impact:

dinomuseum.ca

The Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum is a paleontology museum located in Wembley, Alberta, Canada. The museum is situated within a 3,800-square-metre-building (41,000 sq ft) constructed in 2015, and is named for renowned Canadian paleontologist Philip J. Currie. The Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum is located near the Pipestone Creek bonebed, part of the Wapiti Formation which contains fossils from the Late Cretaceous to early Paleocene epoch. The bonebed was discovered by local school teacher Al Lakusta in 1974. Lakusta found the bones belonging to Pachyrhinosaurus, a type of horned dinosaur which was named Pachyrhinosaurus lakustai after Lakusta. The Pipestone Creek bonebed was found to have thousands of fossils and is considered one of the densest fossil sites in the world, and subsequently the area would come to be known as The River of Death. Other fossils found in the bonebed include hadrosaurs, tyrannosaurs, nodosaurs, plesiosaurs, and pterosaurs. More information...

According to PR-model, dinomuseum.ca is ranked 525,458th in multilingual Wikipedia, in particular this website is ranked 378,955th in English Wikipedia.

The website is placed before clubsanignacio.com and after crida.in in the BestRef global ranking of the most important sources of Wikipedia.

#Language
PR-model F-model AR-model
525,458th place
334,889th place
616,410th place
378,955th place
347,185th place
543,917th place
csCzech
13,949th place
9,994th place
16,841st place
frFrench
212,185th place
270,459th place
304,654th place
417,119th place
280,489th place
386,641st place