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Horseshoe Canyon Formation

Horseshoe Canyon Formation
Stratigraphic range: Maastrichtian, 74–67 Ma
Horseshoe Canyon Alberta Nov 1988.jpg
Horseshoe Canyon Formation at Horsethief Canyon, near Drumheller. The dark bands are coal seams.
Type Geological formation
Unit of Edmonton Group
Underlies Whitemud Formation
Overlies Bearpaw Formation
Thickness 227 meters (745 ft)
Lithology
Primary sandstone
Other shale, coal
Location
Coordinates 51°25′24″N 112°53′18″W / 51.42333°N 112.88833°W / 51.42333; -112.88833 (Horseshoe Canyon)Coordinates: 51°25′24″N 112°53′18″W / 51.42333°N 112.88833°W / 51.42333; -112.88833 (Horseshoe Canyon)
Region  Alberta
Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin
Country  Canada
Type section
Named for Horseshoe Canyon
Named by E.J.W. Irish, 1970

The Horseshoe Canyon Formation is a stratigraphic unit of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin in southwestern Alberta. It takes its name from Horseshoe Canyon, an area of badlands near Drumheller.

The Horseshoe Canyon Formation is part of the Edmonton Group and is up to 230 metres (750 ft) thick. It is of Late Cretaceous age, Campanian to early Maastrichtian stage (Edmontonian Land-Mammal Age), and is composed of mudstone, sandstone, carbonaceous shales, and coal seams. A variety of depositional environments are represented in the succession, including floodplains, estuarine channels, and coal swamps, which have yielded a diversity of fossil material. Tidally-influenced estuarine point bar deposits are easily recognizable as Inclined Heterolithic Stratification (IHS). Brackish-water trace fossil assemblages occur within these bar deposits and demonstrate periodic incursion of marine waters into the estuaries.

The Horseshoe Canyon Formation crops out extensively in the area around Drumheller, as well as farther north along the Red Deer River near Trochu and along the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton. It is overlain by the Battle, Whitemud, and Scollard formations. The Drumheller Coal Zone, located in the lower part of the Horseshoe Canyon Formation, was mined for sub-bituminous coal in the Drumheller area from 1911 to 1979, and the Atlas Coal Mine in Drumheller has been preserved as a National Historic Site. In more recent times, the Horseshoe Canyon Formation has become a major target for coalbed methane (CBM) production.


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