Natural History

Natural History

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 15. A Completely Intact Egg of an Elephant Bird .

A Completely Intact Egg of an Elephant Bird

Lot Closed

December 3, 07:16 PM GMT

Estimate

40,000 - 60,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

A Completely Intact Egg of an Elephant Bird 

Aepyornis maximus

Pre-17th Century

Madagascar


12 by 9 inches (30.5 x 22.9 cm). 10⅓ inches (26.3 cm) in diameter. 3 lbs., 15.5 oz. (1804 grams).


This Aepyornis maximus egg displays a sandy, off-white color palette, with no erosion or abrasions to the surface. X-rays reveal some repaired cracks which are otherwise not visible to the naked eye; overall a very attractive specimen.

X-rays reveal some repaired cracks which are otherwise not visible to the naked eye.

Weighing in at a whopping 1,200 pounds (544 kg), Aepyornis is amongst the largest birds of all time. Commonly known as “elephant birds”, these ratites—the class of long-legged, flightless birds that include emus, ostriches, and cassowaries—were endemic to Madagascar until their extinction approximately 1,000 years ago.


At 150 times the size of a chicken’s, Aepyornis boasts the largest eggs of any animal ever. Used by generations of Malgasies as both a food source and as a means to transport water, precious few of these eggs remain in existence. Only a tiny fraction of those left are wholly intact, with the overwhelming majority being restored from pieced together fragments. Most of these also display a pip, a hole made either organically by a chick attempting to exit the egg, or by a person in an attempt to delicately empty the egg's contents.


Unhatched, intact specimens such as this are rare on the market.