1-20 OF 93 RESULTS FOR

Nikanassin Range

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Publisher: Society for Sedimentary Geology
Published: 01 January 2017
DOI: 10.2110/sepmsp.107.07
EISBN: 9781565763456
... carbonate complex at Toma Creek to time-equivalent strata exposed in the Nikanassin Range. Exposures in the Nikanassin Range include a carbonate shelf prograding southeast into the South Jasper Basin. Stratigraphic architecture of the carbonate platforms was influenced by relative sea-level change within...
Image
—A. Cross section of Nikanassin-Boule limestone range by B. R. MacKay. Note similarity between this and other Foothills structures. B. Cross section showing Crowsnest Mountain outlier on low-angle overthrust fault and Rocky Mountain structure by B. R. MacKay. C. Cross section of Livingston limestone range by Rose and Leach with additions. This range appears to be a large-scale Turner Valley type denuded to Paleozoic limestone. D. Geologic column for Crowsnest and north Foothills area by B. R. MacKay.
Published: 01 October 1935
Fig. 20. — A . Cross section of Nikanassin-Boule limestone range by B. R. MacKay. Note similarity between this and other Foothills structures. B . Cross section showing Crowsnest Mountain outlier on low-angle overthrust fault and Rocky Mountain structure by B. R. MacKay. C . Cross section
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1991
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1991) 39 (2): 217.
.... The Brazeau Syncline has an overturned southwest limb and is a tight fold. The Nikanassin Thrust forms the boundary with the Front Ranges. The economic coal seams of the Tertiary Coalspur Formation are of high volatile C rank and are present in three parallel bands in the Entrance Syncline and the Coalspur...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1980
AAPG Bulletin (1980) 64 (5): 669.
.... Hydrocarbons have been found in 20 rock units ranging in age from Permian to Late Cretaceous. The majority of the reserves are contained within the Lower Cretaceous Spirit River Group and the Jurassic Nikanassin formation. Spirit River sediments were deposited in a series of transgressive and regressive cycles...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 March 2015
GSA Bulletin (2015) 127 (3-4): 480–502.
... obtained from the Simpson Pass (161.7 ± 6.6 Ma) and Johnson Creek (145.7 ± 14.9 Ma) thrusts indicate that the initial phase of contraction lasted at least throughout the Late Jurassic deposition of the Kootenay-Nikanassin-Minnes clastic wedge. In the Front Ranges, the Greenock thrust yielded an age...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Orogenic pulses in the Alberta Rocky Mountains: Ra...
Second thumbnail for: Orogenic pulses in the Alberta Rocky Mountains: Ra...
Third thumbnail for: Orogenic pulses in the Alberta Rocky Mountains: Ra...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1979
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1979) 27 (2): 183–208.
.... It grades laterally into an alternating succession of siltstone, sandstone, mudstone and shale of the lower Nikanassin Formation (Gibson, 1978). Thickness The Formation ranges in measured thickness from a minimum of 20 m near Moose Mountain (Fig. 2) to a maximum of 80 m near Mist Mountain and Highwood Pass...
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 April 2016
Geosphere (2016) 12 (2): 400–438.
... ). Nikanassin Formation sandstones are fine to medium litharenites ( Miles et al., 2012 ; Raines, 2011 ). Reported permeability in core ranges from 0.05 to 1 mD ( Hayes, 2009 ; Solano et al., 2011 ; Zambrano et al., 2014 ). Nikanassin Formation litharenites that we analyzed are fine, poorly sorted...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Quartz c-axis orientation patterns in fracture cem...
Second thumbnail for: Quartz c-axis orientation patterns in fracture cem...
Third thumbnail for: Quartz c-axis orientation patterns in fracture cem...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1999
GSA Bulletin (1999) 111 (3): 317–346.
...Peter Fermor Abstract Ever more detailed subsurface images of the Alberta Foothills and Front Ranges obtained from improving seismic techniques, coupled with an ever expanding base of information from deep wells and improved structural analysis techniques, have produced an understanding of fold...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1949
AAPG Bulletin (1949) 33 (4): 533–546.
... which the Kootenay (Nikanassin) beds consist of non-marine strata in large part. East of the Bighorn Mountains in the Brazeau Range area the Fernie formation overlies the Rundle formation and is 270–330 feet thick ( 19 ). The lower 120–160 feet consists of black fine-grained cherty and phosphatic...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Jurassic Sections in Foothills of Alberta and Nort...
