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Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Greentree Mall tenants given eviction notice

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Greentree Mall tenants have received eviction notices and will be moving out of the mall by March next year.

The three remaining businesses at the mall: Kreations Photography, Greentree Dental, and Mark’s were given notice on October 29, but they say it wasn’t really a surprise.

“It was only a matter of time,” says Kreations Photography owner Christina Crossey.  “They’re not going to keep the mall open just for me.”

She says despite the news being expected, it’s still something for her to process.

“You know it’s coming but when it’s on paper it’s real.”

She will be searching for a new location and plans to continue doing business.

Those three businesses are the last remaining at the mall, which is owned by Westview Co-op. The Drumheller Co-op operated at the location since 1978 and Greentree Mall was an active shopping centre since then, but the number of vendors have slowly decreased since the closure of the Co-op last year led to a migration of businesses from the mall.

“When the Co-op closed, everything just died. We lost traffic and everyone moved downtown,” says Crossey.

Greentree Dental says they had already been planning their relocation to a different facility downtown due to their needs, and the notice of eviction did not affect their decision.

Mark’s will move in the spring next year to a new building currently under construction near Canadian Tire.

Westview Co-op, who owns the mall, could not be reached for comment as of press time.


Body of Airdrie man found in Montana

 

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The body of Cameron Collin, who went missing near Billings, Montana in early October, was found by authorities Saturday.

Collin’s body was found in a creek south of Billings around 9:30 a.m. after a helicopter pilot saw his body.

The 37-year-old from Airdrie had been missing since October 4, when he had gone missing after attending a bachelor party for a former college roommate’s wedding.

The Drumheller Mail reported on October 31 that Collin’s family had area ties, with his father Glen Collin being a volunteer with Pioneer Acres near Irricana. A vigil was held by the association there two weeks ago.

The GoFundMe page for the family is still active as the family will continue to incur expenses. So far $16,000 was raised for the family.

 

Tyrrell techs work on summer finds

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Two skulls are among the specimens brought back to the Royal Tyrrell Museum this autumn as field work is wrapping up for the season.

An Edmontosaurus skull was found in the Drumheller area after a tip from a member of the public, and technicians at the museum will be working on preparing it over the winter. Tyrrell head of preparation Lorna O’Brien says while these types of skulls are a common find, this one is exciting for their researchers.

“Most of the good skulls have, historically, already been collected. We haven’t had a good Edmontosaurus skull at the museum before,” she says.

While they were in the field preparing the find, staff ended up finding a partial anchiceratops skull as well. Sometimes the crew will take their lunch breaks to go prospecting in the area, and in this case they stumbled onto the find.

“There are very few skulls in the first place, so having that is scientifically important, so that’s exciting for us. Skulls generally have the features that are scientifically important, especially with the anchiceratops, as they are horned dinosaurs and their ornamentation on the frills is something researchers get excited about,” O’Brien says.

When thinking about palaeontologists working, most people imagine them out in the field, digging in the dirt and chipping away at their finds. But much of the work is done in the Tyrrell’s labs, after specimens are either carried by hand out of the field or via helicopter when the location is too remote.

While researchers may get a lot of the glory when it comes to new and exciting finds from the field, O’Brien says it’s the technician who lays eyes on these specimens for the first time in tens of millions of years.

“Our techs are the first people ever who get to see that material – when we talk about new dinosaurs or new species, it’s the technician who actually got to see it first. They’re the ones saying ‘this looks weird, this looks different,’ and they’ll contact the researcher and say there might be something new here.”

“Often, they are also the ones who are boots on the ground, out in the field, and they get to see the entire process, from finding it, collecting it, and preparing it then having it on display. It’s always something different.”


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