DODO
The dodo was rather a stupid bird. Indeed, it was so stupid
that was named dodo by the Portuguese when they discovered Mauritius its home
in 1507. The Portuguese word doudo means stupid.
Mauritius is an island, 720 square miles in area and lying
500 miles to the east of Madagascar in the
Indian Ocean. Until the arrival of man, with his attendant creatures such as
the cat and dog, the dodo had been able to live in peace. It had no enemies,
which was fortunate because it was big and clumsy and was completely unsuited
to fleeing from danger. Its short legs were almost incapable of supporting the
weight of the fat, round body (about the size of a swan’s), and the
ridiculously inadequate, stubby wings were of no use for flying.
Within 180 years of its discovery by the Portuguese, the
dodo was extinct. Over the intervening years several were brought to Europe
alive, and one was to be seen in London in 1638. By 1680 the dodo had
succumbed.
With the help of drawings and by the collection of bones
gathered in Mauritius, an almost complete reconstruction has been made of the
poor bird. It can be seen at the Natural History Museum in London.
Mauritius is the only place in the world where the bird is
known to have existed. A similar bird once lived on the neighbouring island of
Rodriguez, but this also has become extinct.
The phrase “as dead as the dodo” is used to mean that
something is very dead indeed.
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