Hi. My name's Craig Scott and I'm the 
Director of Preservation and Research
here at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of
Palaeontology in Drumheller, Alberta.
I've brought with me today a specimen of 
a small mammal called Procerberus.
Procerberus lived in the time just after the
dinosaurs went extinct 66 million years ago.
It was likely an insect-eating mammal.
You can get that idea from looking at the very tall 
cusps and the pointy crowns of the teeth.
This specimen is really special to me because
it's the first specimen that I found
at a locality that sits just above the 
Cretaceous / Palaeogene boundary.
That's the marker that marked the 
extinction event 66 million years ago
when all the dinosaurs went extinct.
We don't have very many localities 
of that age here in Alberta.
So it was a real joy to find this specimen.
