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Fossil organisms of the Cretaceous chalk seas topic of Friday's Speaker Series

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This Friday’s, February 16 session of the 2018 Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology’s Speaker Series is a presentation by Dr. Jon Noad entitled “Fauna of the Cretaceous Upper Chalk: Adapting to Life in the Soup.” Dr. Noad is the president of Sedimental Services and professor at the University of Alberta.
Chalk seas covered much of the Late Cretaceous world. The White Cliffs of Dover in the United Kingdom are one of the world’s most recognizable remnants of these oceans. Chalk is composed primarily of tiny coccolithophores, tiny circular discs formed as plankton that disintegrated after death. After they died, coccolithophores settled on the floor of the seabed as a thick ooze, forming this Cretaceous chalk.
Fossils in the Cretaceous chalk are often perfectly preserved in the very fine-grained sediment; due to this exceptional preservation, researchers are able to study their morphology (form). Many of the inhabitants appear to show adaptations to living in the soft conditions of the seabed. There are a number of theories suggesting that many organisms evolved odd features to adapt to the living conditions of the chalky seabed.
In his presentation, Dr. Noad will discuss the form and shape of the organisms found in the Cretaceous chalk and the various styles of preservation.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. Presentations are held every Thursday until April 26 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Speaker Series talks are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/c/RoyalTyrrellMuseumofPalaeontology.


Crew on scene of water main break

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Town crews are on site of a water main break on 12th Street West between Newcastle Trail and South Railway Avenue. Currently there is no disruption to traffic, however, the Town asks that drivers be cognizant of workers at the site over the next two days as they repair the break. So far there has not been any disruption in service.

Hope College adopting name change

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    The board of directors for Drumheller’s Hope College has made a decision to change the current name of the postsecondary institution.
    The college was often mistakenly affiliated with religious schooling and it was easier on shoestring budgets. The society will be registering under a new name, leaving behind the bad debt associated with the college’s old name.
    “We did it for a few different reasons; it’s going to help us out financially and some people were getting confused and plus we just wanted to separate ourselves,” said Dave Watson. “We want to start fresh.”
    “Now it’s just time getting the I’s dotted and T’s crossed and get things done so then we can start a new college basically,” said Watson.
    Watson feels the name change is long overdue with most of the board or anyone associated with it to some capacity already embracing the new name.
    “Philosophically, we’ve changed for a couple of years, we’re just catching up to ourselves and it takes so long to do things. We knew this was going to happen, it was only a matter of time,” said Watson.
    The next step is to switch the college over from a corporate style not-for-profit to a not-for-profit society.
    “We have to become a society so we can do bingo and all these kinds of things,” said Watson.
    It is confirmed that the curriculum itself will remain the same despite the upcoming transformation.
    Watson urged the community to join if they were interested in furthering their education or wanting to help raise funds for the small school.


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