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Hash, cell phones among items found on institution grounds

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Three packages containing cell phones, sim cards, hash oil, cannabis ‘shatter,’ and nicotine patches were found on the grounds of the medium security unit at the Drumheller Institution on January 18.

As a result of the vigilance of staff members, the packages seized held a total institutional value of $137,200, Correctional Services Canada Prairie Region said in a press release.

CSC has set up an anonymous telephone tip line (1-866-780-3784 for all federal institutions so that it may receive additional information about activities relating to security in their penitentiaries.


Stolen truck from Drumheller involved in collision, carjacking

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A truck stolen from Fountain Tire last week in Drumheller was involved in a school bus collision and armed carjacking near Blackfalds Tuesday morning, January 22.
Blackfalds RCMP reported that at 8:12 a.m. police responded to the incident. A male driving the truck taken from Fountain Tire had collided with a school bus. A passerby who stopped to offer assistance was confronted by the suspect armed with a handgun, demanding her vehicle. The male fled in a Mitsubishi Outlander.
The bus had seven children onboard. All were assessed and cleared by on-scene EMT. Two had minor injuries and were released.
RCMP are looking for a silver 2012 Mitsubishi Outlander, with Alberta license plate BNR6558. The public is not to approach this vehicle, or the male driving the vehicle. He is considered to be armed and dangerous.
The male suspect is described as Caucasian, 5’11” in height with dark wavy hair. He had a black skull bandana pulled up covering the lower half of his face and was wearing a dark jacket with the hood covering his head, and dark cargo pants.
Police ask that if someone encounters the Mitsibushi Outlander or the male driver to call 911 immediately. If the vehicle is located abandoned, please contact the Blackfalds RCMP at 403-885-3333.
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."

Origins and evolution of animals on Madagascar subject of this week’s Speaker Series

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The January 24 session of the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology’s 2019 Speaker Series is a presentation by Dr. Karen Samonds from Northern Illinois University entitled, “The Origins and Evolution of Madagascar’s Modern Vertebrates.”

Madagascar is one of the earth’s biodiversity hotspots with some of the most unique species of animals on the planet. However, these pale in comparison to the diversity of animals that existed on the island in the prehistoric past. Madagascar has a dramatic geological and tectonic history that has greatly shaped today’s plants and animals. The details of how, when, and from where the ancestors of the present-day animals arrived still remain poorly known.

Madagascar has been isolated from all other landmasses for nearly 90 million years, well before the arrival of most of the ancestors of animals currently living there. If these animals were not stranded when the island separated, how did it acquire its unusual animals and plants, especially those with close relatives in distant landmasses?

The Cenozoic Period fossil record (66 million years ago to the present) remains our best source of information about the origins of these groups of animals, but much of this fossil record is missing. Recent palaeontological surveys have produced the first collection of Cenozoic vertebrates from Madagascar, including fishes, sharks, crocodylians, turtles, sea cows, dolphins, and, most significantly, the recent discovery of land-dwelling animals.

Dr. Samond will discuss how fossil discoveries in Madagascar shed light on the island’s evolutionary history, and how the remaining species can be preserved.

 

The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. The series is 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.


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