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    |  |  |  | The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology (near Drumheller) – The 
      Royal Tyrrell Museum, (four miles from Drumheller, along the North Dinosaur 
      Trail) is one of the largest palaeontological museums in the world, with 
      over 200 dinosaur specimens on display. It was named for Joseph Burr Tyrrell, 
      who found the first dinosaur skeleton in the Drumheller area in 1884.The museum traces the origin of life on Earth from 3.5 billion years 
    ago, to the present with displays of 800 fossil specimens. | 
  
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    |  |  |  | Don't miss the Cretaceous Garden, an indoor garden, housing plants that 
      grew in Alberta when it had a semi-tropical climate 65 million years ago. 
      There’s also the Burgess Shale, an undersea environment from 530 
      million years ago: this display makes you a part of the environment. Dinosaur Hall and Ice Ages exhibits have stunning displays 
    of fossil skeletons! | 
  
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    |  |  |  | Historic Atlas Coal Mine (east of Drumheller) – Step into the life of a 1930's coal miner (teenagers worked the mines too). 
      Climb up the 8 story high wooden tipple for screening and loading coal, 
      and follow the kid's guide map through the sitemine offices, blacksmith shop, wash house, miner's shack, graveyard. Along 
      the way there are things for kids to do  – lower miner's baskets up and down, climb on pint-sized 
      locomotives, screen coal with a shaker screen, parents can push your kids 
      in an empty coal car (or bigger kids can push the car for themselves, to 
      see what it was like for real). There are puppet shows (e.g. the day the 
    pit pony saved the mine), story telling, and people dressed up in costume   – find out how far your miner's paycheck would go. Open May   – Sept. | 
  
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    |  |  |  | Dinosaur Provincial Park (near Brooks)  – The Dinosaur Provincial Park, a World Heritage Site, is the heart of the 
      ""Great Canadian Dinosaur Rush," where amazing dinosaur fossils 
      were excavated in the early 1900's. Not a large park (73 sq. km.), about 
      two-thirds of it is a Natural Preserve you can explore on interpretive bus 
      tours and hikes through the “badlands.” | 
  
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    |  |  |  | Field Station Visitor Centre   – Stop in the visitor center for maps, and don't miss the exhibits   – dinosaur skeletons, cast of a big dinosaur footprint, mural of what Alberta 
      looked like 75 million years ago, and watch paleontologists at work in the 
    lab. | 
  
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    |  |  |  | Guided walking tours include the “Fossil Safari Hike”, 
      a 2.5 hour interpretive walk through a fossil site, where you’ll see fossils 
      and learn about the dinosaurs who once roamed here. Or join a 45 minute 
      “Lab Talk” tour where you’ll meet paleontologists in the Preparation 
    Lab. | 
  
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    |  |  |  | Or, if you'd rather go it alone, there are two outdoor dinosaur 
      display buildings and several self-guided walking trails (some are 
      accessible with strollers). Take the Badlands Trail for an easy walk 
      among the "hoodoos" and other rock formations. Budding paleontologists 
      will want to follow the Trail of the Fossil Hunters, where tons of 
      fossils were excavated. Or, just bring a picnic and sit under the trees 
    on the Cottonwood Flats Trail. |