Drumheller Travel Guide

Located 130km (81 miles) northeast of Calgary in Alberta's badlands, the Drumheller Valley is one of the premier dinosaur-fossil hunting places on earth. It wasn't always so, though. In the 1930s, Drumheller was a boomtown of a different sort. Rich in coal deposits throughout the surrounding badlands, it swelle ...

Located 130km (81 miles) northeast of Calgary in Alberta's badlands, the Drumheller Valley is one of the premier dinosaur-fossil hunting places on earth. It wasn't always so, though. In the 1930s, Drumheller was a boomtown of a different sort. Rich in coal deposits throughout the surrounding badlands, it swelled to more than 30,000 people. But after a few fruitful decades the coal was all but mined out, and the town was dying. Desperate for a new anchor industry, in 1967 a large federal prison became the town's largest employer.

But the town was overlooking something else, buried in the ground. Seventy-five million years before, an extraordinary range of dinosaurs roamed the badlands -- so named for its rough, difficult-to-farm soil, though at the time it was largely an inland sea. The first discovery, by James B. Tyrrell in 1884, was an enormous skull of a predator, the Albertosaurus. The rich prehistoric resource hovered in the background for decades, though, as industry took hold, even though paleontologists from all over the world had made Drumheller a center of study. Then, in 1985, the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology opened, and Drumheller was truly open for the dinosaur business. About half a million visitors make their way here each year now, drawn largely to the museum and such sites as Horse Thief and Horseshoe canyons -- where, until recently, a casual meander along one of its hiking trails would yield pocketfuls of dinosaur bone fragments. The fossils are still there, but be warned: the province states that "all fossils in or on the ground are owned by the province." Taking them constitutes theft. So look, touch, but leave them in peace.

Book a Trip