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Lot Essay
The Elephant Bird, formally categorised as Aepyornis maximus, is an enormous flightless bird native to Madagascar. Standing as high as 10 or 11 feet, and weighing up to 1100lbs, the Elephant Bird was undoubtedly the largest bird ever to have lived. Compared to even the largest modern ostrich (up to 8 feet high and weighing 300lbs) it was far taller and thicker-set with its far more muscular legs. A comparable species in terms of size is the Moa of New Zealand, which are also now extinct. The Elephant Bird roamed the plateaus and forest of Madagascar until their extinction sometime between the 14th and 17th centuries. Perhaps unsurprisingly given their gargantuan size, the Elephant Bird was originally believed to have been the giant flying beast known as the Roc (or Ruhk). This legendary bird of prey is perhaps a distorted version of Aepyornis maximus, immortalised in the tales of Sinbad and accounts of Marco Polo's voyages. In Sanskrit epics the mythic bird Garuda carried a battling elephant in its talons, which is how the species received its colloquial name. Despite this association, the Elephant Bird’s diet instead comprised forest fruits. The egg of an Elephant Bird is a seldom seen specimen rarer still are examples with complete and intact shells like the present lot. Fewer than 40 such eggs populate public collections around the world. One reason for the rarity of these eggs would have been their culinary appeal for the human settlers of Madagascar. A single Elephant bird egg could easily feed a large group, and as a result they were highly sought after for nourishment. Their redefined status as a desirable food source for humans almost certainly contributed to their extinction. These curved eggs, with their cream or pale hues and gently perforated shells, are not only visually beautiful, but an enduring symbol of a creature revered in both science and legend. This is one of then largest examples we have seen.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE Balanoff, A.M. & Rowe, R., ‘Osteological Description of an Embryonic Skeleton of the Extinct Elephant Bird, Aepyornis’, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Memoir, Vol.9 (2007) Fig.6, p.9
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