News

If you were a teddy bear lost in a museum, what would you do? When the staff at Regina's Royal Saskatchewan Museum found a lost teddy bear in their building last week, they decided to try and ...
Because someone — specifically a little boy — did leave his teddy bear at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum (in Canada), according to the museum. And now employees there are trying to bring the ...
The Royal Saskatchewan Museum (RSM) is inviting families to explore the province’s roaring history of dinosaurs, fossils and palaeontology from the safety of their home.
The Royal Saskatchewan Museum in Regina has launched a website featuring bird egg photographs for more than 300 species that nest in Canada. Ryan Fisher, the museum's curator of vertebrate zoology ...
SASKATOON, SASKATCHEWAN--(Marketwired - Jul 14, 2014) - Department of Canadian Heritage The Government of Canada is providing the Royal Saskatchewan Museum (RSM) with $78,006 in funding for its ...
The Royal Saskatchewan Museum (RSM) is renowned for its exhibits and displays, but there’s a whole lot more tucked away out of the public eye.
The Royal Saskatchewan Museum is alive — literally with it's latest exhibit — Snakes Alive. And on Saturday people flocked to the museum to see the exhibit and celebrate World Snake Day.
Scientists at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum uncovered several multimillion-year-old fossils around the province over the summer. Emily Bamforth, curatorial assistant for paleontology, discovered a ...
Researchers at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum in Regina showed off some recent discoveries they've made. One of them involves a duck-billed dinosaur whose fossils are a rare find in Saskatchewan.
Not all snakes are in the grass — some can be found at Royal Saskatchewan Museum, starting this weekend. The museum's Snakes Alive exhibit features all nine species of snakes found in the province.
These fossils were prepared and curated at McGill's Redpath Museum over the past decade on loan from the Royal Saskatchewan Museum in Regina. More information: Alexandre V. Demers-Potvin et al ...
The collaboration between the Royal Saskatchewan Museum and University of Regina, began in the fall of 2021 with 17 biodiversity monitoring stations positioned around the city.