News | DrumhellerMail - Page #1734
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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

43 foot long Bruce the mosasaur makes journey to Manitoba tomorrow

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Drivers on the TransCanada Highway will catch a peculiar site on Thursday as a 43 foot long replica of a mosasaur will make its 1,200 kilometre journey from Dinosaur Valley Studios to a museum in Manitoba.

“I’m sure we’re going to raise a few eyebrows,” said company owner Frank Hadfield, who will drive the replica of the ancient marine reptile to the Canadian Fossil Discover Centre in Morden. 

The mosasaur is the largest fleshed out creature Dinosaur Valley Studios has ever built. It weighs up to two tonnes, has a six-foot long skull and flippers 11 feet long and eight feet high. The actual mosasaur is estimated to have weighed 12 to 15 tonnes, about twice the weight of a Tyrannosaurus rex or an adult elephant. 

The most unique feature of the mosasaur is a double row of flanged teeth on its palate that would oscillate while eating. Its lower jaw was hinged so it could splay to the side, similar to snakes.

“Once it got a hold of you there was only one way to go – down the hatch,” said Hadfield. 

The studio previously molded and cast a skeleton of a smaller mosasaur for the museum and shortly after it was installed the Canadian Fossil Discover Centre requested this true-to-life reconstruction. 

“We based it on that skeleton and reconstructed it as closely as possible to what the animal probably would have looked like. We had extensive knowledge on the anatomy and physiology so we were the go-to people,” said Hadfield.

“The best representation of it was actually in Jurassic World. The mosasaur is the animal that leaps out of the ocean and eats a shark – it’s sort of the hero of the move at the end.”

The mosasaur skeleton in Morden, nicknamed Bruce, is the the Canadian Fossil Discover Centre’s flagship specimen and this replica will be placed outside the museum as an attraction.

Hadfield said CTV will be tracking the replica’s journey along the way to Morden. It leaves Drumheller early Thursday morning.


Drumheller 4H members ready for show and sale

 

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The Drumheller and District 4H club has been raising, training and preparing their cows for auction. The day has finally come to see which cow will get the highest bid.

This year’s sale and show will be held at the Delia Arena

The day starts off bright and early and continues on with events all throughout the day.

The female showing will start at 9:30 am and the steer showing will start shortly after at 12:20 pm.

After that, the grand champion class will begin between 4:00 and 4:30 pm.

The banquet and awards supper will be held at 5:00 pm.

The sale will start at 7:00 pm.

Last year’s Grand Champion for the Drumheller and District 4-H Show and Sale was McKenzie Paget’s 1,476
pound Angus, purchased by Triton Land Services.  

For some members, this year will be their last show.

Brianna Heck, who is an 18 year old Drumheller and District 4H member, will be showing her last steer, Tonto, on Monday, June 8.

“It is definitely going to be weird not being in 4H next year. I really enjoy showing and working with cattle . I am probably going to miss that the most.

As for Tonto, Heck’s approximately  1,450 pound steer, has been easy to care for Heck’a last year.

“He is pretty laid back and easy going, which makes it pretty easy to lead him around.”

This will be Heck’s 9th year in 4H. She reflects on what the best thing she has learned from 4H.

“I used to be a really shy kid, and 4H helped me to break out of my shell with public speaking”

Hope College massage therapist students graduate

 

hope grad 16 pictureCongratulations to Hope College massage therapists graduates (l-r) Sonia Linn, Amanda Sargent, Jennifer Sison and Janzen Ohlhauser stand behind their instuctor, Terri Lesle. The grads earned a 2 year diploma with 2200 hours of instruction and practice.


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