Christie’s in London will next week offer a decidedly bizarre lot: “a rare fragment of a dodo bone femur”, which is expected to sell for up to £15,000 (€17,600).
The international auctioneers said “this is believed to be the first dodo bone to come to auction since 1934”.
The dodo was a flightless bird first discovered by Dutch sailors in 1598 on the island of Mauritius but the creature was hunted to extinction within a hundred years and the last recorded sighting was in 1662.
![](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/N6PS56KIIVC7Y63VAOMFHUDCIY.jpg?auth=15295478cea76a30845613b3bb06fe16ca2494b12deb5e4444e2744ce6ee4f3b&width=800&height=450)
The bird has fascinated scientists and naturalists ever since and the bone being auctioned "was almost certainly excavated in 1865" in Mauritius by George Clark, a natural history enthusiast.
The Travel, Science and Natural History sale at Christie's South Kensington on Wednesday also features a copy of
A New Dictionary of Natural History
published in London in 1785 which contains 100 hand-coloured plates, one of a dodo, £700-£1,000.
(€820-€1,172
).
– MP