Amanda Murphy Wears Plaids By Camilla Akrans For Harper's Bazaar September 2016

Amanda Murphy Wears Plaids By Camilla Akrans For Harper's Bazaar September 2016

GLAMTRIBALE NECKLACE & EARRING SETS

By Color By Length | By Price

GLAMTRIBALE NECKLACES

By Color | By Length | By Price

GLAMTRIBALE EARRINGS

By Color | By Length | By Price | By Type

GLAMTRIBALE 4" COASTERS Sets

Sets of 2 or 4 Coasters $25 and $40

GLAMTRIBALE 6" Art Tiles/Trivets Sets

Sets of 2 or 4 Coasters w/Art Tile $40 and $55

Woolly Mammoth Batik Bone Leather Pendant w/Earrings
$125.00

Details

* 2 mammoth bone beads

* Africa: 1 large oval recycled glass, 4 batik bone beads, 1 batik tube, 1 camel toe brown bead, 5 brass donuts. 2 speckled bone tube, bone spacers

* Antique gold elephant, bee charms; hand-crafted bone toggle, leather. 11mm surgical steel antique gold fishhook ear wire.

Handcrafted in America; natural variations and minor substitutions for sizing apply. Necklace shipped in burlap bag w/recycled tissue.

FREE SHIPPING US. $10 PD SHIPPING EUROPE. Fits in Small USPS Priority Mail box for expedited shipping.

Sizing

*30" L to top of pendant. The leather sits at 30" at top of average-size breasts, falling through the open-space between breasts. It looks great with classic black or beige sweater.

* Pendant measures top of brown camel toe bead to bottom recycled glass 4"L x 1 3/4"W. Camel toe bead top of pendant 1" W

Earrings: 1 1/4"L

Rachell Smith Flashes Winnie Harlow For Marie Claire Mexico September 2016

Winnie Harlow is styled by Holly Ounstead for 'Winnie in a Million', lensed by Rachell Smith for Marie Claire Mexico September 2016. / Hair by Daniel Dyer; makeup by Harriet Hadfield

Researchers Reveal Extinction of St Paul Island Woolly Mammoths

Researchers Reveal Extinction of St Paul Island Woolly Mammoths | Shop Woolly Mammoth Jewelry

The majority of woolly mammoths have been extinct for a minimum of 10,000-100,000 years. But new research about woolly mammoths living on a remote island off the coast of Alaska are the subject of a scientific investigation by Prof Russell Graham, from Pennsylvania State University. Graham has focused on a group of woolly mammoths that lived on St Paul Island, located in the Bering Sea, for another 4,500 years. 

Scientists have long believed that the woolly mammoths became extinct due to human hunting and environmental connections. It's hoped that some of the research conclusions will have applications to human and animal populations living in areas impacted by climate change.

As the Earth warmed up after the Ice Age, sea levels rose, much as they are today across the globe. Prof Graham believes that as ocean salt water levels rose, available land mass on St Paul Island was reduced, along with necessary for survival freshwater watering holes.