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Royal Tyrrell staff revisits past by transporting specimen on Red Deer River

fossil boat extraction

Last Tuesday, palaeontologists from the Tyrrell museum were excavating the rare fossilized remains of a ceratopsian from a bonebed about halfway up a valley wall near the Tolman Bridge when they found that the rock, a jumbled and mingled mass of fossilized bones weighing up to 300 pounds, was much too heavy to haul over 700 metres up to the prairies and back to their trucks.

The plaster casing and burlap used to protect the fossils, known as a jacket, was necessarily heavy as the palaeontologists were safeguarding the remains of multiple arrhinoceratops’, one of the rarest horned dinosaurs in North America that until recently was only known through the study of two skulls. The team had found a rich bonebed containing the remains of at least five individuals ranging from babies to adults – a palaeontological gold mine of information on a little known and rare specimen, from a bonebed containing evidence of hip bones, jaws, and ribs all mixed and piled together. 

Palaeontologist François Therrien said the team was dealing with a cumbersome excavation up the hillside through narrow passages to prairie level, and then almost a kilometre to their vehicle, when by coincidence he spoke to two colleagues working on the museum’s flood mitigation program, which surveys Red Deer River valley by boat for flood damage to potentially significant sites.

“We asked if there was any chance they were going out on the river anytime soon and they said they were actually going out that day,” Therrien said. “I said ‘you’re kidding, you’re my new best friend.’”

They coordinated a rendezvous point and time and six palaeontologists carried the burlap jacket 50 metres down the hillside and loaded it onto the boat and easily shipped it back to the museum for study. 

Therrien said it’s a rare occurrence to excavate a fossil by boat as palaeontologists typically transport specimens, if they’re small enough, by hand or backpack to their vehicles. 

“Most of the time we are in the badlands where we’re not close to the river or can access the badlands by road. Sometimes we’ll ask landowners, many are farmers, to use their ATVs – it’s whatever method that is at our disposal and is most convenient. If a block is too heavy we’ll even call in the cavalry and get a helicopter in,” he said.

In a way, the excavation harkened back to the young days of palaeontology, the days of which Drumheller’s history as a centre of dinosaur studies began, where early scientists set off by boat down the Red Deer River from Red Deer in search of the big discovery that would give them a name, anchoring their barges to set up prospecting camps on the shore before moving on down the river to the next stop.

“In those days that was the easiest method. Sometimes they’d have access to horses with wagons and use those to haul jackets out of the valley and to the nearest town or train station,” Therrien said.

And just how does today’s excavations compare to then?

“We were joking about that on Wednesday when we were carrying another jacket up the valley. We keep saying palaeontologists in the early 20th century had it hard compared to us, having to do everything by hand, but the truth is they had their boats and horses and we don’t. We rely so much on trucks now that we’re limited in terms of how close we can get to the badlands via surfaced roads. In reality we actually carry those jackets a farther way than the early palaeontologists were doing, so we had a chuckle over that.”

“Using a boat was definitely a luxury… and now that the boat is out of storage and we know how to use it, it is definitely going to be a method we use more often when it’s convenient,” Therrien said.


Park signage revitalized by Kinsmen Club and inmates

 

mcconckey park

For over 80 years the Drumheller Kinsmen Club has been donated their time and money in ways in which benefit every person in the community, and can often be seen donating to local organizations and projects or serving free meals at town events.

Recently the club partnered with inmates at the Drumheller Institution to spruce up the signage at parks the club maintains throughout town.

The Kinsmen and employees of the Drumheller Institution coordinated an effort to improve the signage at McConkey, Greentree, Riverside and Partici parks, which the Kinsmen maintain, by giving inmates the opportunity to paint and improve some of the woodwork on the signs. The park signs, bright and sharp, look excellent in a tourist town that has been becoming increasingly more beautiful over the last few years, thanks to the municipality and groups like the Kinsmen Club.

“They look good as new,” said Kinsmen member Grant Daly. “I was pretty grateful for what they pulled off for us.”

Daly said the work the inmates put in was above and beyond what the club expected. 

“It was good to just see that they were getting some good skills in there to transition them into the public. I was blown away with one guy’s carpentry skills.”

And even though they are walls away from the fruits of their labour installed in the parks, the craftsmen at the institution were just as excited to take on the project as Daly.

“It was just cool seeing how proud they were of what they accomplished. When I said thank you to him, you could just tell that he hadn’t had anyone be appreciative for what he did in a long time. He wasn’t from here, but said ‘it was so cool to be a part of your town.’ He didn’t have any affiliation or anything but he was still proud of what he did.”

The Kinsmen have plans in the works to potentially maintain Newcastle Beach in what the call a remediation project, which would see a gazebo, tables, and better beach rock put on the shore.

“Right not it’s just dirt and it’s pretty rough. We’ll be challenging other clubs to help out now.”

The Kinsmen Club will be hosting a booth and are interested to speak to prospective volunteers at the Sports Recreation and Arts Expo on September 7 from 4 to 8 pm at the Badlands Community Facility.

Stuff the Bus today!

IMG 5164

Come on Drumheller, get out and Stuff that Bus. The Salvation Army and volunteers are at the ATB parking lot on until 3 p.m. today, taking food and cash donations for the Salvation Army Food Bank in anticipation of the beginning of the school year. This year Encana is supporting the annual drive, and is matching food donations at $2 per pound of food and matching cash donations, dollar for dollar, up to $5,000.


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