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Bearpaw Shale

Bearpaw Formation
Stratigraphic range: Campanian-Maastrichtian, 75–72 Ma
Bearpaw-Horseshoe Canyon.jpg
Contact (red arrow) between the underlying marine shales of the Bearpaw Formation and the coastal Horseshoe Canyon Formation.
Type Geological formation
Unit of Montana Group
Underlies Horseshoe Canyon Formation, St. Mary River Formation, Eastend Formation, and others
Overlies Dinosaur Park Formation,
Judith River Formation
Thickness Up to 350 meters (1,150 ft)
Lithology
Primary Shale, claystone
Other Siltstone, sandstone, concretionary beds
Location
Coordinates 48°15′0″N 109°30′0″W / 48.25000°N 109.50000°W / 48.25000; -109.50000 (Bearpaw Formation)Coordinates: 48°15′0″N 109°30′0″W / 48.25000°N 109.50000°W / 48.25000; -109.50000 (Bearpaw Formation)
Region Alberta, Saskatchewan, Montana
Country  Canada  United States
Extent Northern Montana to central Alberta and southern Saskatchewan
Type section
Named for Bear Paw Mountains, Montana
Named by Hatcher and Stanton, 1903

The Bearpaw Formation, also called the Bearpaw Shale, is a geologic formation of Late Cretaceous (Campanian) age. It outcrops in the U.S. state of Montana, as well as the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan, and was named for the Bear Paw Mountains in Montana. It includes a wide range of marine fossils, as well as the remains of a few dinosaurs. It is known for its fossil ammonites, some of which are mined in Alberta to produce the organic gemstone ammolite.

The formation was deposited in the Bearpaw Sea, which was part of the Western Interior Seaway that advanced and then retreated across the region during Campanian time. It is composed primarily of dark grey shales, claystones, silty claystones and siltstones, with subordinate silty sandstones. It also includes bedded and nodular concretions (both calcareous and ironstone concretions) and thin beds of bentonite. As the seaway retreated toward the southwest, the marine sediments of the Bearpaw became covered by the deltaic and coastal plain sediments of the overlying formations.

The Bearpaw Formation conformably overlies the Dinosaur Park Formation of the Belly River Group in central Alberta, and the Judith River Formation in the plains to the east and Montana. It is overlain by the Horseshoe Canyon Formation in central Alberta; by the Blood Reserve Formation and the St. Mary River Formation in southern Alberta; by the Eastend Formation in southern Saskatchewan; and by the Fox Hills Formation in Montana. To the east, it merges into the Pierre Shale.


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