South Asia At
Mehrgarh, a village located at the foot of the
Bolan Pass in
Balochistan in modern-day
Pakistan, ornaments made of
Dentalium shell have been found at burial sites dating back to 6000
BCE. Excavations conducted by
Jean-François Jarrige have described 'Exceptional grave deposits of Dentalium headbands found on the heads of several females… In Burial 274, the headband was made of woven rows of small dentalium and closed by two straps used as a clasp'.
Native Americans The shells of
Dentalium neohexagonum have been used by Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest and West Coast as a form of status and currency since time immemorial. The
Chumash people have also been reported using dentalium as early as circa 1000
AD, in the
Morro Bay area.
New Zealand Māori traditionally used Dentalium shells for decorative purposes, such as rings and necklaces. Most artefacts have been found around the
Coromandel Peninsula, and typically earlier artefacts during the
Archaic Period (1300–1500) are
Dentalium solidum, while later shells are
Dentalium nanum.
18th-century European use In pre-modern medicine, these shells were considered an excellent
alkali, and
apothecaries would pulverize them for use in several preparations. The shell used for this purpose was described by
Joseph Pitton de Tournefort in London in the 18th century as being "of a tubular, or conical form, about 3 inches (7.62 cm) long; of a shining, greenish white; hollow; light, and divided lengthwise by parallel lines, running from top to bottom. It is about the thickness of a feather, and bears some resemblance to a canine tooth." However, it was considered at that time to be very rare, and in lieu of that, another shell was usually substituted. This was described as a multicolored shell found in the sand where the tide had fallen; this shell was not channeled, or fluted. The large green shell to which the writer first refers must have been either
Dentalium elephantinum or
Dentalium aprinum, both of which are large and greenish, and live in the
Indo-Pacific zone. The other shell was presumably another species, possibly
Dentalium entale, which is native to
Great Britain. ==Species==