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Wednesday, Oct. 2
The Indiana Daily Student

arts

Mammoth sells for record $421,200 at Paris Christie’s auction

Named ‘The President,’ skeleton is 15,000 years old

CORRECTION FRANCE MAMMOTH FOR SALE

PARIS – If you were looking for the skeleton of a prehistoric mammoth, Monday was your day to buy. Christie’s auction house sold one for $421,200 – a world record.\nThe unidentified buyer was a European who collects contemporary art and 19th-century furniture, Christie’s spokeswoman Capucine Milliot said.\nThe mammoth sale was one of a dozen world records set during Monday’s auction of paleontological curiosities that brought in a total of more than $1.53 million, Christie’s said.\nThe 10,000-year-old skeleton of a 13.5-foot-long rhinoceros sold for a record $162,000. That of a 7.5-foot-high prehistoric cave bear from the Russian Urals sold for $63,180.\nThe skeletons previously were owned by private collectors.\nMost were bought by individuals, although a German museum and a French museum – neither identified – purchased fossils for smaller sums, Milliot said.\nThe Siberian mammoth from the High Plestocene era, dubbed the “The President,” was the star item at the auction. At 12.5 feet tall and 16 feet long, it had been estimated to sell for about $199,000.\nThe last such item sold at auction, last year in Paris, went for $254,340, Milliot said.\nAmong other items sold was a bezoar, a sort of pearl formed in the stomach of some herbivores, made of a stone or hair covered by a layer of calcium phosphate. Bezoars that reach or exceed the size of an egg become tremendously valuable. This one went for $45,360.\nThe molar of a Siberian mammoth sold for $6,480.

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