Revised stratigraphic position of a volcanic-ash-derived maximum depositional age in the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation
Revised stratigraphic position of a volcanic-ash-derived maximum depositional age in the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation
Bulletin of Canadian Energy Geoscience (September 2024) 71 (2): 171-184
- Alberta
- Albian
- Aptian
- Athabasca Oil Sands
- bentonite
- Canada
- chronostratigraphy
- clastic rocks
- Clearwater Formation
- coal
- coal seams
- cores
- correlation
- Cretaceous
- density logging
- depth
- enhanced recovery
- gamma-ray methods
- geophysical surveys
- igneous rocks
- lithofacies
- lithostratigraphy
- Lower Cretaceous
- McMurray Formation
- Mesozoic
- oil sands
- paleoenvironment
- petroleum
- pyroclastics
- reservoir rocks
- sandstone
- sea-level changes
- sedimentary rocks
- sequence stratigraphy
- surveys
- thermal recovery
- thickness
- transgression
- unconformities
- volcanic ash
- volcanic rocks
- well-logging
- Western Canada
- northeastern Alberta
- Wabiskaw Member
- steam-assisted gravity drainage
- Firebag Sub-basin
The stratigraphic framework developed for the McMurray Formation and Wabiskaw Member of the Clearwater Formation (Aptian, Lower Cretaceous) provides a consistent nomenclature and allows for correlation across the Athabasca Oil Sands Region. Event horizons (e.g. volcanic ash layers) within the stratigraphic framework provide crucial geochronologic ages that constrain the timing of deposition and improve upon biostratigraphic estimations. Here, we provide recognition criteria for genetic depositional units in the Firebag sub-basin with the intent of revising the stratigraphic position of a previously published volcanic ash-derived maximum depositional age of 115.07 +/- 0.16 Ma. Results demonstrate that the previous placement of this event horizon at the top of the B1 parasequence set was not consistent with the accepted definition of the McMurray Formation-Wabiskaw Member boundary or application of the stratigraphic framework. Here, we establish that the ash-bearing coal horizon is at the top of the A2 parasequence set/channel belt of the McMurray Formation. The implications of this change include constraining the age of the A2 channel belt system to approximately 115 Ma which, under the previous study, would have been younger and unconstrained. We also discuss the implications for our understanding of the Aptian-Albian boundary in the context of allogenic drivers and global environmental change at that time.