Second thumbnail for: Jurassic Sections in Foothills of Alberta and Nort...
Third thumbnail for: Jurassic Sections in Foothills of Alberta and Nort...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1996
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1996) 44 (2): 282–298.
... the Precambrian crystalline basement along a basal ddcoltement (Price and Mountjoy, 1970; Price, 1981). The Nikanassin thrust separates the Front Ranges from the Foothills (Fig. 2). From SW to NE, major NE-directed thrust faults of the outer Front Ranges include the McConnell, Miette, Bighorn and Fiddle River...
Series: Geological Society, London, Petroleum Geology Conference Series
Published: 01 January 2010
DOI: 10.1144/0071099
EISBN: 9781862394131
... Formation can be subdivided into two main units, referred to simply as the Upper and Lower Nikanassin (Fig.  6 ). Net sand in the Upper Nikanassin can exceed 130 m in thickness along the axis of the trough. This depocentre is approximately 50 km long and can range in width from 10 to 20 km. To the east...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1990
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1990) 38A (1): 159–175.
... formation Nikanassin et le groupe Minnes, est un dépôt orogénique clastique qui se termine en biseau en direction est et remplit l’avant-fosse à l’ouest, et qui se retrouve en minces dépôts de schiste argileux et de grès équivalents déposés sur une plate-forme à l’est. L’absence ou la quasi-absence de...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1981
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1981) 29 (3): 293–333.
..., the contact with the underlying Fernie shales is gradational which, combined with structural complexity, makes it difficult to establish the true thickness of the Nikanassin Formation. It is estimated to range from 900 to 2300 m. In outcrop sections, Stott (1967) preferred using 'the better defined and dated...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2012
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2012) 60 (1): 3–36.
... the Buchia n. sp. aff. B. inflata Zone and of late Valanginian (Early Cretaceous) age. To the south of the study area, the age of the Nikanassin Formation has been estimated to range from Kimmeridgian to Tithonian/Volgian, based on the bivalve Buchia mosquensis , found in the Smoky River region ( Irish...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: A stratigraphic framework for Late Jurassic–Early ...
Second thumbnail for: A stratigraphic framework for Late Jurassic–Early ...
Third thumbnail for: A stratigraphic framework for Late Jurassic–Early ...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1985
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1985) 33 (1): 1–11.
...C. Willem Langenberg; Margaret E. McMechan RÉSUMÉ Le Groupe Luscar (revisé) forme la séquence carbonifère du Crétacé Inférieur qui recouvre disconformément les strates marines et non-marines de la Formation Nikanassin du Groupe Minnes et qui est disconformément sous-jacent aux argiles marines...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1978
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1978) 26 (3): 297–342.
... fine-grained sandstones and siltstones of the Nikanassin Formation are exposed. (Folding Mountain) CADOMIN CONGLOMERATE 303 35, 25 E o o e I BIGHORN RANGE (Loca l i ty 4 ) I J ml -" I I <. . 11 LI 50 100% 100% . o l ] "PC -~o . =o 3,0~ L * i ' ' ' IK "o ,2 J ¢o~ 50 CADOMIN (Loca l i ty 7...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1991
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1991) 39 (2): 217.
... shows at least 3 km of northeast- directed movement and places Blackstone shale on top of the Brazeau Formation. The Brazeau Syncline has an overturned southwest limb and is a tight fold. The Nikanassin Thrust forms the boundary with the Front Ranges. The economic oal seams of the Tertiary Coalspur...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1991
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1991) 39 (2): 217.
... the Coalspur Triangle Zone. The Brazeau Thrust shows at least 3 km of northeast- directed movement and places Blackstone shale on top of the Brazeau Formation. The Brazeau Syncline has an overturned southwest limb and is a tight fold. The Nikanassin Thrust forms the boundary with the Front Ranges. The economic...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1991
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1991) 39 (2): 217.
... on top of the Brazeau Formation. The Brazeau Syncline has an overturned southwest limb and is a tight fold. The Nikanassin Thrust forms the boundary with the Front Ranges. The economic oal seams of the Tertiary Coalspur Formation are of high volatile C rank and are present in three parallel bands...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1996
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1996) 44 (2): 410–421.
... referenced above comprise a basal and roof thrust linked by imbricate thrusts that bound a series of horses. Banks and Warburton (1986) introduced the term passive- roof duplex using the Kirthar Ranges of Pakistan as the type example. The passive-roof duplex has a roof which is a back- thrust, commonly...