Eastend, Saskatchewan
Encyclopedia : E : EA : EAS : Eastend, Saskatchewan
Eastend is a town in southwest Saskatchewan, Canada. It is situated approximately 80 kilometres from the Montana border and 100 kilometres from the Alberta border. The town is best known for the nearby discovery of a Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton nicknamed "Scotty" in 1994. The town has used the discovery of this fossil as the main centrepiece in the construction of a museum called the T. rex Discovery Centre, which opened on May 30, 2000. The centre is closely affiliated with the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, and contains the RSM Fossil Research Station. A former resident of Eastend is the writer Wallace Stegner, who lived in the town between 1917 and 1921.
According to the Canada 2001 Census:
| Population: | 576 (-6.5% from 1996) |
| Land area: | 2.71 km² |
| Population density: | 212.8 people/km² |
| Median age: | 52.3 (males: 49.8, females: 54.3) |
| Total private dwellings: | 333 |
| Mean household income: | $39,131 |
External links
| North: Maple Creek | ||
| West: Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park | Eastend | East: Dollard |
| South: N/A |
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