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From the Field: Arrival in Churchill, Manitoba

July 18, 2011 – Welcome to Churchill! We arrive from Winnipeg by twin turboprop early this evening, after the usual minor delays and frustrations,… pick up our 4×4 vehicle, get settled in at the wonderful new Churchill Northern Studies Centre facility and spend a few hours showing two novice

Hydraulophones at the ROM – Making Water Sing!

The golden days of summer just wouldn’t be the same without water – going to the pool, eating popsicles, making a slip’n’slide across the back yard with a sprinkler and a plastic tarp – but have you ever used water to make MUSIC? Steve Mann, a Torontonian who studied at MIT, has made it

From the Field: Southern Alberta Dinosaur Project 2011 – Prospecting for new dinos!

July 10-12: More Surprises from the South Side Work at the South Side Ceratopsian site continues to progress. The scattered skeleton continues to emerge from its surrounding mudstone matrix. Mudstone is made from exactly what it sounds like – mud. Specifically, it is made of the compressed mud

Changing of the guard – Schad Gallery welcomes North America’s largest land animal

A long awaited addition to the Royal Ontario Museum was installed today in the Life in Crisis: Schad Gallery of Biodiversity. Our new North American Plains Bison (Bison bison bison) wears his shaggy winter coat and munches on grass, a key component of his vegetarian diet. Weighing about 360 kg (or

From the Field: Southern Alberta Dinosaur Project 2011 – Visitors!

July 6-8: Visitors These past few days we have had some welcome visitors to Camp. First, some of our colleagues from the Montana State University and the Museum of the Rockies joined us for a day on July 6th. They are working the same series of rocks just a few kilometers south of us in Montana,

From the Field: Southern Alberta Dinosaur Project 2011 – Found a skull!

July 3, 2011: The South Side Ceratopsian Quarry At the end of last field season, one of our crew made a very intriguing discovery – some vertebrae and a good skull bone from a single small site on the south side of the Milk River. The skull bone was a squamosal, a bone that forms the bottom of

From the Field: Southern Alberta Dinosaur Project 2011

We are back again in southern Alberta, to continue our palaeontological survey and excavation of the Milk River region and adjacent areas. This blog will document how this field season progresses, and will report on any new and exciting dinosaur discoveries from the field! June 28, 2011: Home Sweet

A National Symposium on Our Blue Planet

A National Symposium on Our Blue Planet

Oceans.  Canada borders three of them – we have more coastline than any country in the world, some 200,000km.  Canadian scientists study all of them – from south-east Asia to the Cape of Good Hope to our own watery borders. The ROM’s own curator Dr. Claire Healy has discovered whole orders

Arctic Adventures with Dr. Doug Currie

  Dr. Currie and his colleagues, technicians and grad students, will be available to answer your questions and to tell stories about what the pesky black fly can tell us about our changing natural world.  Doug is THE authority on black flies (he wrote the book on them), and his research has

The ROM changed my life- it's in my DNA.

The ROM changed my life- it's in my DNA.

When I tell people I volunteer at the ROM’s DNA laboratory they are surprised. Not because I’m volunteering at the ROM, but because they are unaware of the fantastic work that goes on behind the scenes at the ROM. My name is Christine Black and I’m in grade 12, and since September 2012, I