Peace River Formation Explained

Peace River Formation
Type:Geological formation
Age:Middle
Period:Albian
Prilithology:Greywacke, sandstone, shale
Otherlithology:coal
Namedfor:Peace River
Namedby:McConnell, 1893.
Region:Peace River Country
Country: Canada
Coordinates:56.2°N -137°W
Unitof:Fort St. John Group
Subunits:Paddy Member, Cadotte Member, Harmon Member
Underlies:Shaftesbury Formation
Overlies:Spirit River Formation
Thickness:up to 60feet[1]

The Peace River Formation is a stratigraphical unit of middle Albian age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.

It takes the name from the Peace River, and was first described on the banks of the river, downstream from the Smoky River confluence to the mouth of the Notikewin River by McConnell in 1893.

Lithology

The Peace River Formation consists of greywacke, coal, coarse to fine marine sandstone and dark, fissile, non-calcareous shale.

Hydrocarbon production

Gas is produced from the Cadotte Member in northern-western Alberta.

Distribution

The Peace River Formation is 60feet thick on average. The formation has different extents at different stages, with the Paddy Member present only in the Peace River Country in northern Alberta south of Clear Hills, while the Cadotte Member and the Harmon Member occur in both Alberta and north-eastern British Columbia.

Physiography

The Peace River Lowland, a landform region in the Alberta Plateau. The landform region is a gently rolling lowland without clearly defined outer boundaries, extending east of the Rocky Mountains on both sides of the Peace River, sloping downward to the north and east. The higher hills in the foothills east of the Rockies in northeastern British Columbia have elevations of about 1000 m and the plains west of Lake Athabasca are about 300 m above sea level.[2] The lowland's Quaternary sediments of the former lake bottom of Glacial Lake Peace are underlain by Upper and Lower Cretaceous sedimentary rocks mainly shales of the Shaftesbury formation and sandstones of the Dunvegan and Peace River formations.[3] The Peace River and its immediate tributaries have incised almost 200 meters into the sediments and into the Cretaceous bedrock in the western section but only about 70 meters in the east side further north around Fort Vermilion.

On the basis of topography and landscape pattern, the area may be subdivided into four local physiographic units: the Peace River Lowland, Otter Lakes Upland, Utikuma Lake Upland, and Clear Hills Upland.

The Peace River Lowland is located in the central part of the area and is dissected by the Peace River. The Otter Lakes Upland in the northeast is a southern extension of the Buffalo Head Hills. It has a rugged moraine topography with steep slopes and isolated hills. Elevations above sea level range from 1900feet to 2600feet. The Utikuma Lake Upland in the southeast also ranges from 1900feet to 2700feet. The Clear Hills Upland in the west ranges from 1900feet to 2700feet.[4]

Relationship to other units

The Peace River Formation is a sub-division of the Fort St. John Group. It is conformably overlain by the Shaftesbury Formation shale and is conformably underlain by the Spirit River Formation.

It is equivalent to the Commotion Formation in British Columbia and to the Scatter Formation in the Liard River area. It correlates to the Buckinghorse Formation in north-eastern British Columbia.

Subdivisions

The Peace River Formation is composed of the following subdivisions from base to top:

Lithology Max
Thickness
Reference
Paddy Member 40feet[5]
Cadotte Member 52feet[6]
Harmon Member 34feet[7]

The Harmon Member correlates with the Hulcross Shale of the Commotion Formation in British Columbia and the shale member of the Scatter Formation in the Liard River area. The Cadotte Member correlates with the lower part of the Boulder Creek Member of the Commotion Formation and to the sum of the sandy member of the Scatter Formation and the base of the Lepine Formation.

In eastern and central Alberta, the Harmon Member can be correlated to the Joli Fou Formation, and the Cadotte Members with the Viking Formation.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Peace River Formation . . 2009-02-11 . https://archive.today/20120708115131/http://cgkn1.cgkn.net/weblex/weblex_litho_detail_e.pl?00053:011614 . 2012-07-08 . dead .
  2. Web site: Peace River Lowland . August 29, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060827195204/http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0006166 . August 27, 2006 .
  3. Web site: Morgan . A. James . Paulen . Roger C. . Froese . Corey R. . 2008 . Ancestral buried valleys of the Peace River: Effects on the Town of Peace River . https://web.archive.org/web/20160109062202/http://www.ags.gov.ab.ca/geohazards/pdf/pr_buried_valleys.pdf . 2016-01-09 . ags.gov.ab.ca.
  4. Web site: Canada Land Inventory - EcoInformatics International . 2023-07-13 . geostrategis.com.
  5. Web site: Paddy Member . . 2009-02-11.
  6. Web site: Cadotte Member . . 2009-02-11 . https://archive.today/20120731155412/http://cgkn1.cgkn.net/weblex/weblex_litho_detail_e.pl?00053:002143 . 2012-07-31 . dead .
  7. Web site: Harmon Member . . 2009-02-11.