same animal. This is unusual]]
    23: ...igh up to ten kilograms. One in 500 males has two tusks.
    25: ...ract a mate. Like the tusks of elephants, Narwhal tusks do not regrow if they break off.
    33: ...ey congregate on the same coast. Males use their tusks for jousting to establish a social [[hierarchy]]....
    49: ...rn]] in the middle ages. During that time Narwhal tusks (usually found washed-up on northern shores) were...
  18. Walruses (5529 bytes)
    24: ...[[Latin]] means "turning apart", referring to the tusks.
    39: ...s which they suck from their shells. The walrus's tusks serve to pry out shellfish from their beds.
    42: ...ng and for display. Humans use [[ivory]] from the tusks for carving. The natives call the [[penis]] bone ...
    44: ...rus legally. The law prohibits the export of raw tusks from Alaska, but walrus-ivory products may come o...
  19. Artiodactyls (4197 bytes)

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