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Royal Tyrell Museum, Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
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In early May, Art and I were in Canada, landing in Calgary, then driving about an hour and a half
across the Alberta wheat fields to the town of Drumheller, located in the Canadian Badlands,
where some of the world’s most impressive dinosaur fossils have been found. Our
goal was to visit the Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology, a treasure trove of fossils from the
Dinosaur Age.
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Dinosaur fossils at the Royal Tyrell Museum, Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
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After buying our tickets
at the museum entrance, we followed signs to the first room, which we found filled with
life size models of dinosaurs and an introduction to life in Cretaceous Alberta. We felt as if we had stepped into another
world.
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Cretaceous Alberta. Seventy million years ago, eastern
Alberta was warmer and wetter than it is today and was teeming with wildlife—dinosaurs
of all sorts of shapes and sizes! |
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Dinosaurs lived from about 230 to 64 million years ago, during the Mesozoic Era.
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A visit to the museum is a trip through time—3.9
billion years of evolution.
While some skeletons are displayed in life-like poses, assembled as they
would have been in the living animal---
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Camarasaurus. The mounting of the skeletons in real-life poses recreates the drama of life in the past. |
--or even as whole skeletons as they appeared when first
discovered---
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This T. rex skeleton is known as “black beauty". The
bones became darkened by the element manganese during
fossilization. |
--it is more typical for fossil bones to be scattered, needing
to be reassembled like a jigsaw puzzle.
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A typical bonebed.
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And not only are there fossils of dinosaurs at the museum, but also of plants, insects, fish, amphibians, birds, other reptiles.
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Fossil impression of an early bird Confuciousornis
sanctus (125-120 mya) from Liaoning Province China. Donated by the Chinese
Academy of Science. |
While most exhibits are just to look at, some invite participation. Standing next to this Camarasaurus hind limb, I look miniscule. In real life Camarasaurus grew to be 60 feet long and weighed 32 tons.
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Camarasaurus right hind limb. |
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Albertosaurus sarcophagus hand--and my hand!
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The remains of Borealopelta markmitchelli, found at a mine north of Fort McMurray, are of the best-preserved armored
dinosaur in the world. This dinosaur is named after
Mark Mitchell, who worked on the specimen to prepare it
for study and exhibit. Analysis of
pigments found with the skeleton suggest that the dinosaur was reddish-brown in
real life.
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Borealopelta markmitchelli |
Most of the fossils on exhibit at the Tyrell Museum have been found in Canada, but some are from other places. A slab of fossilized ferns from a coal mine in Pennsylvania is mounted at the entrance to the Cretaceous Garden, a greenhouse with ferns, cycads, and other plants typical of the Dinosaur Age.
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Ancient ferns preserved in coal.
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Every day scientists are learning new things about dinosaurs. The large flat plates along the spine of Stegosaurus
were probably used for display and species recognition, but traces of blood vessels suggest they may also
have been used to help regulate body temperature.
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Stegosaurus. This slow-moving, plant-eating dinosaur was about 20-25 feet long and weighed 2-5 tons.
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Shonisaurus skeleton.
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One whole room of the
museum is devoted to the giant fossil of a sea reptile called Shonisaurus, the
biggest and best-preserved giant sea reptile fossil ever found. I wrote about its discovery in my
book Giant Sea Reptiles of the Dinosaur Age. It was a thrill to meet it in person--and to see all the other amazing fossils that fill the museum.
(You can read more about Shonisaurus in a separate blog post at my Art and Books blog.)The path through the museum winds its way through many rooms (including some on the second level) finally exiting through the gift shop. Among the many souvenirs for sale I was pleased to see a large selection of children's books about dinosaurs and the prehistoric world. We visited on a Saturday afternoon and the museum was filled with families of dinosaur enthusiasts. As we left the last room of the museum we were reminded of the importance of learning about the Earth's past:
Understanding ancient life and the circumstances in
which it flourished or died, helps us recognize our place in nature, and how
our decisions affect all life on Earth.
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Royal Tyrell Museum seen from viewing platform.
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During our visit we spent several hours in the museum, pausing for lunch in the museum cafeteria. We ate inside but on a warmer day one can sit on the patio overlooking a pond. At the end of the day, before going back to our car, we climbed the stairs to the top of the hill across from the museum for a panoramic view of the Red Deer River Valley. The next morning we returned for a hike around the Badlands Interpretive Trail and a visit to the hoodoos. (See my blog post of May 15, 2023.)
To plan a visit to the Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology, visit the museum website.
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Daspletosaurus skull.
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