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Article Title:
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Where the Dinosaurs Roamed

Article Description:
====================

When our family thundered into the Canadian Badlands on a recent
dinosaur–hunting holiday, we did it in an armoured beast of our
own – a 25–foot recreational vehicle. We'd come to search for
the fossil remains of some of the most bloodthirsty beasts of the
Late Cretaceous period, and our kids thought it might be wise to
have a little extra protection. So, for five days our beloved RV
became our home–away–from–home.


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934 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-03-12 10:00:00

Written By:     Travel Alberta
Copyright:      2007, All Rights Reserved
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Where the Dinosaurs Roamed
Copyright (c) 2007 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved
Written by: Travel Alberta
http://www.travelalberta.com




When our family thundered into the Canadian Badlands on a recent
dinosaur–hunting holiday, we did it in an armoured beast of our
own – a 25–foot recreational vehicle. We'd come to search for
the fossil remains of some of the most bloodthirsty beasts of the
Late Cretaceous period, and our kids thought it might be wise to
have a little extra protection. So, for five days our beloved RV
became our home–away–from–home.

Safely cocooned, we had the best of both worlds. Camping
underneath 75 million year–old rock faces, we were still able to
enjoy our creature comforts – soft beds, a solid roof, and
instant access to ice cream and running water. For an urban
family trying out camping for the first time, RVing struck the
perfect balance between rough and luxe.

Our prehistoric road trip began in Calgary, southern Alberta's
biggest city, located just 140 km (88 miles) from the heart of
the Badlands. Our vacation planning was simple – fly in to town,
see a bit of the Calgary Stampede and then grab our RV from the
rental company and head out on the road. We made a mental note to
do that other great Alberta road trip - the Scenic Drives Banff
route – the next time around.

Rumbling out of Calgary in our rig, we got our first glimpse of
the Badlands at Horseshoe Canyon, where the prairie abruptly ends
and cracks wide open, exposing steep sandstone canyons. Streaked
with the deep red ochre of ironstone, this scenic drive is framed
with fast–eroding walls lousy with dinosaur bones, making the
Badlands home to some of the richest prehistoric bone beds on the
planet.

Perched at the canyon's edge, a fossil shop brimmed with
trilobites, ammonites and crocodile teeth. We oohed and ahhed
over them, anxious to start exploring and spotting some of our
own. We took our scenic drive a few more kilometres into
Drumheller, home of the World's Largest Dinosaur, (which we
climbed) and the Royal Tyrrell Museum, one of the finest
paleontology museums in the world.

As we settled into our campsite on the banks of the Red Deer
River, we imagined herds of bloodthirsty dinosaurs thundering
through this weather-beaten and mud-caked landscape. But when
dinosaurs ruled in southern Alberta, things looked entirely
different – a fact we were to discover the next day, when we
toured the incredible Tyrrell Museum.

Standing in the museum's Dinosaur Hall the next morning, we saw
the Badlands as they had looked 75 million years ago – an oozing,
subtropical swampland, on the edge of a shallow sea that
geologists have dubbed the Bearpaw. Posed in front of this
panorama were 40 or more towering dinosaur skeletons, duking it
out in grand Prehistoric style.

Walking through this awesome place, it was easy to see why the
Tyrrell is regularly ranked among the finest museums in the
world. Chronological galleries take visitors back to the
4-billion-year-old primordial soup whose remains turned up in
Yoho National Park's Burgess Shale, and then forward to the
present mammal-dominated world we're familiar with today. We
marvelled at Black Beauty – a pitch–black T.Rex skull that was
pulled out of a mountainside near the Crowsnest Pass a few years
back – and wondered how many more discoveries were yet to be
made, right outside the doors of the museum.

After hiking along trails that surround the museum grounds, we
took another scenic drive to Dinosaur Provincial Park, a UNESCO
World Heritage Site about two hours south of Drumheller. At the
end of this roadtrip is where most of the specimens at the
Tyrrell were found, and where visitors can pick up a dinosaur
species checklist along with the usual bird and animal lists.
Activity in the park is centred around the Field Station, which
is closed until September 1st for a major expansion. In the
meantime, visitor programming is being conducted from a temporary
trailer housing displays. Visitors can sign up for park tours
here, but during the busy summer months it's advisable to
reserve tickets well in advance, through the park website (see
sidebar to the left).

In our three days at the park, we almost did it all – some scenic
roadtrips, five self–guided hikes, a lab talk, and a Badlands Bus
Tour. Our kids joined other campers in mock game shows like
Dinosaur Family Feud and hysterical "paleomusicals" staged by
park staff in the outdoor amphitheatre. But our absolute
favourite tour of the trip was the Fossil Bed Safari. This is
where kids and grown–ups alike are let loose on an ancient bone
bed, searching for signs of fossils underfoot.  "You're in
luck," said safari guide Kamala Hutchison. "It rained last night,
so it should be even easier to find them."

And was she ever right. The ground was awash in bones, and within
minutes every one of us amateur paleontologists had made a
discovery. During our morning of prospecting, we lost count of
the number of dinosaur bones, turtle shell fragments and
crocodile teeth that were found and duly identified by Hutchison.
"Way funner than the bus tour," said 12–year–old Jake Hudson from
Edmonton.

Thanks to the constant erosion that gives the Badlands its
ever-changing face, fossils are exposed or literally washed down
the hillsides with every rainfall. As park supervisor Fred Hammer
put it, "We get a totally new park here every 10 to 15 years."
Or, as I overheard one visitor say to his wife, "If you don't
like the landscape, just wait a minute." For kids (of all ages)
who dream of discovering dinosaur bones, this corner of Alberta
is pure paradise.




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Copyright (c) 2006 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved

Travel Alberta (http://www.travelalberta.com) is the destination 
marketing organization for the Province of Alberta. Guided by the 
Strategic Tourism Marketing Council, Travel Alberta is the steward 
for the effective delivery of tourism marketing programs. For 
information about our organization, please visit our Travel 
Alberta industry web site at http://industry.travelalberta.com


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