Fernie Formation


The Fernie Formation is a stratigraphic unit of Jurassic age. It is present in the western part of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin in western Alberta and northeastern British Columbia. It takes its name from the town of Fernie, British Columbia, and was first defined by W.W. Leach in 1914.

Depositional history

The Fernie Formation consists of marine sediments that were deposited in the Western Interior Seaway. Deposition took place throughout most of the Jurassic period, starting during the Hettangian stage in some parts of northeastern British Columbia and continuing until the mid-Tithonian, as determined from its fossil assemblages, including ammonites, molluscs and microfossils.
The sediments were sourced from the east during the deposition of the lower and middle units of the Fernie, where the coarser facies occur in the eastern part of the formation. In the uppermost Fernie, the coarsest material is found in the west, however, indicating a shift to sources in the west and south.

Lithology

The Fernie Formation is composed primarily of brown and dark gray to black shales that range from massive with conchoidal fracture to laminated and highly fractured or papery. Phosphatic sandstone and limestone, including cherty limestone, occur locally in the lower parts of the formation; siltstone, sandstone, coquinas and oolitic limestone interbeds can occur in the center; glauconitic sandstone and siltstone can be present in the upper parts.

Distribution

The Fernie Formation reaches a maximum thickness of near Mount Allan in Alberta, and typically is about 70 to 150m thick. It thins toward the east, disappearing at about the longitude of Calgary. The formation is exposed in outcrops in the Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, in the foothills and front ranges of the Canadian Rockies in southwestern Alberta, and as far north as the Peace River Country in northeastern British Columbia.

Relationship to other units

The Fernie Formation is conformably overlain by the Morrissey Formation in the south, by the Nikanassin Formation in central Alberta and by the Monteith Formation in northeastern British Columbia. It rests disconformably on Triassic units in the west, and unconformably on upper Paleozoic units such as the Schooler Creek Group and the Montney Formation farther east.

Subdivisions

The Fernie Formation has the following subdivisions from top to base:
Sub-unitAgeLithologyReference-
Passage BedsOxfordian to Tithoniandark grey splintery shale interbedded with siltstone-
Ribbon Creek MemberBathoniansilty shale-
Green BedsOxfordianglauconitic sandy mudstone, calcareous and phosphatic concretions-
Grey BedsCalloviandark platy shale with ammonites and concretions
Gryphaea BedBathoniancoquina with shells of Gryphaea impressimarginata, ammonites and belemnites; calcareous siltstone-
Corbula munda BedsBathoniansilty shale, calcareous sandstone-
Pigeon Creek MemberCalloviancalcareous siltstone and grey shale-
Highwood MemberBajociandark grey shale, bioturbated sandstone-
Rock Creek MemberBajocianalso called "Belemnite zone" - fine-grained grey sandstone that may contain commercial gas reserves-
Lille MemberBajociancoquina with Gryphaea and Ostrea shells-
Poker Chip ShaleToarcianfissile black calcareous shale, thin-bedded black argillaceous limestone-
Red Deer MemberPliensbachianblack shale, black laminated limestone-
Oxytoma BedSinemuriancoquina with Oxytoma shells-
Nordegg MemberSinemuriandark cherty and phosphatic limestone, calcareous shale-