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Last updateThu, 28 Nov 2024 11am

Royal Tyrrell Museum celebrates 25th anniversary

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    The Royal Tyrrell Museum, quite possibly the valley’s crown jewel of attraction, is celebrating its 25th birthday this year and is celebrating with an exhibit and party as gargantuan as the museum’s contents.
    To kick off its anniversary season, a new exhibit, Alberta Unearthed: 25 stories of discovery, will showcase 25 of the museum’s most significant specimens and the intriguing stories behind them.
    May well being the centerpiece of the new exhibit, 'Black Beauty', one of the most complete tyrannosaurus rex fossils in the world, was found in Crowsnest Pass, Alberta by two children fishing. 
    She is one of many examples of the interesting stories behind the chosen specimens on exhibit.
    Selecting 25 specimens from a collection of 130,000 fossils was a challenging task.
    “The specimens we chose tell the story of the Royal Tyrrell Museum while highlighting some of the most significant discoveries in modern science,” said Andrew Neuman, the museum’s executive director.
    “The result is an incredible exhibit, featuring everything from a stunning tyrannosaurus rex named ‘Black Beauty’ to an exquisite piece of amber, to a flying turtle from China.”
      Alberta Unearthed will open to the public Saturday, May 22, and the anniversary celebrations will be held September 17-19. The official Royal Tyrrell Museum birthday party will be held Saturday, September 25.
    “The Royal Tyrrell Museum has been making Albertans proud for 25 years,” said Lindsay Blackett, Minister of Alberta Culture and Community Spirit.
    Alberta Unearthed is about the people, places, and pieces of heart of Canada’s world renowned dinosaur museum. Amazing stories, extraordinary illustrations and photographs, and spectacular specimens come together in this tribute to a quarter century of scientific success.
    The Tyrrell has come far from when it first layed down its mandate to share Alberta’s rich fossil history.
    New initiatives set out by the museum include the ambitious distance learning program now being offered.
    Students can now have the expertise of a world-renowned Tyrrell palaeontologist broadcast into their classroom via the internet, with interactive and intimate instruction being sent as far as New Zealand.

Six months sentence for role in jewellery store break-ins

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    One of the three accused in the break-ins of the Berkes Jewellers in 2008 in Hanna and Drumheller pleaded guilty last Friday.
    Shane Kurtz, 23, was in provincial court in Drumheller on Friday, May 14. He was charged with a number of offenses including break and enter, possession of stolen property and disguise with intent. He originally asked to be tried in Court of Queen’s Bench, but on Friday re-elected to be tried in front of a provincial court judge.
    He pleaded guilty to two counts of break and enter.
    The court heard that around 11:30 p.m. on December 4, 2008 Hanna RCMP responded to an intrusion alarm at Berkes Jewellers in Hanna. The display cases were smashed and culprits made off with a considerable amount of inventory.
    Hours later, culprits punched the lock at the Drumheller Berkes Jewellers, again smashed the displays, took merchandise and departed in a dark-coloured car. Surrounding RCMP detachments were put on alert.
    At about 3:30 p.m. Airdrie RCMP made a traffic stop and arrested Kurtz, along with Tyler Schaeffer and Ryan Latrielle. In the car, they recovered merchandise from the stores valued at $40,000.
    Kurtz admitted to being part of the break and enters in entering his guilty pleas. He also pleaded guilty to a breach of his release conditions where he failed to report.
    The Crown and defense joined in their submission for a global sentence of six months. Judge Shriar accepted the joint submission sentencing Kurtz to five months in custody for each break and enter charge to be served concurrently, and one month for the breach to be served consecutively. Shriar also felt it was important to follow his sentence with one year of probation from the date of his release.
    On Friday, May 14, Kurtz’s co-accused Tyler Schaeffer also appeared in provincial court in Drumheller. He is to appear on July 23 for his charges to be spoken to. The third accused, Ryan Latrielle has already dealt with the charges on an earlier date in Calgary.

Baby bison Brady imbibes with bottle daily

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    A little bison now roams… a lot closer to home, to get his milk from a bottle each day.
    Derek Dekeyser and Kim Clozza have two new guests roaming close to their farm yard. They are bottle-feeding two youngsters. One is Splash, a month-old calf that was orphaned, and an 11 day-old bison calf named Brady that was rejected from his mother. Four times a day, everyday, bottles are warmed and the babes drink to their heart’s content.
    “He (Derek) brought him (Brady) home on Mother’s Day,” laughs Kim Clozza as she feeds the babe with a makeshift nipple on a plastic bottle.
    His buddy Splash has earned his name from his nursing style, bunting his surrogate to make sure he gets every last drop. Occasionally a few drops spill.
    The two get along well.
    Brady was found alone in the field after he was born. Dekeyser explains because bison are naturally always wandering, a mother, when it has twins, will reject the smaller of the two calves to allow them to keep moving. This appears to be what has happened. They brought the animal in from the field and they have been feeding him ever since.
    Already, in less than two weeks, Brady has adjusted to nursing from a bottle and has a skip in his step as he comes running at feeding time, and he appears to be comfortable with humans. The two yard-mates, after feeding, have a quirky habit of trying to continue nursing on each other, wherever they can latch onto.
     Brady will have to take care of the home front himself for a little while as Splash this week has found a new home.
    Dekeyser is confident they will find Brady a new owner in the near future. He is planning to offer the animal to a friend, the man that raised the famous Bailey D. Buffalo. Bailey has made many public appearances, and even met former Premier Ralph Klein, former Prime Minister Paul Martin and Prince Phillip.
    Until a new home is found, the feedings continue.

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