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Old 5th February 2023, 05:04 PM   #22
kai
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Join Date: Apr 2005
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Thanks, Joe, now I get what you're comparing it to!

Quote:
if you take the krowit of the ant jaws. and if they twist the opposite direction, and if you look at only half.
Actually, these sometimes appear as single rather than as a paired feature, indeed.


Quote:
if you look at only half , it looks almost like a pangolin head and tongue, more so it starts to look like on the moro, especialy if you use the skull as an example, when you look at the skull you notice the toothless jaw.
Since pangolins are also eaten, we can probably assume that their skulls are known to these peoples, too. However, combining a bare skull with the tongue might be a bit of a stretch...

The indigenous Moro interpretation refers to elephants (the traditional view already in place with the keris as ancestral blade) or eagles. While extant birds have no teeth, also elephants (except for their tusks, if any) appear to be kinda toothless as living animals.

While it can be fun to play with such ideas, I'd suggest to be very cautious with any interpretations that are apparently not shared by the originating culture.

Regards,
Kai
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