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Kananaskis

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Series: GSA Field Guides
Published: 01 January 2017
DOI: 10.1130/2017.0048(05)
... of these depositional settings can be observed in the Sulphur Mountain Formation in outcrops in Canmore and Kananaskis. The rocks display a wide variety of sedimentary structures and a suite of body and trace fossils, and provide a valuable window into the subsurface, with the outcropping facies acting as direct...
Journal Article
Published: 25 August 1999
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1999) 36 (3): 395–407.
...David JA Evans; Keith E Salt; Claire S Allen Abstract Stratigraphic and sedimentological analyses of exposures through a glacilacustrine sedimentary sequence along the south shore of Barrier Lake, Kananaskis Country, reveal evidence of glacitectonic disturbance, relating to a readvance of the Bow...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1987
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1987) 35 (3): 358–361.
...Alan McGugan ABSTRACT A large transverse fault, one of several transverse faults in the northern part of the Lewis Thrust sheet, exposed on the westerly dip slopes of the Elk Range, Kananaskis Valley, placed the Triassic Spray River Formation against the Jurassic Fernie Formation (50°36.5’N, 115° 4...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1983
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1983) 20 (3): 409–419.
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1982
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1982) 19 (1): 23–35.
...Glen M. MacDonald Abstract A 3.1 m section of limnic sediment and peat from a bog on the Morley Flats and a 2.8 m section of limnic sediment from Wedge Lake in the Kananaskis Valley have yielded the first comprehensive late Quaternary biostratigraphic record from south-western Alberta. Both...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1981
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1981) 29 (1): 96–109.
... 1981, The Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists 1981 BULLETIN OF CANADIAN PETROLEUM GEOLOGY VOL. 29, NO. 1 ( MAR. 1981), P. 96-109. PERMIAN AND PENNSYLVANIAN STRATIGRAPHY, DISCONFORMITIES, FACIES CHANGES AND STRUCTURE, KANANASKIS AND SPRAY LAKES AREAS, SOUTHERN CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS ALAN...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1980
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1980) 17 (11): 1588–1591.
...Alan McGugan; Harrell L. Strimple Abstract A new occurrence of Pelecocrinus cf. P . banffensis is described from the Banff Formation of Osage age, Kananaskis Valley, Alberta. On décrit une nouvelle occurrence de Pelecocrinus cf. P . banffensis dans la formation de Banff datant de...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1980
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1980) 17 (4): 459–477.
...L. E. Jackson Jr. Abstract Deposits of till, glaciofluvial, and glaciolacustrine sediments representing four glaciations are recognized in the Alberta portions of the Kananaskis Lakes 1:250 000 map sheet (82J). The oldest episode is represented by scattered erratics and patches of till above 1400 m...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1979
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1979) 27 (4): 405–417.
...Alan McGugan; June. E. Rapson ABSTRACT A roadcut on the improved Kananaskis Forestry Trunk Road, near Fortress Mountain Junction, exposes the Pennsylvanian Spray Lakes Group (McGugan and Rapson, 1963) including the Lower Pennsylvanian Tunnel Mountain Formation (restricted, McGugan and Rapson, 1961...
Image
Yahatinda Formation outcrop at Wasootch Creek, <span class="search-highlight">Kananaskis</span> area, Alberta. In...
Published: 01 March 2000
Fig. 2. Yahatinda Formation outcrop at Wasootch Creek, Kananaskis area, Alberta. Interbedded light and dark units comprise thinly bedded dolostone and terrigenous dolostone couplets. Resistant, thickly bedded Middle Cambrian carbonates (Eldon Formation) are prominent along the skyline on the far
Image
—Mount Lorette. Looking northwest from <span class="search-highlight">Kananaskis</span> River. Formations from le...
Published: 01 April 1949
Fig. 4. —Mount Lorette. Looking northwest from Kananaskis River. Formations from left to right, lower Rundle limestone (LR), Banff shale (B), Exshaw shale and limestone (E), Palliser limestone (P), and Fairholme dolomite (F).
Image
—View near <span class="search-highlight">Kananaskis</span>, Alberta
Published: 01 January 1943
Fig. 4. —View near Kananaskis, Alberta
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1984
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1984) 32 (4): 372–381.
...Alan McGugan ABSTRACT Carboniferous sediments referable to the Mississippian Mount Head Formation (dolomitic facies) rest on fossiliferous limestones of the Mississippian Turner Valley Formation and are locally overlain by Middle Pennsylvanian Kananaskis Formation, Spray Lakes Group (thin white...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1997
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1997) 45 (4): 461–473.
...) clastic wedge. No evidence has been found in the Nd data to suggest that magmatic arc rocks of Triassic age to the west of the miogeocline ( e.g. , Quesnellia) made any contribution to the sediment record. U-Pb geochronology of detrital zircons from Triassic sandstones in the Pine Pass and Kananaskis...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1997
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1997) 45 (4): 693–707.
... of considerable condensation within the basal parts of these formations was not recognized. The best section is at Opal Creek in Kananaskis Country where the Permian-Triassic boundary is identified at 1.5 metres above the top of the Ranger Canyon Formation. This suggests that a global eustatic fall, related...
Image
—Exshaw fault and branch fault. Looking northwest at drainage divide betwee...
Published: 01 April 1949
Fig. 8. —Exshaw fault and branch fault. Looking northwest at drainage divide between Kananaskis and Bow rivers. Lower Rundle (LR), upper Rundle (UR), Exshaw fault (EF), Palliser (P), Exshaw (E), Banff (B).
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1967
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1967) 15 (2): 209.
... Supergroup of Pennsylvania ge contains five for- mations which in ascending order are: Todhunter, Tyrwhitt, Storelk, Tobermory and Kananaskis. All except the Kananaskis are new formations that are equiv. alent to the Tunnel Mountain Formation. The Todhunter, Tyrwhitt and Tobcr- mory consist mainly of brown...
Journal Article
Journal: The Leading Edge
Published: 01 March 2000
The Leading Edge (2000) 19 (3): 275.
... in Kananaskis (Draugen, Foinaven, Lena, Gannet-C, Meren, to name but a few), we saw that the focus had already moved away from the technical demonstration of seismic reservoir monitoring and toward how best to incorporate it into a reservoir management workflow. So much for our defining moment. The second...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1943
AAPG Bulletin (1943) 27 (1): 38–50.
...Fig. 4. —View near Kananaskis, Alberta ...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1994
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1994) 42 (3): 296–311.
.... In this paper, we briefly describe and illustrate selected ammonite zone fossils retrieved from two sections of the Cardium Formation exposed along the Bow River near Seebe (at Kananaskis and Horseshoe dams), west of Calgary (Figs. 1, 2), and from three cores in the Pembina Field. The precise stratigraphic...