Multiple voices:
 Studio K Away!
♪ [dramatic]
This is Studio K Away and I'm
at the Royal Tyrrell Museum
in Drumheller, and I'm
hanging out with my friend, Dan.
Hi!
And he's gonna teach us
how to dig for dinosaurs!
I'm so excited.
All right.
You ready to do this?
Yes.
Excellent. OK,
let's get started.
OK, let's go.
So this is an area where
there might be some fossil
or might be some
dinosaur bone.
So you want to try
and clear it away.
So your, first thing
you'd use, is the brush.
Brush. OK.
You wanna brush away
some of this loose rock
and see if there's
anything there.
 Whoa!
I see something there.
 I see something!
What's it look like?
 Ah, it looks like teeth.
Yeah.
 Is that teeth?
That's definitely teeth.
What do you think
that animal's eating,
with the teeth
shaped like that?
Ah, definitely meat.
Yeah. So, this is a carnivore
or a meat eater jaw
or part of the mouth
of a meat eater.
You can tell teeth,
because they're a lot shinier,
and they also have these
tiny bumps on the side,
they're called serrations,
like a steak knife
for cutting through meat.
Oh, OK. All right.
Let's see
if it looks the same.
It fit there.
Kind of like it.
So these ones,
a little bit different,
but you can see
these ones are even bigger.
Some of the Albertosaurus
teeth would've been almost
as big as bananas.
OK, Dan. So we get
our fossils and then what?
And then once you wrap it
all up, it goes to museums.
So let's head to the museum
and see what happens next.
OK, sounds good.
Let's go.
[swoosh]
Hi, guys. What we're
going to do next is actually,
manually prepare the fossil,
which means that we're going
to remove all of the rock
that's around the bone
and just expose
the bone itself.
Why don't you
give it a try, Janaye?
OK.
Ah, alright, I'm going
to start right in here.
[scraping]
This bone
is called a lacrimal.
Lacrimal.
A lacrimal, so it's one
of the bones of the skull
of a large tyrannosaur.
A tyrannosaur?
Yeah.
Like in the
family of a T-Rex?
Exactly. So not a T-Rex,
but it's also a big one,
and it's called
a daspletosaurus.
So, you can see that's
where the eyeball would go.
So it makes up the front
half of the eye socket.
[laughs]
Where does
the fossil go next?
Now the fossil
will head to collections,
where it will be stored.
Collections. Alright.
That's where I'm going.
Let's go!
[swoosh]
OK. So we're
here in collections.
Brandon,
what is this place?
This is the main
storage facility
for all of the
fossils that we have here
at the Royal Tyrrell Museum.
Whoa, how many
do you have?
Ah, over 170,000 specimens.
[gasps loudly]
Can we see them?
Absolutely.
[gasps]
OK. Let's go.
let's go.
Bye!
So we have, ah,
some of everything.
We have, just, ah,
this is some pachyrhinosaurus,
ah, specimens,
which is a type of ceratopsian,
ah, those are
from northern Alberta.
Ah, we have a whole bunch of
different types of ceratopsians,
we have a--
[indiscernible]
We have centrosaurus,
we have a rhinocerotops,
we have anchiceratops.
Just, just gorgeous, some
of the most amazing dinosaurs
you will find
in the world are here
at the Royal Tyrrell Museum.
Janaye:
 Brandon are these teeth?
Brandon:
These are.
These are an assortment
of tyrannosaur teeth.
♪ ♪
[Janaye gawks]
Daspletosaurus!
[gawks]
Brandon, I can't believe
how many dinosaurs are here.
This is amazing!
It's pretty awesome.
Oh, thank you so much
for showing me around.
Absolutely. My pleasure.
Wow. So that's how the fossil
goes from the ground, to this.
This has been
a Studio K Away!
