Hi Paolo, you forgot to cover the label, now everyone already knows it’s a bird humerus. Judging from shape and size I think it’s an eagle, a golden or a white-tailed sea eagle. However, I’m away for the weekend so I have no acces to my collection to compare humeri of both species
I knew, but:
1. I think most people who regularly read the blog would be able to id a bird humerus
2. Labels can be wrong and should never be taken as accurate until they’ve been checked 😉
Pretty sturdy for anything but eagle-sized bird, I think. But there were many large birds around in that era. If the era is correct in the label. Trust no one, trust nothing?
I know you didn’t say it wasn’t a bird. In the note about the label you didn’t say it was a bird, either. You said we’d all know a bird humerus if we saw one. Well, I’m looking again, that’s all.
I am still thinking a mammal – same sturdy size as a gray wolf, but not a pronounced supratrochlear hole. If you are still sticking with birds then, I am voting for a White-tailed eagle, Haliaeetus albicilla, since one end is really worn and could have possibly had the larger protuberance that should be there.
Hi Paolo, you forgot to cover the label, now everyone already knows it’s a bird humerus. Judging from shape and size I think it’s an eagle, a golden or a white-tailed sea eagle. However, I’m away for the weekend so I have no acces to my collection to compare humeri of both species
I was going to ask if he was being humorous, or if it was a twisted Friday the 13th spoof.
I knew, but:
1. I think most people who regularly read the blog would be able to id a bird humerus
2. Labels can be wrong and should never be taken as accurate until they’ve been checked 😉
(!) Regarding number 1… well, I wouldn’t have!
I thought it was from some mammal even though it has the wearing to show some of the decreased density.
Since I have an osprey humerus in front of me, we can rule it out as the unknown.
Pretty sturdy for anything but eagle-sized bird, I think. But there were many large birds around in that era. If the era is correct in the label. Trust no one, trust nothing?
Never trust a label!
So. Not a bird. Who has such curvaceous humeri?
Oh, I didn’t say it wasn’t a bird, just that you shouldn’t trust a label 😉
I know you didn’t say it wasn’t a bird. In the note about the label you didn’t say it was a bird, either. You said we’d all know a bird humerus if we saw one. Well, I’m looking again, that’s all.
I am still thinking a mammal – same sturdy size as a gray wolf, but not a pronounced supratrochlear hole. If you are still sticking with birds then, I am voting for a White-tailed eagle, Haliaeetus albicilla, since one end is really worn and could have possibly had the larger protuberance that should be there.