'' lacking feathers outside the
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology In
1959,
Wann Langston, Jr. recorded evidence of a
Centrosaurus bonebed near Hilda, Alberta. Later, between
1964 and
1966 Don Taylor of the
Provincial Museum of Alberta (now called the
Royal Alberta Museum) oversaw the collection of fossils from yet another bonebed in the same region. These prospective bonebeds attracted the attention of scientists working for the
Royal Tyrell Museum in the 1990s because Hilda was an ideal location for maintaining physical continuity across the bonebeds' expanse. Physical continuity is important, because discontinuity in the rock strata can make it harder to tell if the bones were deposited at the same time or not. Eberth and the other researchers considered Hilda a prime site for a continuous bonebed for two reasons, one related to its history, one related to its present geography. First, during the
Cretaceous the area was situated closer to the
Western Interior Seaway where more sediment would have been deposited than at
Dinosaur Provincial Park. Secondly, the modern Hilda area lacks the rough
badland terrain that breaks up many probably equivalent deposits in Dinosaur Provincial Park. In
1996, the Royal Tyrell Museum finally performed a preliminary survey of the area studied by Langston and Taylor and entire new bonebeds were discovered. The next year, in
1997, research at Hilda began in earnest. In only two days, researchers discovered 14 separate bonebeds in one mudstone bed that extended for at least 7 km, with 3.7 km worth of visible outcrops. By the conclusion of the research program, the scientists mapped the bonebeds and excavated the bonebed cataloged as H97-04. They concluded that the Hilda bonebeds formed simultaneously when a herd consisting of thousands of
Centrosaurus apertus drowned in a flood. The researchers further speculated that some of the 17
Centrosaurus bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park likely formed simultaneously in a manner analogous to the formation of the Hilda bonebeds, which the researchers estimated to be spread over 2.3 km2. The researchers only collected fossils and
taphonomic data from the bonebed H97-04, although all the others were also examined to check the quality and number of preserved bones. The research at Hilda was so complex that over ten years passed from the start of the project until David A. Eberth, Donald B. Brinkman, and Vaia Barkas published a formal description in the
scientific literature. ==Geographic location and extent==