News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2132
10032024Thu
Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Minor injuries in rollover near Morrin Bridge

rollloverrb

On February 18th, 2015, at about 8:45 pm, Drumheller RCMP responded to a single vehicle rollover on Highway 27 at Morrin Hill.  
    Drumheller EMS and Morrin Fire Department also responded.
     Investigation revealed a Chevrolet Tahoe was travelling westbound on Highway 27 and began descending Morrin Hill.  The poor weather conditions resulted in extremely slippery road surface, causing the driver to lose control.
    The Tahoe struck a guard rail then flipped and rolled into a ravine.  Fortunately both occupants were wearing their seatbelts which minimized their injuries.
    The 39 year old male driver and the 42 year old male passenger, both from Saskatchewan, sustained minor injuries and were transported to Drumheller Health Centre for assessments.  Alcohol was not a factor and no charges are being laid.
    Police remind motorists to adjust their driving to the road conditions, which are subject to change quickly here in Alberta.


Everyone invited to Tough Mudder open house

tough-mudder-photo

    Drumheller businesses and residents are invited to drop by a Tough Mudder open house on Thursday, February 19, downstairs in the large conference room at the Badlands Community Facility.
    The open house is scheduled from 4:30 pm to 8:00 pm, and people are invited to drop by anytime during those hours.
    Drumheller Festival Society president Ryan Semchuk said the three people from the Tough Mudder headquarters team will be in town for a few days, and attending the open house, including the general manager of Canada, the operations manager, and the marketing representative for all of Tough Mudder.
    “If you want to come down, ask questions about Tough Mudder, find out how to get involved, maybe you’re interested in running the event. Maybe you want to get your business involved. Whatever the situation is, we’d love to just have people come down at any time during that time, stop in, come meet the crew, and they’d love to meet the community of Drumheller.”
    Semchuk said now that Drumheller has its inaugural Tough Mudder under its belt, the Festival Society expects more people to become involved, either in helping with the event or participating in the obstacle course.
    Close to 10,000 people took part or cheered on their family and friends during Drumheller’s Tough Mudder 2014.
    Drumheller’s 2015 Tough Mudder event is scheduled for September 5 and 6 of the long weekend. Semchuk said the Festival Society begins the planning for this year’s Tough Mudder the first two weeks in March.

Fossil record offers glimpse of earth’s history

Jason Anderson

    The Royal Tyrrell Museum is pleased to welcome Jason Anderson from the University of Calgary on February 19 as the next presenter for the 2015 Speaker Series with his talk on “Gaps in the Fossil Record of Vertebrates.”
    Our understanding of the history of life on Earth is derived directly and indirectly from fossils. When the fossil record is less than perfect, which is usually the case, we can be misled.
    One of the biggest gaps in the fossil record of four-legged animals (called tetrapods, tetra = four, poda = feet) occurs after the mass extinction at the end of the Devonian Period (~375 million years ago) and into the Carboniferous Period. This time interval, called “Romer’s Gap,” is of great importance because it is during this time that four-legged animals left the water to colonize land.
    Romer’s Gap has been interpreted as an absence of fossils, but new discoveries in Scotland and Nova Scotia suggest that it is due to a reduction in the preservation potential of fossils, not their absence, which has caused so few to be found.
    These new fossils shed light on the first steps of four-legged animals out of water and reveal that tetrapods may have been less affected by the end-Devonian extinction event than previously thought.
    The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. The first part of the series will be held every Thursday until February 26, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Speaker Series talks are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/user/RoyalTyrrellMuseum.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.