The Winnipegosis Formation (Middle Devonian) is the major carbonate unit of the first transgressive-regressive pulse of the Kaskaskia sequence. The sea invaded the narrow, elongated Elk Point basin which extended from northern Alberta southeastward to North Dakota. The southeastern end of this basin corresponds to the present-day Williston basin.
In North Dakota, reworking of red beds and deposition of restricted argillaceous carbonates occurred (Ashern). Winnipegosis deposition began after a brief hiatus. Initially, there was a widespread establishment of a clear quiet shallow-marine environment. Subsequently, the basin differentiated into three distinct environments of deposition: (1) scattered pinnacle reefs, (2) a deeper interreef basin, and (3) an encompassing carbonate platform.
Carbonate production in the pinnacle-reef and platform environments was able to keep pace with rising sea level as the transgression continued. In the pinnacle-reef environment, several lithofacies developed through time. Of special importance, due to recent production, is an upper porous dolomite in which the original limestone has undergone extensive fabric-obscuring dolomitization. In the platform environment, there developed a patch-reef lithofacies and several quiet-water shallow-marine lithofacies which illustrate a vertical subtidal regressive sequence. In addition, the pinnacle-reef and platform environments grade into an uppermost intertidal and/or supratidal regressive series of dolomites and anhydrites. Carbonate production did not keep pace with rising sea level in the interreef environment resulting in topographic relief. Subaqueous laminated lithofacies were deposited throughout the basin and between the pinnacle reefs.
During the regressive phase, barrier reefs formed in northern Alberta which restricted the basin and resulted in the deposition of evaporites (Prairie) which eventually filled the basin.