Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology is Canada’s only museum dedicated exclusively to the science of palaeontology. In addition to housing one of the world’s largest displays of dinosaurs, the Museum offers a wide variety of creative, fun, and educational programs that bring the prehistoric past to life.
The Museum is operated by the Government of Alberta under the Ministry of Culture.
Cretaceous Arctic Birds from the Prince Creek Formation of Northern Alaska
Anatomy and Biomechanics of the Ribcage in Birds, Crocodiles, and Dinosaurs
Tiny Fossils and the Big Picture: Mammals from the Age of Dinosaurs
Going for a Swim: Influences of Terrestrial Ancestry on Land-to-Sea Transformations
Exploring Methods in Fossil Photography
Broken, Bruised, and Bitten: Survival Tales of Tyrannosaur Injuries
Microfossils of the Lance Formation, Including the Rare Dinosaur Pectinodon
Global Greening in a Warmer World: What We Can Learn from Plant Fossils
History and Contributions of Romanian Vertebrate Paleontology: Beasts, Bioevents, Geology
Teeth and Mammalian Evolution
Descent into Carnivory: How Large Vertebrate Suspension-Feeding in the Mesozoic Ran Out of Options
Munching Mosasaurs: A Look into Mosasaur Feeding Ecology from The Netherlands and Canada
What the Fossil Record Tells Us About Parasites, and What Parasites Can Tell Us About Fossil Animals
Theropod Dinosaurs of the Nemegt Formation (Upper Cretaceous) of Mongolia
Forests, Prairies, Puddles, and Badlands: Exploring Alberta’s Amphibians and Reptiles
You Are What You Eat: Revealing Dinosaur Diets Using Fossil Tooth Chemistry
Eco-tales of the Dinosaurs: 75 Million Years Ago in Alberta
Earth and Mars—One Wet, One Dry. Why?
Did you know some ancestors of whales lived on land?
Did you know “Oviraptor” means “egg thief”?
The Anthropocene: A Crucial Moment in Earth History
A Brief (Pre-)History of the Domestic Cat
Chemical Defense in Poison Frogs
Deep-Time Beginnings of Bone Biology
Locomotion Ecology in the Fossil Bird Ichthyornis
The Evolution of Grasslands: What Plant Fossils Reveal About One of the Largest Ecosystem Changes
Ecosystem Jenga: What Tiny Fossils Tell Us About a Massive Extinction
Beasts Before Us: The Untold Story of Mammal Evolution
Excavating Wyoming's Ancient Tropical Forests While Challenging (and Changing) the Face of Science
Vertebrate Faunal Assemblages of the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway of Manitoba, Canada