Royal Tyrrell Museum Virtual Tour 2018 [Drumheller, Alberta]
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Drumheller, Alberta, Canada is filled with over 130,000 dinosaur fossil specimens, and is famous around the world for its amazing exhibits and dioramas. If you have a passion for dinosaurs, you need to visit this museum!
Join Marti from Down the Wrabbit Hole - The Travel Bucket List as she and her excited children explore the museum and take you on a virtual tour of the galleries. Please keep in mind, this video is just the tip of the iceberg - there is so much more to see and do at the Tyrrell Museum!
Read about what to expect at the museum in Marti's detailed accompanying blog post:
To learn about hiking outside the Royal Tyrrell Museum on the Badlands Interpretive Trail, hunting for outdoor fossils, watch this video:
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Royal Tyrrell Museum Drumheller, Alberta
Royal Tyrrell Museum
Drumheller, Alberta
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Drumheller Royal Tyrrell Museum
Come along and explore some dinosaurs and other fossils!
ROYAL TYRRELL MUSEUM, DRUMHELLER ALBERTA, CANADA
The Royal Tyrrell Museum is a Canadian tourist attraction and a centre of Palaeontological research noted for its collection of mpre then 130,000 fossils. Located 6 km northwest from Drumheller, Alberta and 135 km northeast from Calgary, the museum is situated in the middle of the fossil-bearing strata of the Late Cretaceous Horseshoe Canyon Formation and holds numerous specimens frm the Alberta, badlands Dinosaur Provincial Park and the Devil,s Coulee Dinosaur Egg Site.
Address:1500 N Dinsaur Trail, Drumheller ,Alberta,Canada TOJ 0Y0
FOR MORE INFORMATION YOU CAN CALL ;403-823-7707
Royal Tyrrell Museum.in Drumheller, Alberta
Checking out the dinosaur museum at the Royal Tyrrell Museumin Drumheller, Alberta
Drumheller: Royal Tyrrell Museum||A Must-visit Place||Alberta, Canada ????????|| Part 1
A world-renowned Royal Tyrrell Museum. This museum housed the worlds largest dinosaur displays. I hope you will enjoy my video.
#DinosaurMuseum #Drumheller #RoyalTyrrellMuseum
VISITING ROYAL TYRRELL DINOSAUR MUSEUM DRUMHELLER, ALBERTA
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Trip to the Royal Tyrrell Museum, Drumheller Alberta Canada
I was invited to go on a trip to see The Royal Tyrrell Museum. Had a late start due to waking up to snow in the campground. Was a bit of a shocker considering it was April 7th... Sooo I pulled up to the museum a bit late. Too late for doing any useful recording. Sorry.
I did manage to get a few decent pics and a couple of short videos. Enjoy and Thanks for Watching as always.
P.S. Looks like Movie Maker chopped a goodly amount off the top of my video. I shall remember that for future video's.
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Drumheller Royal Tyrrell Museum
On this video, we will show you our adventure in Drumheller Royal Tyrrell Museum!RAWR!!! Brace yourselves to see a bunch of Dinosaur fossils!!!????????????
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Dinosaurs 5: Royal Tyrrell Museum (Drumheller) Alberta, Canada
Самый большой в мире музей динозавров. Май, 2016
Drumheller Alberta Canada | Royal Tyrrell Museum dinosaur fossils
Drumheller Alberta Canada | Royal Tyrrell Museum dinosaur fossils. Visit Drumheller Alberta and the Royal Tyrrell Museum, world famous for dinosaur fossils. Lizzy and I highly recommend the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller Alberta Canada.
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Exploring Royal Tyrrell Museum - Drumheller Alberta Canada - June 2017
2016 Season - E15 - Royal Tyrrell Museum - Drumheller
The Royal Tyrrell Museum was fantastic. We take a ride through Dinosaur Valley near Drumheller, Alberta
Royal Tyrrell Museum - Drumheller Alberta Canada - Dinosaur Museum
Royal Tyrrell Museum - Drumheller Alberta Canada - Dinosaur Museum - BC Road Trip - Winnipeg Manitoba to BC.
