Introduction
Located 130km (81 miles) northeast of Calgary in Alberta's badlands, the Drumheller Valley is one of the premier dinosaur-fossil hunting places on earth. It wasn't always so, though. In the 1930s, Drumheller was a boomtown of a different sort. Rich in coal deposits throughout the surrounding badlands, it swelled to more than 30,000 people. But after a few fruitful decades the coal was all but mined out, and the town was dying. Desperate for a new anchor industry, in 1967 a large federal prison became the town's largest employer.
But the town was overlooking something else, buried in the ground. Seventy-five million years before, an extraordinary range of dinosaurs roamed the badlands -- so named for its rough, difficult-to-farm soil, though at the time it was largely an inland sea. The first discovery, by James B. Tyrrell in 1884, was an enormous skull of a predator, the Albertosaurus. The rich prehistoric resource hovered in the background for decades, though, as industry...
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Royal Tyrrell Museum
- The Royal Tyrrell Museum is Canada's only museum dedicated to the study of paleontology, and it houses one of the largest collections of dinosaur...
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- Nile Expert Tip: The Royal Tyrrell Museum has been one of the world's finest paleontology facilities for over 25 years....
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Royal Tyrrell Museum
North of Drumheller, and about 145km (90 miles) northeast of Calgary, this is one of the world's best paleontology museums and educational facilities....
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