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Dino discovery has familiar name attached

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A new dinosaur species now bears the name of a dino-hunter very familiar to the valley.
    On July 8, the Royal Ontario Museum announced the discovery of a new Horned Dinosaur named Wendiceratops pinhornensis, named after Wendy Sloboda, who discovered the new species.
     Her name is well known in palaeontology circles, first coming into prominence when, as a teenager she discovered dinosaur eggshells at Devil’s Coulee in Southern Alberta. She went on to spend many years searching for dinosaurs and making many discoveries.
    “Wendy Sloboda has a sixth sense for discovering important fossils. She is easily one of the very best dinosaur hunters in the world,” said Dr. David Evans, Temerty Chair and Curator of Vertebrate Palaeontology at the Royal Ontario Museum, who co-authored the study of the discovery.
    This most recently announced discovery was found in 2010 in Alberta near the Montana border. The discovery is of at least four individuals; three adults and one juvenile. The adults are about 20 feet long and weighed more than a ton. It is one of the oldest known members of the family of horned dinosaurs that include Triceratops and Ceratopsidae.
    “Wendiceratops helps us understand the early evolution of skull ornamentation in an iconic group of dinosaurs characterized by their horned faces,” Evans said. “The wide frill of Wendiceratops is ringed by numerous curled horns, the nose had a large, upright horn, and it’s likely there were horns over the eyes too. The number of gnarly frill projections and horns makes it one of the most striking horned dinosaurs ever found.”
    A full sized skeleton of a Wendiceratops is currently on exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum and the dig uncovering the discovery appeared on the History Channel in the documentary series Dino Hunt Canada.


Rattlesnakes not much of a concern in Drumheller says Fish and Wildlife Officer

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There are many snakes in the badlands area, but the prairie rattlesnake is one hikers should watch for.
Recently, STARS took a nine-year-old girl to a hospital in Calgary after being bitten by a rattlesnake in Dinosaur Provincial Park near Brooks, which is approximately 200 kilometres from Drumheller.
    Jeff Zimmer, District Fish and Wildlife Officer for Drumheller said, in his experience, it is rare that someone gets bit.
    “Typically when someone does get bit, it is by a bull snake, and it is because they are trying to pick them up,” he said.
    He explained that with rattlesnakes, as long as people are aware of the snakes and they avoid them or they see them before they get too close to them, there should not be a problem, but with children it is a different story if they are uneducated about snakes he said.
    “The (prairie rattlesnake) is the only species of venomous snakes in Alberta. The toxin levels are very low, because they are on the northern end of their range… the toxicity is quite minimal,” he said.
    He told inSide Drumheller that if a healthy person was to be bit by a venomous snake, and if they were to be injected with the venom, it would be similar to a wasp sting.
    “In most cases you will be in the hospital and they will monitor you. If your symptoms get worse then they would treat you with the anti-venom,” Zimmer explained.
    He continued by saying that the anti-venom is “quite expensive.”
    Being relatively new to the area, Zimmer said he has not heard much about rattlesnakes in Drumheller but mentioned that there are bull snakes, especially near the Atlas Coal Mine area.
    “If we had rattlesnakes in Drumheller it would be very rare and would be the extreme end of where we would find them,” he said.
    The prairie rattlesnake can usually be found in southwestern Saskatchewan and southeastern Alberta as well as in the US in Idaho and Montana, western Iowa all the way to northern Mexico.
    Zimmer explained that if a person was to be bit by a rattlesnake it is “in pure defense, it is not that they are trying to eat you, it is that they are doing it to defend themselves. In a lot of cases what will happen is the (snake) will throw its head and will hit you in the leg with their head to ward you off. If they do bite you, they will (either) release the venom before they bite you, or they will release it after.”
    He said because of this, in a lot of cases people will end up with what is called a ‘dry bite’, which means the person won’t end up with the venom injected in their system, which is why the hospital will monitor people who come in with a snake bite.
    “It is very important that people know what kind of snake it was that bit them, because bull snakes are biters as well,” he said, explaining that bull snakes have no venom because they are constrictors.
    He explained that snakes don’t have ears and feel the vibration of vehicles driving by or people walking and that is what alerts them to danger. He continued by noting that if the snake wasn’t to feel a person approach through the vibration, they could be startled which might result in the snake throwing its head at the person to warn them it is there. He also said a rattlesnake will begin to rattle right away.
    Zimmer mentioned that if a person was to be bit by a snake typically the procedure is standard first aid for the bite, to treat for shock, and then to get the person to a hospital within three hours, but explained that if a person has underlined health conditions, such as an allergy to a wasp sting, the procedure would change to needing immediate medical attention at a hospital.
    “There is a misconception that because (the prairie rattlesnake) is venomous, that it is deadly. But in actuality, they are not because they are on the northern end of their range,” he said.

Passion Play opens tonight

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The Canadian Badlands Passion Play is pulling out all the stops to make this year’s Canadian Badlands Passion Play its best performance ever.
    The Passion Play is in its 22nd season and this year’s performance is the pinnacle of its Gospel of John cycle. Vance Neudorf, executive director of the Passion Play, says they want to make it the best performance yet. And part of that strength is the people, this year with 174 actors.
    “We have one of the largest sets of children actors,” said Neudorf. “It is a great crew. We have a lot of new actors we have never had in the past, and a lot who want be in the play again.”
    The look of the play has changed as well.
    “We have a chariot this year, which is a neat addition,” said Neudorf. “The set has changed considerably, it is much taller and bigger.”
     While this is the final year of the Gospel of John script, the production was not afraid to make some changes to the play itself.
    “It is tighter this year. There are some scenes that have been taken out and some scenes that have been added, so it is a new look again. There is some freshness added to it, which is pretty exciting,” said Neudorf.
    He says it is important they try to keep it fresh.
    “There have been other Passion Plays that have died off because they didn’t make any changes and they ended up with fewer actors all the time, you have to keep things fresh for sure.”
    This is the second year the Passion Play has extended its run to three weekends, and so far Neudorf says the ticket sales are on par with last season. Of course they would like to see the ticket sales grow.
    Opening night for the Passion Play is this Friday, July 10 at 6 p.m. On Saturday, July 11, the performance is at 6 p.m. and on Sunday, July 12, there is a 3 p.m. matinee performance.
    Performances continue on Friday, July 17 at 6 p.m., with matinees on Saturday and Sunday, July 18 and 19 at 3 p.m.
    The final weekend has performances on Friday and Saturday evenings, July 24 and 25, and a final Sunday 3 p.m. performance on July 26.
    Tickets are available by going to www.canadianpassionplay.com or by calling the box office at 1-888-823-2001.


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