Museum realizes collection's rare elephant bird egg is real

This photo provided by The Buffalo Museum of Science shows a rare elephant bird egg that curators recently realized is an actual egg from the extinct creature. The fully-intact egg, 12-inches tall, 28 inches in circumference, and weighing more than 3 pounds, had previously been mislabeled as a model. Curators discovered the mistake while cataloguing pieces in the museum's collection. The museum will unveil the egg to the public May 1, 2018. (The Buffalo Museum of Science via AP)
This photo provided by The Buffalo Museum of Science shows a radiograph (X-Ray) of a rare elephant bird egg that curators recently realized is an actual egg from the extinct creature. The fully-intact egg, 12-inches tall, 28 inches in circumference, and weighing more than 3 pounds, had previously been mislabeled as a model. Curators discovered the mistake while cataloguing pieces in the museum's collection. The museum will unveil the egg to the public May 1, 2018. (The Buffalo Museum of Science via AP)

Museum realizes collection's rare elephant bird egg is real

This photo provided by The Buffalo Museum of Science shows a rare elephant bird egg that curators recently realized is an actual egg from the extinct creature. The fully-intact egg, 12-inches tall, 28 inches in circumference, and weighing more than 3 pounds, had previously been mislabeled as a model. Curators discovered the mistake while cataloguing pieces in the museum's collection. The museum will unveil the egg to the public May 1, 2018. (The Buffalo Museum of Science via AP)
This photo provided by The Buffalo Museum of Science shows a radiograph (X-Ray) of a rare elephant bird egg that curators recently realized is an actual egg from the extinct creature. The fully-intact egg, 12-inches tall, 28 inches in circumference, and weighing more than 3 pounds, had previously been mislabeled as a model. Curators discovered the mistake while cataloguing pieces in the museum's collection. The museum will unveil the egg to the public May 1, 2018. (The Buffalo Museum of Science via AP)