
Collins FDC Catalog
Please send comments to Collinsfdcat@AOLcom

F2601
F2601 / Scott 3077
Prehistoric Animals
Eohippus
Collins Cover Announcement
PREHISTORIC ANIMALS
Eohippus -- Ancestor of the Horse
I wish you could see the illustration of this cachet in color. Since the eohippus was only ten to twenty inches high, I pondered over how to make the cachet dramatic and visually attractive. My solution was to put the fragile animal is a vibrant green fern thicket highlighted by a living frame of colorful orchids. As you can imagine, the magic of watercolors blended and painted by hand made each of these COLLINS cachets a true work of First Day Cover art.
The eohippus is the earliest known relative of the horse. In fact, the name eohippus means "dawn horse". It had a short skull giving its head a snout-like appearance and its back was quite arched. It lived about 55 million years ago and remains have been found in Utah and Wyoming.
It is my opinion that this COLLINS will be judged the best cachet for this issue. The beautiful orchids provide a truly eye-catching yet natural frame for this early diminutive horse as it makes its hidden way through the delicate green ferns. Eohippus. Item #F2601. $11.75.
Summer 2024 Mail Sale Commentary
Lot 24 F2601, F2602, F2603, F2604 — Prehistoric Animals (set of 4 covers) — 6-8-96
The four stamps for the Prehistoric Animals mini-series are interesting and unique. Eohippuses (F2601) were the ancestors of today's horses, but they were much smaller — about the size of a fox. It took that prehistoric animal about 50 million years to grow into the large horses we know today. They lived in North America and Europe and had eyes in the middle of their skulls. The Wooly Mammoths (F2602) roamed the Northern Hemisphere for at least a half a million years. They were ancient elephants and grazed on plants. They gave birth to one calf at a time. Females and young roamed in herds of about 15 individuals. Wooly mammoths weighed between 5 to 13 tons each, and they were extinct as of 4,000 years ago. Mastodons (F2603) were also enormous and weighed as much as 6 tons. They had low-domed heads with prominent upper tusks. They were related to but not the same as wooly mammoths. Their extinction was complete about 10,000 years ago. Saber Tooth (F2604) cats weighed about 350 to 620 pounds and were the size of today's Siberian tigers. They were ferocious and were able to successfully hunt larger animals such as bison and horses. Saber tooth cats went extinct approximately 10,000 years ago. This is the first time these Prehistoric Animals have appeared in one of my sales.