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Fort Simpson Northwest Territories

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Journal Article
Published: 19 February 2002
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2002) 39 (2): 169–187.
... granites from the Fort Simpson magnetic high, northwest Canada . Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences , 28 : 1003 – 1008 . Villeneuve M.E. Butterfield N.J. Cook D.G. MacLean B.C. Rainbird R.H. 1998 . Age of the Cap Mountain (Northwest Territories) Proterozoic section, sequence...
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Book Chapter

Author(s)
F.A. Stoakes
Series: SEPM Short Course Notes
Published: 01 January 1992
DOI: 10.2110/scn.92.28.0207
EISBN: 9781565762510
... Winterburn basin that became infilled by shales of the upper part of the Fort Simpson Formation as far to the northwest as northeast British Columbia and contiguous areas of the Northwest Territories. Limestones of the Jean Marie Member of the Redknife Formation form a shelf bordering the open seaway...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2009
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2009) 57 (3): 209–250.
... Columbia, and the southern Northwest Territories. In British Columbia this unit is estimated to most likely contain approximately 10 TCF of gas in place and 6.5 TCF of marketable gas. This paper discusses the depositional facies framework, evolution, and reservoir architecture of the Jean Marie Member...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1994
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1994) 31 (3): 447–457.
... uplifted during tectonic development of the ca. 0.9–1.3 Ga Racklan Orogen in Canada's western Northwest Territories. The reflection data are located at the eastern front of the Mackenzie Mountains portion of the Canadian Cordillera and on the western flank of the Fort Simpson structural trend...
Image
Aeromagnetic anomaly map for northern Alberta and adjacent parts of the Northwest Territories. TO, Thelon Orogen; GBMZ, Great Bear magmatic zone; FS, Fort Simpson; HRF, Hay River Fault; MF, MacDonald Fault; N, Nova domain; K, Ksituan domain; TMZ, Taltson magmatic zone; CH, Chinchaga domain; STZ, Snowbird tectonic zone. Inset shows the contrast in tectonic style across the right lateral Great Slave Lake shear zone (GSLSZ; arrows). The white triangles show the possible piercing point provided by matching the eastern edge of the Archean Slave craton with the Archean rocks of the Nova domain. The cartoon sketches (right; a and b) show the age and tectonic environment postulated for ductile (b) and brittle (c) indentation tectonics along the GSLSZ (modified from Hoffman 1987 and Gibb 1978). M, McDonald Fault; A-CL, Andrew – Colin Lake fault; BB, Back Bay fault; BL, Black Lake fault; GSL, Great Slave Lake. Boxed area on magnetic anomaly map corresponds with the location in general of panels b and c.
Published: 29 March 2002
Fig. 4. Aeromagnetic anomaly map for northern Alberta and adjacent parts of the Northwest Territories. TO, Thelon Orogen; GBMZ, Great Bear magmatic zone; FS, Fort Simpson; HRF, Hay River Fault; MF, MacDonald Fault; N, Nova domain; K, Ksituan domain; TMZ, Taltson magmatic zone; CH, Chinchaga
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1954
AAPG Bulletin (1954) 38 (11): 2290–2301.
.... In the Northwest Territories’ wells 1 and 2, the Spence River shale either wedges out or loses its identity from the Simpson. However, over the remainder of the area it appears to be a mappable lithological unit. The Horn River shale as described by Whittaker (1921) is believed by the writer to be correlative...
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Journal Article
Published: 26 August 2005
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2005) 42 (6): 983–997.
... Lithospheric Evolution (SNORCLE) transect, which, among other things, address the deep structure of the Fort Simpson trend in northeastern British Columbia and the southern Northwest Territories. These data provide new information and lead to enhanced interpretations of the Proterozoic western margin of North...
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Journal Article
Published: 21 July 2021
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2021) 58 (12): 1283–1300.
...: 10.1139/e04-075 . Villeneuve , M.E. , Thériault , R.J. , and Ross , G.M. 1991 . U-Pb ages and Sm-Nd signature of two subsurface granites from the Fort Simpson magnetic high, northwest Canada . Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences , 28 ( 7 ): 1003 – 1008 . doi: 10.1139/e91-091...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1990
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1990) 38 (3): 332–356.
