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Doe Creek Member

Smoky Group
Stratigraphic range: Late Cretaceous
Pouce Coupe River.JPG
Kaskapau Shale exposed along the Pouce Coupe River
Type Geological formation
Sub-units Puskwaskau Formation
Bad Heart Formation
Kaskapau Formation
Underlies Wapiti Group
Overlies Dunvegan Formation
Thickness up to 1,100 feet (340 m)
Lithology
Primary Shale, sandstone, siltstone
Location
Region  Alberta,  British Columbia
Country  Canada
Type section
Named for Smoky River
Named by George Mercer Dawson, 1881.

The Smoky Group is a stratigraphical unit of Late Cretaceous age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.

It takes the name from the Smoky River, and was first described in outcrops along the banks of the Smoky River, Spirit River and Pouce Coupe Rivers by George Mercer Dawson in 1881.

The Smoky Group is represented by marine silty shale with ironstone and bentonite streaks. Sandstone occurs at the base, and is transitional to the Dunvegan Formation.

Gas is produced from the Cardium Formation in the southern reaches of the Group, in central Alberta and northern Alberta.

The Kaskapau Shale reaches 477m in the Pouce Coupe River area and thins towards the east in the Smoky River area. The Bad Heart Formation sandstone is up to 8m thick, while the Puskwaskau Formation ranges from 200m in the Pouce Coupe Prairie to 123m in the Spirit River area. The entire group measures up to 677 m (2,220 ft) in the Pouce Coupe Prairie, and can reach 1,100 m (3,610 ft) in the Canadian Rockies foothills of northeast British Columbia.

The Smoky Group is conformably and transgressively followed by the Wapiti Group and rests conformably on the Dunvegan Formation sandstone. The Cardium sandstone and Muskiki shale are replacing the upper parts of the Kaskapau Formation in the south-east of the distribution area. The entire group correlates with the Blackstone Formation, Cardium Formation and Wapiabi Formation of the Alberta Group in the southern foothills. The equivalent stratigraphic sequence in central Alberta consists of the Lea Park Formation and the upper Colorado Group, in north-eastern Alberta it correlates with Labiche Formation, and with the Kotaneelee Formation in the Liard River area.


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