It will soon be Easter, a day associated with eggs. It thus seems totally appropriate that on Friday, March 5, 2010, the International Cryptozoology Museum received delivery to its collection of a high quality, lifesize reproduction of the largest bird egg in the world ~ that of Aepyornis maximus. (We would like to thank Illinois educator Jerry Clemens for the partial donation of this item.)
Aaron Spriggs, who works at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science (formerly the Denver Museum of Natural History), and I discussed the topic of these eggs two years ago, in preparation for his illustrated lecture on “Cryptozoology.” Spriggs noted that there are only 16 elephant bird eggs in the world, and the DMNS owns two intact ones.
The DMNS should be proud. Any museum with a display on elephant birds and their eggs is a worthwhile place to visit. I just learned of a new exhibition at the Peabody Museum in Cambridge on the larger flightless birds, which I shall have to visit myself.
The Bone Clones replica is now to be seen at the ICM.
This new addition to the museum joins the farm-grown hen, emu, rhea, and ostrich eggs exhibited at the Portland, Maine museum. A cassowary egg is en route, a partial donation from Kathy Lamb at The Eggery Place.
Here are some photos of the remarkable Elephant Bird eggs, and what the bird looked like that issued these eggs. This bird might be the last great instance of what must have been a near-modern version of the “terror birds.”
Reconstruction of an elephant bird egg, Ipswich Museum, England.
An elephant bird egg compared with an ostrich and hummingbird egg.
Dr. Timothy Rowe (above) University of Texas poses inside the CT scanner with the National Geographic Society’s elephant bird egg, on loan from Washington D. C.
Colin Keates (c) Dorling Kindersley, Courtesy of the Natural History Museum, London.
Egg of the giant elephant bird. Registration No. NMV B.3273. Museum Victoria, Australia.
The size of the elephant bird’s egg was enormous ~ 15 times larger than an ostrich egg and 10,000 times larger than a hummingbird egg.
The elephant birds of Madagascar reportedly mostly ate forest fruits.
The giant moas of New Zealand may have been a more diverse diet. Preserved stomach contents have shown that the moa ate a diet of twigs, seeds, leaves, fruit and leaves, and browsed on shrubs, rather than grazed on grass.
Ostriches, the largest ground-dwelling bird around today, eat various seeds, grasses, bushes and forage on trees. They supplement this diet with animal food such as invertebrates and small vertebrates.
Considering that the elephant bird supposedly became extinct in the 16th-17th century, the full extent of their diet probably is not clearly known. Due to the size of the elephant birds, I would suggest they may have eaten small invertebrates and little vertebrates, as the opportunity presented itself.
Some reports have surfaced that sightings of Elephant Birds continued long past their usual stated extinct date in the 16th or 17th century. Also, speculation is widespread that the legend of the Roc may have been based on sightings of the Elephant Bird, or conjecture on what bird could have produced their eggs, found in situ without the bird being seen.
The International Cryptozoology Museum is now proud to share the viewing of its newest addition, a full-sized Elephant Egg museum-quality replica, with the general public, in a new exhibition case.
Assist the museum by turning your small and large fiscal donations through PayPal into the small fee that is often needed to be paired with partial gifters’ reduced pricing for a new exhibition item. This is the way we may expand our collection in a reasonable matter. Also, we are slowly upgrading our exhibitions from inexpensive wooden bookshelves to partially donated, fully contributed, and reduced priced glass, lighted display cases. Please help by clicking below, on the following button…
Remember, no donation is too small. We got this far by way of all of your $10 and $20 contributions. Know that we need to keep receiving them to maintain operations, as well as to enhance the exhibits. Thank you!
Of course, right now, to make certain we continue to exist in this shaky economy, we rely on donations, contributions, and other sources of my income to support the major expenses of the museum. Until the admission flow stabilizes and we are assured of a steady number of visitors, we have to make do with the space we are renting.
Thus, some decisions have been made to “expand” upward (up the walls, on the ceiling) and in more concentrated ways (by moving from bookcase shelving to well-lit museum display cases, as they become inexpensively available or are donated). In that way, we can actually show and exhibit more items in the space we have. Through a combination of those two dimension-expanding design factors, we are actually enlarging the museum almost daily.
I thank PhotoExpert for his Paranthropus bust donation, again, and his other fiscal support that has helped us greatly, as I do to all others!