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Last updateMon, 29 Apr 2024 2am

Annual cruise weekend in Three Hills starts tonight

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Car enthusiasts mark your calendars for this weekend.
    The annual Three Hills Cruise Weekend takes place Friday to Sunday (June 5-7) and is jam-packed with activities for everyone.
    The weekend will kick-off with a meet, greet and cruise that begins at Anderson Park at 6 p.m. The cruise will take place at about 8 p.m.
    “We cruise up to the highway and then north to Trochu and around town, then back to Three Hills and then we cruise around town till dusk,” Dennis Fox, Chairman of the Cruise weekend committee said.
    At dusk the movie, “American Graffiti” will be shown drive-in style on 6 Ave. north of the prairie gym.
    Saturday is the Street Freaks’ Show & Shine taking place on Main Street at Railway Ave. It starts at 10 a.m. and goes until mid-afternoon. There will also be a live band playing throughout the day and an engine-build contest.
    The mile bracket racing will start at the airport with time trials taking place at 3 p.m. and racing beginning at 5 p.m.
After the racing, there will be a cruise cabaret at the Three Hills Curling Club taking place in the evening.
    Sunday morning will feature racing back at the airport with time trials starting at 10 a.m. and racing at 1 p.m.
    Admission for the races is $10. Those 12 and under are free. The racer entry fee is $60 per day.
    The money from these entry fees goes to various charities and volunteer groups.
    “We have several volunteer groups that are getting a share of the proceeds. These volunteer groups are helping us do the event,” Fox said.
    There are approximately a dozen groups that are helping with the event. Any other proceeds will go to other community projects, he said.


Royal Tyrrell Museum unveils new dinosaur species

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The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology unveiled a new species of horned dinosaur on Thursday, June 4.
    The Regaliceratops peterhewsi is a newly described genus and species of ceratopsid, meaning horned dinosaur that lived during the late Cretaceous period - 68.5 to 67.5 million years ago. It is a close relative of the Triceratops.
    Peter Hews, a Calgary resident and geologist in the petroleum industry discovered it in 2005. It is from southwestern Alberta near the Oldman River, Dr. Caleb Brown, Post-doctoral Fellow for the Royal Tyrrell Museum, explained at the presentation. He said this was odd because most of the dinosaur discoveries come from southeastern Alberta.
    It took 10 years to prepare the Regaliceratops peterhewsi to be unveiled to the public, Dr. Brown said.
    “That was a combination of reporting it to the museum, excavating the specimen, preparing it to what you see in the lab, removing it from the rock, consolidating it, making it stable, and the research,” he said continuing by explaining that this is a bit of an exception because normally it does not take that long.
    “It was a particularly problematic specimen, but we also want the public to get an appreciation for how much energy is involved, and how much time is involved by taking a specimen from the ground, putting it on display and also making it available for research,” he said.
    The unveiling of the Regaliceratops peterhewsi was part of the opening of the museum’s new exhibit called “Fossils in Focus.” The exhibit is rotating and will highlight some of the most remarkable and scientifically significant fossils from Alberta.
    Dr. Craig Scott, curator of fossil mammals, said when putting the exhibit together, the museum wanted to focus on a diversity of fossils. Dr. Scott said one of the things the museum desired was temporary exhibit space. He said in some of the larger galleries at the museum some of the same exhibits have been on display for a long period of time.
    “We thought if we had a smaller exhibit in a very confined space, where we could have maximum flexibility it would be easier to rotate specimens in and out and give return visitors something new to look at every time they come,” he said.
    Dr. Scott explained that the museum has committed to rotating the exhibits annually, “but, should a really amazing specimen be discovered, say during this season, we have the ability to move parts of that exhibit out, and replace it with something that has been recently discovered, or if we have specimen that has been the focus of research that is going to be published in the near future, we can put those in as well.”
    The exhibit is now open to the public.

Drumheller girls participate in softball tournament

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    Four teams from the Drumheller Girls Softball Association headed out to Stettler this past weekend.
 The teams took part in a tournament hosted by Stettler and came home all smiles.
    The U-10 Comets came away with one win and two losses.  Coach Justin Bolin was very pleased with how the girls played.
    The U-12 Comets won all three of their round robin games and played Trochu in the gold medal game and won 11-9.  
    Coach Kelsey Calon said, “The girls faced some tough moments, including freezing temperatures and dust storms, during the weekend, but they fought hard and did what they had to do to come up with the wins.”
    The U-12 Renegades had two wins and a tie during their round robin setting them up to play Lacombe for the bronze medal.  Some very bizarre circumstances arose and the umpire ended up calling the close game prematurely without explanation, causing the Renegades to lose by two runs.
    The U-14 Comets went into the round robin with a very tough draw not winning any game. The teams they faced ended up winning the gold and silver medals for their age group.


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