Royal Tyrrell Museum - Drumheller Alberta Canada - Dinosaur Museum - 2015 Alberta Road trip
Royal Tyrrell Museum - Drumheller Alberta Canada - Dinosaur Museum - 2015 Alberta Road trip
BADLANDS INTERPRETIVE TRAIL - PART. 1 - ROYAL TYRRELL MUSEUM - DRUMHELLER - ALBERTA - CANADA
Sentier d'interprétation des mauvaises terres - Part. 1 - Musée Royal Tyrrell - Drumheller - Alberta - Canada
Coordonnées GPS: 51°28'43.1N 112°47'14.4W
Ce sentier d'interprétation est situé dans le parc provincial Midland et débute juste à côté du Royal Tyrell Museum. Il s'agit d'un sentier de randonnée de 1,3 km en boucle.
Malgré l'immense stationnement, y trouver un espace peut être parfois fastidieux car le musée attire considérablement son lot de touristes.
Avant de débuter notre randonnée, nous avons d'abord monté les marches d'un escalier métallique situé devant le musée. Celui-ci nous mène à un belvédère érigé sur un monticule et nous permet ainsi d'avoir une vue 360° des Badlands.
Nous nous sommes dirigés par la suite vers le sentier d'interprétation. Au début du sentier, un panneau nous indique les mesures à prendre non seulement pour notre protection mais aussi celle du parc.
Douze panneaux d'information ont été installés tout le long du parcours. Ceux-ci nous permettent d'en apprendre davantage sur cette région qui est tout à fait spectaculaire.
J'ai donc créé trois sections pour décrire cette randonnée car j'ai cumulé beaucoup trop d'informations, de photos et vidéos.
Si vous n'aviez qu'une seule randonnée à faire dans les Badlands, je vous suggérerais de faire celle-ci. Les paysages sont vraiment sensationnels.
Je vais vous donner la description de chaque station (panneau d'information) et les vidéos vous permettront de visualiser le tout.
Station # 1
Les collines sont constituées d'argile de bentonite. La bentonite a été formée à partir d'anciennes cendres volcaniques déposées dans cette région il y a des millions d'années. A prime abord, les collines ont un aspect qui semble inoffensif. Cependant, l'humidité fait gonfler la bentonite et celle-ci devient très glissante. C'est pourquoi il est conseillé de rester sur le sentier principal.
Station # 2
Semblable à d'autres badlands du Dakota du Sud, du Mexique, de l'Argentine et du désert de Gobi de Chine et de Mongolie, cette terre n'est pas favorable à l'agriculture et aurait été difficile à traverser à pied ou à cheval par temps humide.
Au Dakota du Sud, les Sioux appelaient ce type de paysage Mako Sica, ce qui signifie littéralement mauvaise terre. Les premiers trappeurs de fourrures canadiens-français ont appelé cette région mauvaises terres à traverser.
Station # 3
Avec de fortes pluies, le chenal que l'on peut apercevoir (il était complètement à sec lors de notre visite) devient un torrent de couleur brune. Chaque année, jusqu'à un demi-centimètre de sédiments s'érode sur les surfaces rocheuses exposées et est finalement emporté par la rivière Red Deer.
Lentement, ce processus détruit les badlands, tout comme la pluie, le vent et les conditions de gel et de dégel.
Cette vallée a été formée par les eaux de crue provenant de la fonte des glaciers au cours de la dernière période glaciaire, il y a 10 000 à 15 000 ans, et son érosion se poursuit encore aujourd'hui.
Station # 4
Les badlands contiennent des fossiles spectaculaires. Certains sont situés profondément dans les couches de roche tandis que d'autres sont exposés à la surface.
Si vous voyez des fossiles, laissez-les où ils sont et signalez votre découverte au musée. Tous les fossiles en Alberta sont protégés en vertu de la Loi sur les ressources historiques. Il est illégal de collecter des fossiles dans un parc provincial.
