Click Dinosaur trading cards to view a sample of dinosaur trading cards, with interpretive text by Monique Keiran.
The three trading cards form part of a 12-card series published by the Royal Tyrrell Museum Cooperating Society.
Click Dinosaur trading cards to view a sample of dinosaur trading cards, with interpretive text by Monique Keiran.
The three trading cards form part of a 12-card series published by the Royal Tyrrell Museum Cooperating Society.
In 1998, IMAX Corporation and the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology joined forces. IMAX filmed its first fictional IMAX film at the museum—and it was about dinosaurs. Of course.
One of the collateral projects that accompanied the film was a teacher’s resource guide. I worked with Sue Mander, from IMAX, and the Tyrrell’s education staff and researchers to produce text and activities for the guide.
Click T.rex: Back to the Cretaceous teacher’s resource guide to access a PDF that samples the guide.
Warning: this is a large file, and will take time to load.

A cast of an armoured-dinosaur ankylosaur skeleton takes a tail-swing at an albertosaur at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology.
Trackways #15, Fall 1998—In the world of palaeontology, ankylosaurs remain one of the Big Mysteries. The enigma stems from a lack of specimens to provide answers. Especially rare are good fossils from Alberta—that is, until this past season, the summer of ankylosaurs.
This year, researchers found eight specimens of the elusive armoured dinosaurs at Dinosaur Provincial Park. In just three months, the Tyrrell acquired the world’s most extensive fossil collection of these strange-looking, tank-like animals.
Among the finds are five skulls, raising the number of ankylosaur skulls in the museum’s collection to 14. These represent three known species, while one skull has yet to be identified. A skull provides the most information about the dinosaur it belongs to—its species, age, diet, and size. Since the first fossils were collected in Dinosaur Provincial Park more than a century ago, only 24 ankylosaur skulls have been discovered.
Now more than half of them rest in the Tyrrell’s care.
The ankylosaur windfall will help museum palaeontologists better understand how these unusual animals lived and how the different species were related to one another and to other dinosaurs. The new materials will also provide data on ankylosaur diversity, populations, and what roles ankylosaurs played within their Late Cretaceous ecosystems.
© Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology 1998
Trackways #14, Spring 1998—When Walt Disney World opened Dinoland earlier this year, a little bit of Alberta shone beneath the Florida sun. As part of the attraction, Disney performers play palaeontologists explore the world of the dinosaurs. When looking for ways to immerse staff in dinosaur palaeontology, Disney looked north to the Royal Tyrrell Museum.
For five days in late winter, 10 performers learned to cast and prepare fossils, examined the spectacular specimens Museum staff are preparing, and toured the Museum from top to bottom. They also prospected for fossils in Dinosaur Provincial Park.
On the slopes of a park hoodoo, with dinosaur bones poking through the snow all around him, director Mark Renfrow couldn’t contain his excitement: he pulled out his cell phone and called his boss in Florida to rave about the experience.
© Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology 1997
Trackways #12, Fall 1997—When Lethbridge writer Shanan Timmers went for walk on the banks of the North Milk River west of Del Bonita, Alberta, earlier this summer, he stumbled across a find important to the world of palaeontology.
Jutting out from the overhanging river cutbank, far from where palaeontologists would have thought to look, were dinosaur bones.
It turns out the bones belong to a sub-adult hadrosaur, one of only a few half-grown hadrosaur skeletons ever recovered. When it was alive, the animal measured about three metres long and about two metres high at the hip.
The specimen may be the first dinosaur found in the St. Mary’s River rock formation. That, and its isolation from other know hadrosaur skeletons increase the possibility of it being a new species.
The pelvis, femur and base of the tail sticking ouf of the rock are beautifully articulated, suggesting that the from part of the animal may continue into the bank. However, until the animal is in the lab and prepared, scientists won’t know exactly how much of the animal is in place.
Before that can happen, collecting crews from the Royal Tyrrell Museum and Devil’s Coulee Interpretive Centre must remove the specimen from the overhang six metres above the river—without having bones fall and break in the riverbed. A heavy sandstone layer covering the fossil and access to the site only from above further complicate the excavation.
© Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology 1997
Explore Kananaskis, Summer/Fall 1997—Tiny pink elephants. Flesh-eating plants. Thieving flowers. They sound like characters in a fantastical Arabian Nights story, but in Kananaskis Country, these characters act out these roles under our noses every summer. The wildflowers of Kananaskis have no 1,001 nights in which to bloom and fade: if they’re lucky, they’ll get a mere 60 to 90 frost-free days in which to tell their stories.
Only the hardy and the strong survive this rugged environment. The plants and flowers found in Kananaskis Country have spent many generations adapting to harsh temperatures and poor soil conditions. No shrinking violets, here, if you please.
Cool nights mean flowers last longer and shine brighter. A chemical reaction within the colour molecules of a flower occurs during warm nights, when the plant isn’t photosynthesizing. The reaction breaks down the pigments, causing the flowers to fade.
