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The owner of the
fossilized ivory of 20,000 years
Having four
pieces of fossilized ivory dating back nearly 20,000 years, Mr. Son said many
people offered to buy them at the price of $4 million but Son did not sell
because he wanted to join scientists to study the history of the elephant
species with the ivory.
![]()
The
fossilized ivory dating back more than 19,000 years in Gia Lai.
Mr. Nguyen Truong Son, 49, a resident
in Phu Hoi Ward,
According to Son, about 40 years ago
his father – a photographer, often worked in Chu A Thai in Thien Phu
District,
Several years ago, the father who was
over 80 years old gave the four pieces of "rock" with a total
weight of 24 kg to his son. Once Son placed the “rocks” under his bed, since
then his room was always cool despite harsh weather outside. When he
assembled the four pieces of "rock" together, he realized that this
is the tip of a fossilized ivory, stuck with multi-colored droplets.
"In my opinion, these droplets
are lava glass. This assessment is based on the fact that the fossilized
ivory was founded in the area which is about 30 km from the crater of the Ham
Rong volcano of
Son took the fossil to the Vietnam
Institute of Archaeology for C-14 test and the result is that the fossil was
dated back to 19,450 BC. The
Explaining why until now he hasn’t
made his fossilized ivory public , Son said that it is because the Vietnam
Heritage Act has allowed people to own antiques and treasures.
"Hearing about the precious
ivory, many foreign merchants came to see me and offered to buy it for $4
million. Some also suggested a 50-50 profit sharing to take the ivory to
exhibitions around the world but I refused because I want to work with
scientists on research related to the history of the elephant with this
tusk," he said.
Son, who has researched wild animals
for many years, thought that the ivory belonged to the "ice age"
and the elephants living in area at that time could be tentatively called F2,
i.e. very close to the mammoth and
![]()
Mr.
Son and his son with the fossilized ivory.
Son wanted to clarify all credible
information about the tusk in order to make a mock-up of the elephant with
that tusk, in real size. This may be simply because Son does not lack money
but the biggest concern of Son is whether the elephant of nearly 20,000 years
ago was hairless like elephants today or hairy like mammoths.
"Many times I came back to the
village where my father was given the fossil but I did not find any trace
because the villagers were scattered in war," Son said.
Son is a wildlife expert and a member
of the
In addition, Son is also the son of
the third-generation in a family with the traditional trade of making
wildlife specimen and tanning.
VNE
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Chủ Nhật, 18 tháng 8, 2013
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