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Something For Your Sole

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For Your Soles shoe store is set to open on Tuesday, March 8 at 10 a.m. The shop, located on 3rd Avenue in downtown Drumheller, promises to carry a large selection of name brand footwear as well as accessories. Owner Stacey Campbell is busy at the location beside the new TELUS store unpacking and merchandising the stock.


Dynos Sr. Girls advance to Zones

DVSS Dyno Brayden Peters

 

On Wednesday, March 2, DVSS  Dynos  Sr. Girls won the battle, 38-30,  against Hugh Sutherland School from Carstairs.  This win gave the Dynos the opportunity to  advance to zone playoffs, which is  their  first time in four years.  Zone playoffs are  scheduled for  next weekend March 11-12, in Black Diamond.  DVSS Sr. Girls  Head Coach Jenn Raugust said, “We are pretty sure ,that we  rank 6th out of eight  teams, but it will depend on how  the other seven  teams qualified.  We have three grade 12’s and all they ever want is to do,  is  get to Provincials, so winning zones will be  the next step.  Honorable mention goes to all the girls  who played really well, stepped up when we need them to and we  also had a killer defense.  Its definitely a lot of  fun,  especially when the score is close  and you are  on the winning side.   The team has had a lot of growth this year, with  five new girls,  and  since the middle of  January,  we’ve become a totally  different team. All we have to work on,  is sinking our shots.”  After the game, appreciation awards  were  presented, by Head Coach Jenn Raugust and Coach Andrew Newman,   to the grade 12 Dynos;  Rachel Engen, Karis Hilchey and Kyra Koustrup.  Pictured above is Brayden Peters shooting for the basket.

Rivers reveal fossil finds following flood

Ben Borkovic at Sheep River1

    While the Flood of 2013, wreaked havoc on the province, and even today, many communities are just receiving mitigation funding, for the scientific community, it has been revealing.
    Royal Tyrrell Museum technicians Joe Sanchez and Ben Borkovic have been prospecting in the wake of the flooding looking for specimens that have been revealed by the high water.
    “So far it has turned up some exceptional fossil material that was out in those rivers,” Borkovic tells The Mail.
    One of those exceptional finds is the complete fossil of a small dinosaur known as a Leptoceratops, that was revealed in the banks of the Old Man River near Fort Macleod.
    “That was probably the specimen that started the whole thing,” he explains. “It really made us and the powers that be realize what was out there and the impact the flood had on palaeontology.”
    This fossil was displaced from the wall of the riverbank and spotted by a couple fishing. They contacted the Tyrrell Museum, and staff helped him to collect it.
    “Now that it is being prepared it is turning out to be quite exceptional. It’s great to have a skeleton, and know that it wasn’t lost in the river, but on top of that it is turning out to be a pretty spectacular specimen, which will hopefully be out on display here in time.”
    Since this find in 2013, they have continued to prospect, and often nature is their best helper.
    “Where the largest effect, in terms of our project and in terms of the fossil material turning up, would be in the bends of rivers where the flood was getting higher and pushing harder than any sort of standard spring flow,” he explains. “It really cut the banks back, brought down rock to expose fresh bedrock or clear away a slumped material … it just cut everything clean again.”
    The project took more than just cruising the banks of the rivers looking for fossils.
    “We narrowed down our focus by looking at areas where we knew the rocks were there, right type and age. We were pouring over maps and satellite images for areas where that should be exposed and try to get to those areas,” he explains. “Once we are on that outcrop, you could tell quickly if it was reburied or slumped over. If it was cleanly exposed, we had to make our way along and inspect every section.
    While the flood project itself will be wrapping up over the next year or two. It did however open up new areas to keep an eye on.
    “Some of these finds might have brought further field areas to light. Obviously the Drumheller valley and Dinosaur Park are very well known for their fossil material, but now I think there is now some incentive so that the museum will periodically go and inspect these other areas as well."


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