Partie 2: A suivre ...
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Royal Tyrrell Museum Drumheller, Canada
The Royal Tyrrell Museum is a Canadian tourist attraction and a centre of palaeontological research[3] known for its collection of more than 130,000 fossils.[4]
Located 6 km (4 mi) northwest from Drumheller, Alberta and 135 km (84 mi) northeast from Calgary,[5] the museum is situated in the middle of the fossil-bearing strata of the Late Cretaceous Horseshoe Canyon Formation and holds numerous specimens from the Alberta badlands, Dinosaur Provincial Park and the Devil's Coulee Dinosaur Egg Site.[3]
The Royal Tyrrell Museum is operated by Alberta's Ministry of Culture.[6]
DRUMHELLER ROYAL TYRRELL MUSEUM 2019
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Date: July 2019
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History:
The museum is named in honour of Joseph Burr Tyrrell, a geologist who accidentally discovered the first reported dinosaur fossil in the Red Deer River valley in 1884 while searching for coal seams.[7] The carnivorous dinosaur was later named Albertosaurus sarcophagus. The museum opened September 25, 1985 and was given Royal status in 1990.
More than 4,400 square metres (47,000 sq ft) of the museum's 11,200 square metres (121,000 sq ft) is dedicated to exhibits[8] in a series of chronological galleries celebrating the 3.9-billion-year-history of life on Earth.
Dinosaur Hall is the large display area featuring specimens of an Albertosaurus, Stegosaurus, Triceratops, and a Tyrannosaurus.
One of the most popular is Dinosaur Hall, with over 40 mounted dinosaur skeletons, including specimens of Tyrannosaurus rex, Albertosaurus, Stegosaurus and Triceratops.[4] Other exhibits include Lords of the Land, a gallery of some of the most dangerous theropods known from Alberta, Burgess Shale, a diorama of dozens of creatures from Yoho National Park in British Columbia;[9] Devonian Reef, a life-size model of a 375-million-year old reef;[10] the newly renovated Cretaceous Garden, featuring representatives of the plants that lived in prehistoric Alberta,[11] and Age of Mammals and Ice Ages which cover mammalian life in the Cenozoic. Dioramas painted by Vladimir Krb. Also on display is the Triassic Giant, a 1,700 square feet (160 m2) specimen of the world's largest known marine reptile. The 21 metres (69 ft) long ichthyosaur Shastasaurus sikanniensis was recovered from the shores of the Sikanni Chief River in northeastern British Columbia by a team led by Elizabeth Nicholls, former curator of Marine Reptiles. This exhibit pays homage to the work of Nicholls, who died in 2004.[12] In May 2017 the museum displayed an unusually well-preserved nodosaur. [13]
A window into the Preparation Lab allows visitors to watch technicians as they prepare fossils for research and exhibition.[14] Additional offerings include guided and self-guided tours of the surrounding badlands, the hands-on Science Hall with interactive stations that introduce palaeontological concepts,[15] simulated fossil digs, fossil casting, school programs and summer camps.
Royal Tyrrell Museum Drumheller 4K | Journey Alberta
In today's new video I travel out to Drumheller with my girlfriend to explore the Royal Tyrrell Museum, which is filled with dinosaur fossils! We also take a walk afterwards as the sun is going down on the interpretive trail next to the museum in Midland Provincial Park!
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Looking to explore the Canadian Province of Alberta? Whether you live here or plan to travel to Alberta soon, make sure to check out the diverse geographical features this land has to offer!
FRIDAYS are when new videos go up, featuring hikes, day trips, and more in the form of professionally shot vlogs! I explore Alberta's National Parks, Provincial Parks, city parks, and special events!
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Dino Trails - Episode 2 - The Royal Tyrrell Museum
Journey to the Royal Tyrrell Museum, where its collections are devoted to paleontology, and meet the dinosaur enthusiasts and paleontologists behind new fossil discoveries.
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