The cache is not at the posted coordinates... it is on this page... N 53° 48.207' W 112° 48.677'
Star, Alberta
In 1892 John Duncan Campbell settled on the Victoria Trail near Beaver Creek. Across the trail, Ed Knowlton built a store and a post office and named it Edna for his daughter. In 1900, the post office was moved to the Campbell house and renamed Star. In 1905, the hamlet was moved building by building to what is now Lamont.
In 1928 the Canadian Pacific Railway was built 1.5 km north of the original Star. The post office was moved there in 1929, and the new hamlet became Star. The community was a major centre for grain transport, supported three stores and a car dealership. - Lamont County Website
Spica
Spica is a bright binary star, the 16th brightest in Earth's night sky, visible in the northern constellation Virgo. It is visible not only because of its size, but also because of its relatively close distance: it is about 260 light-years away from Earth.
While the star appears as a single point of light to the naked eye, Spica is a binary system. One star, however, is much brighter than the other one.
The star system is also a massive source of X-rays, which opened a new understanding of Spica when X-ray astronomy became prominent in the 1960s. - space.com