... Formation (Gray and Kassube, 1963). Griffin (1965) elevated the Muskwa Member to formational status. To the northeast, he Muskwa Formation grades vertically and laterally into the Fort Simpson Formation and to the northwest into the Besa River Formation (Pelzer, 1966). Hunt (1954) named 47.5 m (165 ft...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 2008
AAPG Bulletin (2008) 92 (1): 87–125.
... exploration interest here are shales and mudstones of the Besa River, Horn River, Muskwa, and Fort Simpson formations ( British Columbia Ministry of Energy and Mines, 2005 ) ( Figure 1 ). Our study area includes the northeastern region of British Columbia, southern Yukon, and the southern Northwest...
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Journal Article
Published: 23 September 2005
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2005) 42 (6): 1239–1255.
... of these layers may contain igneous rocks. One drill hole in the vicinity of the profile has penetrated igneous rocks beneath the Paleozoic in this area ( Ross et al. 2000 ). East of the Fort Simpson high, a series of small magnetic highs (M2–M5) are associated with linear, northwest-striking anomalies within...
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Journal Article
Published: 09 September 2005
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2005) 42 (6): 955–981.
... in response to either the Fort Simpson – Hottah collision ( Hildebrand et al. 1987 ) or the docking of a Nahanni terrane ( Hoffman 1989 ). It consists of a conjugate set of dextral northeast-trending faults and sinistral northwest-trending faults that resulted in irrotational east–west shortening and north...
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Journal Article
Journal: Interpretation
Published: 13 June 2020
Interpretation (2020) 8 (3): T579–T588.
..., and Northwest Territories, which contains significant unconventional gas resources in Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian (Tournasian) shales (Figure  1 ) ( Ferri et al., 2015 ; NEB, 2016 ). The surface structure and stratigraphy of the Liard Basin area are well-established ( Taylor and Stott, 1968 ; McMechan...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2000
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2000) 48 (1): 19–29.
.... Aeromagnetic maps. Figure 4A is a map of the residual total magnetic field that shows broader aeromagnetically-defined terranes south of Liard Line. The Fort Simpson Terrane (FST) is the north-trending magnetic high passing through Trout Lake at about 121° west longitude. Figure 4B is a map of the first...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1955
AAPG Bulletin (1955) 39 (10): 1927–1975.
... . Campbell , N. L. , 1950 , “ The Middle Devonian in the Pine Point Area, Northwest Territories ,” Geol. Assoc. Canada , Vol. 3 ( December ). Clark , L. M. , 1954 , “ Geology of the Fort St. John Field, British Columbia ,” paper read before Can. Inst. Min. Met. annual convention at Calgary...
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Journal Article
Published: 23 August 2002
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2002) 39 (8): 1189–1200.
.... The similarity of these reflection patterns to those of the Proterozoic Fort Simpson – Hottah collision zone ∼300 km to the west provides support for the interpretation that reflection patterns beneath the Slave Province are also products of collisional tectonics. Rocks within the Slave Province preserve...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1992
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1992) 29 (8): 1756–1766.
...Derald G. Smith Abstract Glacial Lake Mackenzie, located in the middle reach of the Mackenzie Valley, extended 800 km as a long narrow lake between the Rabbitskin River, 50 km east of Fort Simpson, and the Ramparts cliffs near Fort Good Hope; part of the lake extended an additional 75 km west from...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1983
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1983) 31 (2): 117–122.
..., Northwest Territories, Canada. Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, v. 20, p. 498-548. Whittaker, E. J. 1922. Mackenzie River district between Great Slave Lake and Simpson. Geological Survey of Canada, Summary Report 1921, pt. B, p. 455-55. Williams, G. K. 1977. The Hay River Formation and its...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1971
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1971) 19 (2): 437–484.
... and the Tathlina siltstones . To the northwest at Norma n Wells, the Fort Simpson is equivalent to the lower shale section of the Imperial Formation, named by Hume and Link (1945) and redefined b y Bassett (1961) . The Imperial consists of up to 3000 ft of shales with som e sandstones, siltstones and minor...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1969
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1969) 17 (3): 347–353.
...Murray A. Roed ABSTRACT Chalcopyrite, pyrite and quartz mineralization carrying minor amounts of chromium, nickel and silver has been discovered in a fracture zone located 20 mi east of the Mackenzie mountains along the Liard River in the Northwest Territories. The fracture zone...