Woodbend Group Stratigraphic range: Frasnian |
|
---|---|
Type | Geological formation |
Sub-units | Cooking Lake Formation Duvernay Formation Leduc Formation Ireton Formation |
Underlies | Winterburn Group |
Overlies | Beaverhill Lake Group |
Thickness | up to 700 metres (2,300 ft)[1] |
Lithology | |
Primary | Limestone, dolomite |
Other | Shale |
Location | |
Named by | Imperial Oil, 1950 |
Region | Alberta British Columbia Saskatchewan Manitoba Northwest Territories Yukon |
Country | Canada |
The Woodbend Group is a stratigraphical unit of Frasnian age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.
It was first described in the British American Pyrcz No. 1 well by Imperial Oil geological staff in 1950.[2]
Contents |
The Formation is composed of crystalline and dolomitized limestone (Cooking Lake Formation) in off-reef areas, bituminous shale and argillaceous limestone, detrital limestone (reef fallout), stromatoporoid calcarenite (Duvernay Formation), gray shale, argillaceous limestone, argillaceous dolomite, crystalline dolomite (Ireton Formation). In reef build-ups, it consists of massive limestone and dolomite with porosity (Leduc Formation). [1]
Oil is produced from the Leduc Formation in central Alberta.
The Woodbend Group reaches a maximum thickness of 700 metres (2,300 ft) in northern Alberta (where reefs were developed), and has typical thickness of 300 metres (980 ft) in southern and central Alberta.[1] It extends laterally from north-eastern British Columbia] through Alberta and into southern Saskatchewan and southern Manitoba. Reef build-ups range in size from small mounds to pinnacle reefs and large atoll size reefs and bank developments.
In central Alberta the following formations are recognized, from top to bottom:
Sub-unit | Age | Lithology | Max. Thickness |
Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ireton Formation | Frasnian | upper: calcareous shale and argillaceous limestone middle: fissile grey-green shale with calcirudite beds lower: massive and banded limestone with shale partings |
250 m (820 ft) | [3] |
Leduc Formation | Frasnian | shallow water reef deposits: Stromatoporoid limestone, skeletal mudstone, boundstone, floatstone, packstone and wackestone, mostly dolomitized | 300 m (980 ft) | [4] |
Duvernay Formation | Frasnian | bituminous shale, calcareous shale, argillaceous limestone with disseminated pyrite | 250 m (820 ft) | [5] |
Cooking Lake Formation | Frasnian | limestone (dolomite in the Rimbey-Meadowbrook reef trend) | 90 m (300 ft) | [6] |
In northeast Alberta the following formations are recognized, from top to bottom:
Sub-unit | Age | Lithology | Max. Thickness |
Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grosmont Formation | Frasnian | limestone and dolomite, minor argillaceous dolomite, limestone, siltstone and shale | 230 m (750 ft) | [7] |
Ireton Formation | Frasnian | upper: calcareous shale and argillaceous limestone middle: fissile grey-green shale with calcirudite beds lower: massive and banded limestone with shale partings |
250 m (820 ft) | [3] |
Cooking Lake Formation | Frasnian | limestone: fossiliferous mudstone and wackestone, grainstone, stromatoporoid rudstone and floatstone | 90 m (300 ft) | [6] |
The Woodbend Group is conformably overlain by the Winterburn Group and conformably overlays the Beaverhill Lake Group.[1] It is transgressive in the Peace River Arch and Tathlina uplift. Newer deposits rest on the Woodbend group upon an erosional surface in eastern Alberta, south-central Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
It is equivalent to the Birdbear Formation and Duperow Formation in northern Montana, southern Saskatchewan and southwestern Manitoba, as well as parts of the Fort Simpson Formation and Muskwa Formation of northeastern British Columbia and southern Yukon, while it corresponds to the Tathlina Formation, Twin Falls Formation and Hay River Formation in the Northwest Territories.