This Priceless Dodo Skeleton Took 40 Years to Assemble

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The dodo has been extinct for about 350 years, and it’s entirely our fault—so why not own a memento of man’s destructive tendencies in the form of a three-foot tall bird skeleton.

Dodo bones come up for auction from time to time, but this skeleton is the closest to a complete specimen that’s ever come up to market. Cobbled together by a private collector over the course of 40 years, it contains bones from numerous dodos, and is about 95 percent complete. The missing pieces—a claw and a chunk of skull—have been cast in resin, according to the Daily Mail.

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Mauritius—the small island that the flightless bird called home until we killed all of them—has since banned the sale of dodo remains, so it’s unlikely an a mostly-complete skeleton will appear for auction again. As such, it’s expected to sell for around $600,000. As the Independent notes, the last time a partial skeleton was sold was in 1914.

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The auction will take place 22 November at Summers Place Auctions in Billingshurst, West Sussex. Get ready to see the bids fly sky high.

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[Daily Mail, Independent via AP]

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