Dodo skeleton find in Mauritius
One of the team in Mauritius said it was the first discovery of fully preserved bones which could give clues as to how the bird lived its life.
Last year, the team unearthed dodo bones in the same area, but said the current find was more "significant".
The bird is thought to have been hunted to extinction by European settlers.
No complete skeleton has ever been found in Mauritius, and the last full set of bones was destroyed in a fire at a museum in Oxford, England, in 1755.
"It's a wonderful collection," said Dr Julian Hume, a research associate with London's Natural History Museum and a member of the largely Dutch-Mauritian team.
"The chances of a single (intact) bone being preserved [would be] a remarkable event; and here we have a whole collection of them," the Reuters news agency quoted him as saying.
Dr Hume said previous bones had been plucked out in a haphazard way, with little attention given to adjacent dodo fossils or clues about the birds' environment.
The find includes a complete hip and four leg bones (femur, fibula, tibiotarsus and hypotarsus). Numerous other dodo parts were also unearthed, such as skull fragments, beak bones, vertebrae, wing bones and toe bones.
Dr Hume told BBC News: "Not only have we found a cross section of the dodo environment before man but can add many of the ecological components.
"First, many of the bones are in-situ, which means that they are in original articulation. This includes the first dodo parts found in a marsh (a complete leg) and many extinct giant tortoise with beautifully preserved shells. The bone material is of exceptional quality and one may imagine that the animals died only recently."
Dr Hume said the team had also found thousands of leaves, wood, pollen, tree and shrub seeds including the famous dodo tree (Tambalacoque), plus a large number of small land snails and insect parts.
The discoveries are part of an on-going project started last year when scientists unearthed hundreds of dodo bones at Mare aux Songes in the south-east of the island.
The bones, thought to be at least 2,000 years old, included sections of beaks and the remains of dodo chicks.