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Why is the K-Pg Boundary so clearly identifiable in certain parts of Saskatchewan?

The Cretaceous-Paleogene, or K-Pg, Boundary is a line that…

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What do you do with pieces of amber that don’t contain anything?

Resin from modern pine, with mammal hair caught in it at Cypress…

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Do Bees Sleep?

Yes, they do. You likely will not see most female bees sleeping, as…

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Studying Small Mammals Through Owls

Collecting great horned owl pellets northwest of Medicine Hat,…

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(Un)settling Mary Weekes

A selection of beaded belts from the Mary Weekes Collection. …

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Lumsden Beach Find

Q: In 1962 I found this petrified piece, of what I believe, is a…

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The Nottingham Mystery

February is Saskatchewan Aboriginal Storytelling Month. Storytelling…

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Dinosaur Ins and Outs

It was one of the very few times in a paleontologist life that…

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#WascanaTurtles: Highlights of 2016

It feels like just yesterday I was kicking off my second field season,…

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Paradise Found! Exploring Saskatchewan’s Lost Beach Front Property

One of the candidates for the 2016 Provincial Fossil Campaign was a…

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World Snake Day

Hello from Saskatchewan Landing Provincial Park! I remember last…

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#WascanaTurtles: Season 2

Well, it has been an extremely long time since I last wrote a blog,…

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Hammerstones

Every so often we see something in the collections here at the…

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#Fossil4SK: Creating Our Icon

I can’t imagine which to choose.  We have chosen seven…

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#WascanaTurtles in the Winter

At the end of my last blog post, I had talked about my winter research…

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The Royal Saskatchewan Museum and T.rex Discovery Centre are situated on Treaty 4 territory, the ancestral and traditional territory of the Cree, Saulteaux, Dakota, Nakota, Lakota and homeland of the Métis Nation. We acknowledge the land in an act of reconciliation to those whose traditional territories we are on.