Sunday, April 10, 2016

Strange Talismans

Fernandina Beach on Amelia Island, Florida, is the venue each March of the Amelia Island concours d' elegance, so I've been going there for about twenty years. Apparently, Amelia Island is the type of barrier island that was once far out to sea, and has migrated towards the coast, trapping marshland, and for some reason, this means that a great many fossilized sharks' teeth can be found on the beaches.

I could provide references... but I've just realized that Google Books is giving away free an entire ebook copyrighted in 2004 that is for sale as a Kindle on Amazon for $25.99. I'm not going to assist in ripping off the author!

Anyway, this year, I had the amazing fortune to receive the best shark tooth hunting lesson ever from one Nasif who works for the Ritz Carlton. Nasif drew wide circles with his finger in the gritty sand, and tell me to find the tooth. I found three --eventually-- thanks to him.  I also found a quite large fossilized tooth just tumbling in the surf. What a thrill.

Since then, I did a bit of pondering, and wondered why tourists obsess (as they do) over finding shark teeth and turning them into necklaces. There's probably an ingrained superstition about wearing fierce bits of creatures we fear in life... that's why we call them amulets, talismans, charms, juju, totems.

Hercules wore a lion skin. Crocodile Dundee wore a whole lot of teeth. Viking Berserkers wore bear skins and bones. (For a list of types of villains  http://villains.wikia.com/wiki/Types_of_Villains_A-C ) The Kurgan villain in Highlander wore a scull as a helmet.

But why on earth do people make jewelry out of turds? Out of moose poop or deer poop to be specific?  I first heard of that charming custom when visiting Saab in Trollhattan, but apparently, they make earrings and necklaces out of moose do in Maine, too.

Other strange dangling ornaments available online include rings and earrings made of human molars, bat bits, mouse fetuses, coyote claws, cat claws, small fish (in liquid), squid bits (in liquid), bird skulls, and more besides.

So, in an alien romance, what totems might an alien sport? And why? Is there anything new under the sun?

Rowena Cherry


3 comments:

  1. I've found shark teeth for years on the southern North Carolina coast. The biggest trick is to learn to spot the particular shine the enamel produces. When I was at the coast frequently, I could spot a tiny tooth while walking fast with my Golden. A harder trick was to get her to stop before we passed it.

    Even the tiny teeth are heavy so they will be uncovered by the shallow waves. You stand with your back to the sun and watch the water wash up around your feet.

    I could go on, but I'm already boring myself.

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  2. The Victorians commonly had jewelry made with the hair of dead loved ones. More bizarre (though not so squicky as dung or squid bits), companies exist nowadays that convert cremated remains into gems to set in jewelry. (I wrote an erotic ghost story involving that custom, "Heart Diamond.") It wouldn't be surprising if some alien species made ornaments out of body parts of deceased relatives.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The Victorians commonly had jewelry made with the hair of dead loved ones. More bizarre (though not so squicky as dung or squid bits), companies exist nowadays that convert cremated remains into gems to set in jewelry. (I wrote an erotic ghost story involving that custom, "Heart Diamond.") It wouldn't be surprising if some alien species made ornaments out of body parts of deceased relatives.

    ReplyDelete