94 Plated Dinosaurs 



the mighty Superior by the Soo Locks. Then 

 our captain threaded his way far from the shore 

 line through the reaches of this great inland sea. 

 Towards night a dense fog rose. Our siren sound- 

 ed the alarm every few moments, and on either 

 side, before and behind, other fog whistles, too, 

 kept up the refrain "Look out ! Look out ! Dan- 

 ger! Danger!" We soon got used to the music 

 and were lulled to sleep in our narrow state- 

 rooms. We slept in peace, and the next morn- 

 ing the sun rose clear, and scattered his brilliant 

 rays of light over the headlands of the moun- 

 tains back of Port Arthur, lighting up, too, the 

 grain elevators and pretty town. 



On the seventh of June we drove our team to 

 "Happy Jack Ferry," all ready for another cam- 

 paign. 



Of all the strange dinosaurs we found in our 

 hunts for big game in the Red Deer canyon noth- 

 ing, I think, exceeded the plated dinosaurs in 

 wonderful characters. The first I ever found, I 

 mention in the Proceedings of the Kansas Acad- 

 emy of Science for 1908 on page 257. "Last 

 February, Barnum Brown of the American 

 Museum of Natural History staff, published a 

 description for the first time of his armoured 

 dinosaur which he named Anchylosaurus mag- 

 niventris. It was discovered on Hell Creek, Mon- 

 tana, in 1905 by the American Museum Expedi- 

 tion. It represents he says a group of Stego- 



