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Wayfinding dino signs launched downtown

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Those walking around downtown may have noticed the silver medallions at the bottom of the street signs. Coupled with your smartphone, they are a ticket to explore Alberta prehistoric past.

The town has launched a digital wayfinding website where visitors can scan on each of the 20 medallions to learn more about the dinosaurs which lived in the Drumheller area.

“It’s a great way to have locals and tourists interact with the signage, making an offline object online,” says developer Brian Yanish.

The signs work via QR code scanning or through the NFC chip in Android and iPhones which allow users to tap the object to bring up the website. The website provides pulls information on the dinosaur from Wikipedia.

Yanish says there is a lot of potential to further develop the app with video or augmented reality.

The project was partially funded through grant money and was developed in partnership with the town, Travel Drumheller, the developer, and a Calgary company which produced the signs. The emblems were curated by the Royal Tyrrell Museum and designed by Laura Syvertsen, a local artist.


Fildebrandt aims to lead new party into provincial election

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Just when you thought you had heard the last of Derek Fildebrandt, he announced last week he would be running for the leadership of the Freedom Conservative Party.

The current Brooks Strathmore MLA, who has had his name in the news for a number of missteps that ultimately led to him being not welcomed back into the United Conservative Party, has taken the reins of a new political party.

  “Albertans overwhelmingly want the NDP defeated in 2019, but that has resulted in many of the old backroom insiders from the old Tory party seizing almost total control of the UCP,” he said. 

  “Because there is a strong belief there that people will have absolutely no other choice, they can take rural and conservative Albertans for granted. As a result, they have been rigging and meddling unnecessarily in nominations across Alberta to make sure that party inside favourites win over what are often the candidates supported by the actual local conservative  members.”

He says that in some cases, as the party aims to fetch support from a broader audience it is neglecting its roots.

“I always believed a big tent conservative party could be necessary, but it shouldn’t require that individual MLAs are not allowed to speak up and vote freely on issues,” he said. “I have tremendous respect for Rick (Strankman), he is fantastic MLA  but every single Tory MLA has been forced to be quiet on many issues and vote against their own beliefs. 

“Tory MLAs were ordered on 12 separate occasions to run out of the house to avoid debating or voting on Bill 9, which attacked free speech rights for pro-life Albertans. They were forced on four separate occasions to vote for an NDP bill to establish race and gender quotas. They were forced to sit silently as the party supported government ownership of the Trans Mountain pipeline with Trudeau and Notley. They have not  been able to represent their constituents openly and freely.”

While he has issues with his former party, he says the goal is to make sure the NDP does not achieve power. To avoid vote splitting the Freedom Conservative Party has the aim to run candidates in ridings where there is no chance that the NDP will get in.

Fildebrandt is outspoken when it comes to his own predicament that led to his current situation. New electoral boundaries were established and this led to disagreements as to where  Fildebrandt would run in the next election. He says at one point the Boundary Commission proposed a Drumheller–Strathmore riding and he says he was encouraged to run against Drumheller-Stettler MLA Rick Strankman. 

He also said he was pushed out of his own riding.

“When it became Chestermere-Strathmore in the final redraw, he (Kenney) said he wanted me back in caucus and to run in the next election. But I couldn’t run in Chestermere-Strathmore because  it would look bad, in his words, quote “for a blonde-bearded redneck to  defeat one of our only women and minorities in caucus.”

A statement from the UCP Caucus takes issue with Fildebrandt’s assessment.

“Like much of what Mr. Fildebrandt says, this is completely untrue. Mr. Fildebrandt resigned from the UCP caucus in August 2017, after having been caught cheating on his expenses, renting out a taxpayer-funded apartment, and having been charged with leaving the scene of an accident. In November, he approached Jason Kenney to inquire about re-admission to the UCP caucus. Mr. Kenney indicated that Derek would have to make an application to the caucus, who would vote then on his application for re-admission. Mr. Kenney, joined by House Leader Jason Nixon, suggested to Derek that it would be difficult to get the support of his former colleagues if he intended to run against one of them. They suggested that Derek’s application would be better received by Caucus if he indicated an intention to run where he lives - in West Calgary - rather than running against incumbent UCP MLAs such as Rick Strankman and Leela Aheer in constituencies that are very distant from his home.  Mr. Fildebrandt’s statement that he was encouraged by the UCP leadership to run against Rick Strankman is complete fiction.”

‘Roadkill’ fossil discovered at Fort Mac mine

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Royal Tyrrell Museum scientists are in possession of a new discovery of what is believed to be a plesiosaur that was found at Syncrude’s North Mine near Fort McMurray.

On June 7, a geotechnical instrumentation technician for Neegan Technical Services discovered the fossil while performing his regular duties. The fossil was found in inactive overburden. There have been more than a dozen finds in Syncrude’s history. The discovery is fitting as the Tyrrell currently has on display its popular exhibit Grounds for Discovery. These are Alberta fossil finds that were discovered in collaboration with industrial industries.

  Dr. Donald Henderson, curator of dinosaurs at the Royal Tyrrell Museum, says the skeleton is about 60 per cent intact.

“Fossil-wise (60 per cent) that’s really good, but based on the past 25 years of Fort McMurray stuff, it’s not so good. We were getting used to 100 per cent complete things,” said Henderson. “The Suncor Nodosaur, for example, was probably 100 percent before it was hit by the giant bucket. 

What also sets it apart is the positioning of the fossil.

“Most of the ones we have had in the past were perfectly laid out, they went to seabed nicely. This one is a bit of a jumble, like a road kill. The skull was detached from the rest of the body, and the lower jaw we haven’t seen and the teeth had fallen out,” said Henderson. 

“I think it was quite rotten and it was scavenged before it was finally buried.” 

He says that it appears as if the seabed may have had low oxygen which deterred other animals from scavenging.

“Once things got out of the biologically active zone they were home free,” he said. “But this one seems to have had some troubles along the way.”

  He says this was a medium-sized plesiosaur. These reptiles are known for their serpent-like neck.

“We are thinking it is something very similar to something we first got way back in 1994, called Nichollsia borealis, named after Betsy Nicholls,” he said. 

“The only good bone we have seen is the roof of the mouth and that bit of the skull. We really need to see the top of the skull to be sure if it  is the same thing or something new.”

 Henderson said it will take some time before they have a chance to work on the find.

     “We are getting ready for a new exhibit that is opening in May, so all our technicians are getting that ready,” he said. “You need patience in this game. I tell people “the thing sat in the ground for 112 million years, it can wait six months.’”

 


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