An abbreviated growing season also means a riot of wildflowers blooming in a very short period. For flowering plants, a short summer is a frantic flurry. A plant must accomplish a year’s worth of activity in just two or three months. Not only must it flower, produce nectar and pollen to attract pollinators, be pollinated, and produce seeds, it must grow enough green stuff to make sufficient food to supply the energy for all of that flowering, pollination, and seed production—and store enough food to survive the winter and early days of the following spring.
As hard as life may be for a plant in Kananaskis Country, they aren’t passive victims. Each species possesses its own mechanisms for survival, honed and passed down through generations. Click on the gallery images for a glimpse at the lives of some of Kananaskis Country’s summer beauties.
Elephanthead is another Kananaskis wetland plant, but one that has better table manners than its butterwort neighbours. Its burgundy, fern-like leave are distinctive from a distance, but to see the elephants, you have to get close. Each flower on the long spiky stem resembles a tiny elephant head, with high forehead, big ears, upraised trunk, and tusks.
Photo by Jim Kravitz – http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimmypk/6036996432/
If you’re wandering open woodland in mid-August, the elegant western wood lily may catch your eye. The flower ranges from orange to orange-red, and consists of three petals and three sepals. Like most lilies, the wood lily grows from a bulbous root. It has little green material to convert sunlight into food: only a few whorls of narrow leaves surround the stately upright stalk.
Almost all the food energy stored in the bulb goes into making this big, bold flower. The flower will attract insects for pollination and produce seeds. Little energy remains.
The wood lily often falls prey to flower-snatchers. Such a large amount of the plants’ food-producing matter occurs in the stem. When flower-pickers take most of that, the plant usually dies.
To see wood lilies in Kananaskis Country, walk the Fullerton Loop Trail in the Elbow Valley, or go to Bow Valley Provincial Park.
Photo by Kate Ter Haar – http://www.flickr.com/photos/katerha/4721292001/
The tricksters of the flower world include the orchids—especially, the Lady’s Slipper orchids. They look beautiful. They smell lovely. They seem to keep a stash of nectar and pollen to make a closer look worth a pollinating insect’s while. They also provide a handy landing pad just below the nectar-and-pollen lunch counter.
But when Mr. Mosquito stops by Lady’s Slipper to dine and wanders up to place his order—whoops, down into her pouch he goes, pollinating the flower on his way down. As he struggles out of the pouch, his hairy antennae pick up her waxy pollen.
Mr. Mosquito isn’t too bright, because he keeps falling for this trick, over and over and…. But then, if he were smarter, he wouldn’t be pollinating orchids and making the world more beautiful.
Three varieties of lady’s slipper orchid grow in Kananaskis Country. Yellow Lady’s Slippers can be found along Many Springs Trail in Bow Valley Park. Venus Lady’s Slippers and Sparrow’s-Egg Lady’s Slippers can be found there and in Bragg Creek Provincial Park.
Orchids are under siege in Kananaskis. Everyone want to take them home. Please don’t. They won’t survive if you transplant them, and a whole generation of orchids ends if you pick them.
Photo by Dendroica cerulean – http://www.flickr.com/photos/dendroica/5698506662/
Early blue violets bloom first first in spring. You can find them in clusters in dry, sandy soil at lower elevations.
Like many violets, the early blue produces two types of flowers. Spring blossoms bloom large and showy to attract pollinating insects. However, if pollination doesn’t occur, the plant flowers a second time, during summer. Summer flowers never open, have no petals, and grow close to the ground. These flowers self pollinate. They form the plant’s insurance plan for reproduction. Taking no chances on bug romances, Violet’s no fool.
Photo by Miguel Vieira – http://www.flickr.com/photos/miguelvieira/4836616228/
Common yarrow’s Latin name, Achillea millefolium, was given in honour of Achilles, the Greek hero. Achilles made an ointment from yarrow to heal the wounds of his soldiers during the siege of Troy 3,000 years ago.
The plant’s healing properties are mythic. It may be diaphoretic, diuretic, stimulant, astringent, and tonic. It (apparently) reduces hair loss, helps with toothaches, cures spider bits, increases milk supply, reduces fever, and, if you roll the leaves up and stick the wad up your nose, stops nosebleeds.
The second part of its Latin name, millefolium, describes the plant’s leaves. These are long, lacy and much-divided. The plant looks like it has “1000 leaves.”
The flowers cluster on top of long stems. They dry well and their golden heads can be seen standing through the snow throughout the winter.
To see yarrow in profusion, stroll Campers Link ski trail next to Sandy McNabb campground in August.
Photo by orchid galore – http://www.flickr.com/photos/25609635@N03/2670694691/
The single, funnel-shaped purple flower at the top of a long stalk seems harmless, but the Common Butterwort has a taste for blood—for bug blood.
The flower lures tiny insects to horrible deaths. The weapon sits near the ground: the leathery, yellow-green leaves around the base of the stem attract, trap, and digest insects. All that remains are black specks. These hard bits of exoskeleton provide evidence of bug murder.
Butterworts evolved this food-gathering strategy because they live in homes that lack the usual plant food. The bogs and wet, rocky banks where butterworts grow tend to be nutrient poor. What’s a plant to do?
Look for butterworts along Beaver Flats or Many Springs interpretive trails.
Photo by Sara Bjork – http://www.flickr.com/photos/aegishjalmur/778667568/