Aykroyd pals dig deep for Alberta dinosaur museum - Action News
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Aykroyd pals dig deep for Alberta dinosaur museum

Actor Dan Aykroyd joined famed paleontologist Philip Currie on a dinosaur dig Friday to raise money for a new museum in northern Alberta.
Actor Dan Akroyd peers at bone fragments at a dinosaur excavation site near Grande Prairie, Alberta. Akroyd is supporting efforts to build a museum near the dig, one of the richest bone beds in the world. (Alicia Asquith/CBC)

ActorDan Aykroyd joined famed paleontologist Philip Currieon a dinosaur dig Friday to raise money fora new museum in northern Alberta.

Currie is leading the dig in a remote bone bed nearPipestone Creek Park, 40 minutes west of Grande Prairie.

Dan Aykroyd and his wife Donna Dixon, supporters of the museum since meeting Currie lastyear, invited fellow celebrities including mystery writer Patricia Cornell,Bobby Kennedy Jr. and others along for a two-day dig capped by a celebrity ball and private auction.

"Celebrity is good for getting a good table at a restaurant maybe, or occasionally getting out of a speeding ticket," said Aykroyd. "And this kind of thing where you're trying to raise awareness for a cause. So that's what we're doing."

A skull of Pachyrhinosaurus lakustai, a horned dinosaur that roamed Alberta in herds. (Philip J. Curry Dinosaur Museum)

The excavation site,known as thethe River of Death in recognition ofa flood that wiped out a massiveherd of horned dinosaurs73 million years ago,was discoveredin 1974 by Grade 8 science teacher Al Lakusta.

Almost all of the 3,500 bonesand 14 skulls removed so farbelong toa previously unknownspecies, later named Pachyrhinosaurus lakustai (thick-nosed lizard).

Paleontologists describethe largely unknown bone bed as one of the richest they've ever seen.

"Grande Prairie is in fact a much richer area than you would guess by the amount of fossils on display anywhere," said Currie.

"But with the new museum coming into the Grande Prairie region, it means we're now going to be a lot more capable of going out there and looking," he said.

"It is a Canadian treasurehouse, and I want to bring people from all over the world to Canada to help display what's here and show the world we have this incredible resource right here in this province," said Aykroyd.

Organizers are still short $5.5 million towardsthe $26-million Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museumwhich they're hoping willbe completed next year.