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NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Some dinosaur dung was snapped up at auction in New York even as
a 4.5 billion year old meteorite which was supposed to top the
sale went unsold.
The two chunks of
130-million-year-old coprolite, otherwise known as fossilized
dinosaur dung, fetched $960 at Bonhams in New York on Wednesday,
the auction house said.
The Jurassic-era
rocks were sold for more than double their maximum estimate,
said spokeswoman Staci Smith.
A 4.5
billion-year-old meteorite, on which a Chinese desert hiker
habitually ate lunch before he discovered it was valuable,
failed to meet the minimum reserve however.
Bonhams had expected
the space rock to sell for $2.25 million to $2.75 million.
Smith said
negotiations over the meteorite continued after the auction and
that a deal could be struck in days.
The owner of the
meteorite, Marvin Kilgore, the curator at the University of
Arizona's Southwest Meteorite Center, was mystified by the sale
of the fossilized dung which is much more common than rocks that
have fallen from space.
"Some people want it
on their shelves, I guess," he said.
The dung was bought
by a phone bidder which the auction house declined to identify.
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