Backyard dino dig 'all I need,' says world-renowned palaeontologist Philip Currie - Action News
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Edmonton

Backyard dino dig 'all I need,' says world-renowned palaeontologist Philip Currie

Within Edmonton city limits is a dinosaur graveyard containing 15 Edmontosaurus and Albertosaurus skeletons. For world-renowned paleontologist Philip Currie, digging up dinosaurs in his own backyard is as "iconic as you can get in Alberta."

'If I wasn't able to travel anymore ... it wouldn't matter, 'cause here in my own backyard I have dinosaurs'

Paleontologist Philip Currie leads a team of students unearthing dinosaur bones at a quarry in south Edmonton. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Philip Curriepushes a wheelbarrow loaded with dirt through the bushin a south Edmonton ravine.

It's the kind of grunt work you wouldn't expect one of the world's top dinosaur hunters to be doing.
Dinosaur fossils collected from the Danek Bonebed in south Edmonton by students from the University of Alberta. (John Robertson/CBC)

But the 68-year-old Edmonton-based paleontologist believes inteachingby doing and unearthing fossilstakes a combination of perseverance and painstaking manual labour.

At the age of 12, growing up in southern Ontario,Currie dreamed of becoming a paleontologist in Alberta.

"The bizarre story is I ended up doing exactly that," he said.

The University of Alberta professor and Canada Research Chair in Dinosaur Paleobiology is responsible for finds or research on all seven continents.

This month alone he's had two high-profile academic papers, one on giant dinosaureggs unearthed 30 years ago in China and a second on the discovery of a new species of feathered dinosaur, also inChina.

Theinternational discoveriesaddto his reputationin Canada which culminated in the opening of the Philip J. Currie Museum near Grande Prairiein 2015.

"Opportunities to build the (Royal)Tyrrell Museum (and)the new museum up in Grande Prairie, we've had opportunities to work internationally, these are all things that weren't in my game plan originally," admits Currie.
University of Alberta students examine a fragment from a dinosaur quarry in south Edmonton. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

What was always part of his game planwas to do field work alongside others who sharehispassion for discovery.

For the past 14 years Currie, otherUniversity of Alberta staff, and students have been working in the Danek Bonebed at a bend on Whitemud Creek uncovering15 skeletons of Edmontosaurus and Albertosaurus.
Masters student Matthew Rhodes works alongside Philip Currie at the Danek Bonebed. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

The quarry is named after the local sculptorDanek Mozdzenski who stumbled across a bone sticking out of a bank while on a walk in 1989.

"It's about as iconic as you can get in Alberta and it's still fascinating to me," Currie said.

That fascination is shared by10 budding paleontologists at the site including graduate student Matthew Rhodes.

"It's an opportunity to gain some experience digging up fossils and every discovery is truly a new find. Everything that we uncover is the first to be seen by human eyes,"Rhodes said.

"In my own backyard I have dinosaurs and thats all I need

7 years ago
Duration 4:33
Philip Currie, University of Alberta professor and Canada research chair in dinosaur paleobiology, reflects on some of the most interesting finds of his career, including this Edmonton dig site.

After hunting for dinosaurs around the world for more than 40 years,Currie's enthusiasm for crouchingdown in the dirt, unearthing new discoveries is undiminished.

"If I wasn't able to travel anymore to work in these exotic places it wouldn't matter, 'cause here in my own backyard I have dinosaurs and that's all I need."

You can see moreon dinosaurs on Our Edmonton Sunday, April 14 at 2 p.m. and Monday, April 15at 11 a.m. on CBC TV.
Staff and students from the University of Alberta pose at the Danek Bonebed in south Edmonton. (John Robertson/CBC)