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East Coulee studio’s giant turtle, skull replicas exhibited in top Australian museum

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    Dinosaur Valley Studios continues to put Drumheller on the map with two fossil replicas are being featured prominently in a new exhibit in one of Australia’s top museums.

    The studio, based in East Coulee and specialized in fabricating and designing prehistoric fossil and bone models, recently shipped out two giant replicas to the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney. A Shonisaurus skull and a prehistoric sea turtle skull are being prominently featured in the museum’s ‘Sea Monsters, Prehistoric Ocean Predators’ exhibit, which opened in late September and runs into April 2020. The exhibition combines real fossils from millions of years ago and giant replicas like the two fabricated by Dinosaur Valley Studios.

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    Frank Hadfield says the studio was contacted by the museum after they heard of them through the internet, and his team started creating the fossils in May this year. He says this is the fourth continent that studio has sent work too. 

    “It’s quite a feather in our cap,” he says, adding the studio has seen its clients and work diversify and continue to grow globally over the years.

    “We deal a lot internationally, but this was the first Australian display we’ve done but it went so well we are anticipating more work in Australia and Asia as well.”

    The Shonisaurus skull is 14 foot long and anatomically accurate to the real sea monster which lived millions of years ago, a fossil of which was found in British Columbia and measured to 70 feet in length. 

    The Australian National Maritime Museum  is the country’s centre for maritime collections, exhibitions, research, and archaeology, welcoming over 850,000 visitors annually.


Hanna RCMP investigate home invasion

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The RCMP responded to a call on Friday, October 11 at 2:11 a.m. that a home in Craigmyle was broken into while the residents were in the home. Investigation continues into this incident.

At approximately 1:30 a.m. two male suspects entered an unlocked residence and woke up the homeowners, demanding money.  The homeowners provided cash to the males and then the suspects left with no further interaction.  It is not known whether the suspects drove a vehicle onto the rural property.

One of the suspects described as a man with a large build, at least 6 feet tall, wearing a hoodie under black overalls and a balaclava.

 The second suspect was approximately 5-foot-8 with a thin build, also wearing a hoodie under black coveralls and a balaclava.

Both males are believed to have been carrying handguns. The males had an accent of unknown origin.

Hanna RCMP is investigating this incident.  RCMP Forensic Identification Section (FIS) attended to do a scene examination.  Some of the cash taken by the suspects were older bills, therefore will be somewhat unique. The suspects were focussed on taking cash during this break-in.

If you have any information about this incident or observe a person spending older currency, please contact the Hanna RCMP Detachment at 403-854-3393.  If you wish to remain anonymous, you can contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS), online at www.P3Tips.com or by using the "P3 Tips" app available through the Apple App or Google Play Store.

Strong registration for minor hockey

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    Minor hockey players are back on the ice and it is looking like it could be a strong season.
    Already the teams are on the ice in practice in exhibition play. President of Drumheller Minor Hockey Lyle Cawiezel, says registration is still strong.
    “We have about the same as last year. We have a couple of teams in novice, atom has two teams, and midget, peewee and bantam all have one team,” said Cawiezel.
“We have good strength in the tykes program, there is a good number there so the bottom levels are still showing growth.”
    This year all novice players will be playing on half ice.
    “It has been mandated by Hockey Alberta and Hockey Canada that all novice will participate in half-ice,” he said.
    Half ice is reported to give players more touches and help in development.
    Another change this year is there will no longer be playdowns for provincials in peewee bantam and midget. In previous years provincial playoffs were played outside of regular league play, allowing the team more games, and a glance at the competition in other areas.
    “Last year they did a pilot with the peewee group where the winner of the tiers moved on in provincials. In the past we had separate playoffs,” said Cawiezel. They have added that to bantam and midget.”
    ‘The provincials almost gave you a second chance to have extra games and another season,” he said.
    Tiering for the teams begins the weekend of October 12.


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