Since 1600, some 80 species have become extinct – though since the book first appeared in 1987, Jerdon’s Courser and the Four Coloured Flowerpecker have actually been rediscovered – and the stories of these birds are grouped within broad categories, from the Ratites, giants who included the Moa or Lesser Megalapteryx, pictured (the dust jacket reproduction of G.E. Lodge’s oil painting for the old Rothschild book) to Hypothetical & Mystery Birds. Somewhere in between, we meet the pigeons – among them the Dodo, and Martha, who in 1914 was living in a cage in Cincinnati zoo, last of the Passenger Pigeons. Once the most numerous bird on earth, they had been wiped out by hunters in less than a century.
Moas, the Rodrigues Solitary and poor old Martha…
BOUND in contemporary half morocco, one of 300 signed copies of the 1907 first edition of Rothschild’s Extinct Birds, containing 49, mostly chromo plates after Keulemans, Lodge, Grönvold, Smit and Frohawk, went at £3000 to a collector in the Sotheby’s sale of June 5.
Since 1600, some 80 species have become extinct – though since the book first appeared in 1987, Jerdon’s Courser and the Four Coloured Flowerpecker have actually been rediscovered – and the stories of these birds are grouped within broad categories, from the Ratites, giants who included the Moa or Lesser Megalapteryx, pictured (the dust jacket reproduction of G.E. Lodge’s oil painting for the old Rothschild book) to Hypothetical & Mystery Birds. Somewhere in between, we meet the pigeons – among them the Dodo, and Martha, who in 1914 was living in a cage in Cincinnati zoo, last of the Passenger Pigeons. Once the most numerous bird on earth, they had been wiped out by hunters in less than a century.