In first since 1914, `extremely rare` dodo skeleton sold
"There are only twelve close to complete dodo skeletons in the world," all in the possession of museums, and all but one are composites, says Erroll Fuller of Summers Place Auctions in the UK.
Found on Mauritius in the 16th century, the dodo disappeared by the late 1600s at the hands of humans and newly introduced dogs and monkey, Fuller says.
Most of the bones that make up existing dodos were taken from Mauritius in the 19th century, but the island has since banned their export. That`s one reason people were so interested in the skeleton.
But the dodo also "represents extinction and how fast man can influence the environment," says Fuller. "Whether we`re actually learning the lesson, I don`t think I`d like to say," he adds, per CBS News.
The BBC spoke to the unnamed collector who pieced together the bird, whose initial purchase was a foot bone in the 1970s. He didn`t imagine it would lead to full skeleton.
"I finally found myself looking at a dodo in my workshop, something so extraordinary that I hadn`t really imagined it would happen," he says. (Dodos were pretty smart.)
/FoxNews/