As we drove through Glendive, Montana,
on the east side of looking for a park in which to eat our lunch, we
saw a huge dinosaur along the roadside. Then we saw a dinosaur
museum and a sign for a second one. So after lunch we decided to
visit the two museums. One was the Makoshika Dinosaur Museum which
was run by the owner of a music store. His daughter had started it
when she was eleven and now they have a group of people that support
it. The goal of the museum is to keep some of the local dinosaur
finds at home. This area holds the Hell Creel Formation and so far,
over ten species of dinosaurs have been found, including
Tyrannosaurus Rex, and Triceratops.
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Tribolyte |
We enjoyed the small museum and also
visiting with the proprietor. He told us that we needed to go up the
road a very short way to Makoshika State Park. This is the largest
park in Minnesota and has a dinosaur exhibit, a good movie, and
marvelous badlands. At the time we heard about the park, it was early
afternoon and very bright and hot. I suggested we first go to the
other museum, Glendive Fossile and Dinosaur Museum. This museum is not part of the Montana Dinosaur Trail,
as are the other two museums, but is run by the Foundation Advancing Creation Truth. Their dinosaur story is told from the
context of the Bible. They were able to explain the the earth is
very young and dinosaurs coexisted with humans. A few of the most
compelling arguments for people having lived with dinosaurs were a mold of a
human footprint and pottery with pictures of dinosaurs on them.
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Mold of human footprint on top of dinosaur track |
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Bob and large dinosaur |
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Huge extinct sea turtle |
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Small but lethal dinosaur - note killing toe on back foot |
By late afternoon, we were ready to go
visit the park. When we got there it was locked, but had a “Back at
4:00 P.M. sign on the door. So we hung around a few minutes, then
got to go into the air-conditioned building. This felt wonderful
because that day was the hottest I've experienced in Montana. I
sweated all afternoon. We explored the displays and then watched the
movie about the park's badlands. After that, we were ready to take
the drive through the park with many stops. I think I ended this
little detour with about four hundred pictures.
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View near the park entrance |
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The capstones protect the clay from washing away making hoodoos |
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Huge hoodoo |
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Typical evening colors |
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Long view across badlands |
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Feral filly |
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Surely fairies live here |
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Another magical late day view |
These Montana badlands were actually much more
scenic than were the Badlands of the North and South Units of
Theodore Roosevelt National Park. ( But you'll get to decide that
for yourself after I get the time and the Interne access to put up
blogs on them. )
This day and the day before, when we
diverted our trip to the Battlefield of the Little Bighorn, where
Custer was defeated and killed, were our most spontaneous and
therefore the most fun days.
I'm writing this in camp in the North
Unit of Theodore Roosevelt NP. We are planning to stay one more day.
We plan to hike in the morning, then spend the afternoon at a library
catching up on blogging, and e-mail. Then on Wednesday, September
4, we'll head east again but stop at a few historical centers and
then camp near Bismark. Thursday, we are going to visit
Judy Bell, a fellow NWR volunteer and blogger at
Tamarac NWR in Minnosota before
heading closer to Minneapolis to put Bob on a bus back to Houston,
Texas. I'll have four days to myself before I meet up with my
paddling buddies In Grand Marais, Minnesota to paddle two weeks in
the Boundary Waters.
I'm going to miss having a companion as
well as a chauffeur, but am looking forward to the next chapter in
this adventure.
News Flash! I have accepted a position
at Okefenokee NWR from November to April. So I'm all fixed until next
fall. I see lots of paddling adventures in my future.
I've been reading your last month's posts with interest since we have a trip planned through Theodore Roosevelt and on into Glacier for 2015. We get an extra 5 vacation days that year so we'll be gone almost a month. Your pictures are helping to bridge the gap! I know you'll have fun meeting Judy, I'm sure she'll have lots of tips about Okefenokee!
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