Drive a half hour north from the tiny town of High Prairie, Alberta, and you are confronted with a landscape that has changed very little in the last few thousand years: a cold plain stretches in every cardinal direction, spotted with hardy vegetation and crossed by swift-running streams that feed the region’s many lakes. This is the northern edge of the Boreal plains, where wheat fields begin their slow transition into the Canadian taiga and the immense empty spaces of the north. It’s a sparsely populated territory, peopled by close-knit families that work mainly in agriculture or the booming oil and gas industry. When 20,000 acres of farmland was purchased by a South Korean mega-corporation in September 2013, it was unusual enough to raise eyebrows.
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Mammoth ‘Jurassic Park’ May Be Under Development In Northern Alberta | Imgism
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Mammoth ‘Jurassic Park’ May Be Under Development In Northern Alberta | Imgism