News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2683
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Last updateFri, 10 Jan 2025 12pm

Town introduces Christmas tree recycling

    Your Christmas tree may be the gift that keeps on giving this season.
    The Green Team at the Town of Drumheller has identified one of its goals in the new year, and that is not to landfill Christmas trees.
    “The Green Team has made this a priority,” said Tammi Nygaard of Drumheller Solid Waste.
     They have introduced a tree-recycling program to make good use of Christmas trees after the needles have begun to fall.
    For years the Kinsmen Club of Drumheller would pickup trees to use at the club's annual tree burn at the ski kill.  It may not have been the most environmentally sound way to dispose of trees, but it was popular.
    However for the last few years residents' only option was to landfill their trees.
    Now Christmas trees will be accepted free of charge at the landfill. Residents can drop their trees off between December 31 and January 18.  Residents are asked to ensure the trees are free and clear of decorations, especially tinsel. At that time, they can leave their name and be entered into a draw for a chance to win a rain barrel or composter.
    The trees will be chipped into mulch and it will be used by the Town of Drumheller in local parks and green spaces, or made available to residents to use in their own yards.


Greyhound depot returns to Hanna

    The bus stops here.
    Residents of Hanna will now be able to reap the benefits of Greyhound service returning to town after Greyhound Canada reached an agreement with Willow Creek Bistro and Gift’s as their depot.
    The news came as a result of Town officials actively lobbying Greyhound to return to Hanna.
    “We actively solicited Greyhound for a depot and we worked with them to find a local business that would be interested in taking it on,” said Laurie Armstrong, Economic Development Officer for Hanna.
    Greyhound service to the area shut down last year when Greyhound Canada announced they would no longer be sending regular buses through Drumheller and Hanna to Saskatchewan.
    In that time, passenger service has resumed, but not all of Greyhound’s services were returned.
    “Ever since the Greyhound stopped, you could still get [passenger] pick up and drop off here, but you had to make arrangements through the contractor in Alaska,” said Armstrong. “The parcel service was very inconvenient. They’d have to be picked up in Youngstown.”
    Willow Creek will now handle both passenger tickets and parcel services out of their business.

Tyrrell crew collects pristine plesiosaur from frigid north

    Christmas came early for researchers at the Royal Tyrrell Museum.
    Staff recently collected the remains of a large marine reptile estimated to be 110 to 114 million years old. The specimen was discovered during a road construction project near Fort McMurray.
    When an earth scraper exposed fossil bones, they were examined by an expert from Aeon Paleontological Consulting Ltd., who was on site.
     In accordance with Alberta’s Historical Resources Act, Flatiron Construction, the project contractor for Alberta Transportation, constructed a wooden frame and tarp structure around the fossil so the ground could be thawed for excavation.
    Dr. Donald Henderson led a Royal Tyrrell Museum crew to Fort McMurray on December 10 to examine and collect the specimen. The specimen was determined to be a nearly complete long-necked plesiosaur.
    Although the skull and one flipper are missing, the rest of the skeleton is complete, including the tail. The body measures approximately one metre wide with flippers extending about one metre to each side. It is the fourth plesiosaur found in the Fort McMurray area over the last three years.
    Plesiosaurs lived in the inland sea that covered most of Alberta during the Cretaceous Period.
    While conditions inside the structure were comfortable during the seven-day process, temperatures of -35 C with wind chill made loading the fossil onto a truck a challenge. The fossil was transported to the Royal Tyrrell Museum earlier this week and is awaiting preparation and study.   


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