Off beat

'Sabre-toothed tiger' skeleton sells for more than US$84,000

The ancient mammal skeleton was among a number of other discoveries sold to the highest bidder

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 10 Dec 2020 8:00AM

'Sabre-toothed tiger' skeleton sells for more than US$84,000
Director of 'Piguet Hotel des Ventes' auction house Bernard Piguet poses with a rare sabre-toothed cat's skeleton during a preview of the sale in Geneva, on December 1. – AFP, December 9, 2020

GENEVA – A nearly 40-million-year-old skeleton belonging to what is popularly called a sabre-toothed tiger has sold for US$84,350 (RM342,700), a year after its discovery on a US ranch.

The skeleton, about 120-cm long, was snapped up by a private collector in just one minute at an auction in Geneva on Tuesday. 

The original bones are those of a Hoplophoneus – not technically cats, they are an extinct genus of the Nimravidae family and once stalked the plains of North America.

Such extinct predatory mammals are commonly known as sabre-toothed tigers.

Also on sale was a Tyrannosaurus Rex tooth which fetched just over US$6,000, while a 85-cm long fin from a mosasaur – a marine reptile that in the Cretaceous period was at the top of the submarine food chain – was bought for almost US$8,000.

A 75-million-year-old ammolite – an opal-like organic gemstone in shades of red and orange – measuring 40 cm long by 36 cm wide remained unsold because the reserve price was not met.

Debate rages as to the right balance between the scientific value of such items and their worth on the open market. 

Some palaeontologists insist animal or plant fossils are not decorative objects for collectors, but witness to the evolution of life on Earth and therefore scientific articles that ought to be studied and then shared with the public in museums.

Before the sale, Swiss collector Yann Cuenin told AFP: "If we're talking about the sabre-toothed tiger, for example, it's not a skeleton which is of major scientific interest, in the sense that it's something which is already known to science. 

"I am all for museums, but I am also in favour of objects living among us; for there to be collectors, for pieces to be bought and sold – that's what brings culture to life." – AFP, December 9, 2020

Related News

Malaysia / 8mth

Vida's assets successfully auctioned for RM1 million

People / 8mth

Luxury cars, 727 items belonging to Datuk Seri Vida to be auctioned

World / 1y

Mercedes 'streamliner' fetches record 51 million euros at auction

Malaysia / 1y

Rare painting once owned by Jho Low up for auction

Music / 2y

Five of the most prized Freddie Mercury items being auctioned

Art / 2y

Rubens, Picasso, Louise Bourgeois: who are the most bankable artists today?

Spotlight

Malaysia

Johor state election: MACC receives three reports of alleged corruption

Malaysia

Banks need to do more to help counter rising costs of living – Guan Eng

By Ian McIntyre

Business

BNM holds OPR at 2.75 per cent

Malaysia

MACC: No one off limits in probe into US$13 million luxury property deal

Malaysia

Govt rejects claims Jho Low secretly returned to Malaysia for 1MDB asset talks

Malaysia

School stabbing incident: Suspect claimed she was dissatisfied, allegedly bullied

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Rosmah demands action against Nga over alleged misleading election poster in Johor polls

Malaysia

Malaysia faces RM51.4b 1MDB burden after recovering RM31.3b in funds and assets

You may be interested

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Living

Matrix Concepts' home ownership campaign offers over RM30m rewards and prizes