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Hypacrosaurus, Less than the Ultimate Dinosaur

  • John Acorn
View more publications by University of Alberta Press
Deep Alberta
This chapter is in the book Deep Alberta
© 2007 University of Alberta Press, Edmonton, Alberta

© 2007 University of Alberta Press, Edmonton, Alberta

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgements ix
  4. Introduction xi
  5. Geology of Alberta 1
  6. Albanerpetontids, as We Say… 2
  7. Ammonites and Ammolites 5
  8. Albertosaurus, Alberta’s Dinosaur 6
  9. Amber, Fossilized Tree Sap 9
  10. Amia, The Bowfin 10
  11. Atrociraptor, The New Raptor 13
  12. Basilemys, A Very Large Turtle 14
  13. Bison, As Opposed to Buffalo 17
  14. The Blindman River 18
  15. Belonostomus, A Pointy-headed Fish 21
  16. Barnum Brown, Fossil Hunter 22
  17. Burbank, Alberta 25
  18. Calgary, and the Things That Lay Beneath It 26
  19. Extinct Camels 29
  20. The Canadian Shield 30
  21. Centrosaurus, A Herding Horned Dinosaur 33
  22. Champsosaurus, A Kind of Non-Crocodile 34
  23. Chasmosaurus, A Short-Horned Dinosaur 37
  24. North American Cheetahs 38
  25. The Bow Valley at Cochrane 41
  26. Cretaceous Lizards 42
  27. Alberta’s Crocodilians 45
  28. Dawn Redwood Trees 46
  29. Devil’s Coulee and its Dinosaur Nests 49
  30. Didelphodon, A Sort of Primitive Possum 50
  31. Dinosaur Provincial Park 53
  32. Dromaeosaurus, A Snappy Little Raptor 54
  33. The Drumheller Badlands 56
  34. Dry Island Buffalo Jump Provincial Park 58
  35. Dunkleosteus, A Very Scary Fish 61
  36. Edmonton, A Modest Sort of Dinosaur Graveyard 62
  37. Edmontosaurus, Edmonton’s Duck-billed Dinosaur 65
  38. Edmontonia, Edmonton’s Other Dinosaur 66
  39. Feathered Dinosaurs 69
  40. Fossil Frogs 70
  41. Gar, The Fish 73
  42. Horn Corals 74
  43. How Do You Know Where To Dig? 77
  44. Hypacrosaurus, Less than the Ultimate Dinosaur 78
  45. The Kleskun Hills 81
  46. Lambeosaurus, Lambe’s Dinosaur 82
  47. Leptoceratops, A Hornless Horned Dinosaur 85
  48. Alberta’s Lions 86
  49. Lundbreck Falls and the Black Beauty 89
  50. Mammoths and Mastodons 90
  51. The Milk River 93
  52. Mosasaurs, The Giant Marine Lizards 94
  53. Multituberculates, Common but Extinct Mammals 97
  54. Myledaphus, A Guitar Fish 98
  55. New Fossil Names 101
  56. The Oil Sands 102
  57. Ornithomimids, The Bird Mimics 105
  58. Pachyrhinosaurus, The Thick-nosed Dinosaur 106
  59. Palaeontology in Alberta 109
  60. Pantodonts, Giant Palaeocene Mammals 110
  61. Parasaurolophus, A Long-headed Duck-bill 113
  62. Parksosaurus, Park’s Dinosaur 114
  63. The World’s Oldest Pike 116
  64. Plants of the Ornithomimid Quarry 118
  65. Plesiadapis, A Weird Early Primate 121
  66. Plesiosaurs, The Sea Serpents of the Mesozoic 122
  67. “Primitive” Plants 125
  68. Pterosaurs, The Flying Reptiles 126
  69. Fossil Salamanders 129
  70. Sandy Point 130
  71. Saurornitholestes, A Raptor 133
  72. Short-faced Bear 134
  73. Since the Ice Age 137
  74. Snakes of the Dinosaur Times 138
  75. Soft-shelled Turtles 141
  76. Stegoceras 142
  77. The Sternberg Family 145
  78. Sedimentology, the Science of Sediments 146
  79. Sturgeon, A Living Fossil Fish 149
  80. Styracosaurus, A Classic Alberta Dinosaur 150
  81. Trace Fossils 153
  82. Trace Fossils 154
  83. Triceratops, The Three-horned Face 157
  84. Tyrannosaurus or “T. rex” 158
  85. The Venomous Mammal 161
  86. Glossary 163
  87. References and Further Reading 167
  88. Key Figures in Alberta Palaeontology 169
  89. Image Credits 173
  90. Index 177
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