Whitehorse Formation (Canada)
The Whitehorse Formation is a geologic formation of Late Triassic age. It is present on the western edge of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin in western Alberta and northeastern British Columbia. It was first described as a member of the Spray River Formation by P.S. Warren in 1945, who named it for Whitehorse Creek, a tributary of the McLeod River south of Cadomin, Alberta. It was later raised to formation status.
Marine fossils from the Late Triassic epoch including crinoids, brachiopods, bivalves, and gastropods, have been found in the Whitehorse Formation.
Lithology and stratigraphy
The Whitehorse Formation was deposited on the continental shelf along the western margin of the North American craton. It consists of dolomite, limestone, quartzose sandstone, and siltstone, with minor gypsum.The Whitehorse Formation is subdivided into the following members:
Geological Unit | Age | Lithology | Thickness | Reference |
Winnifred Member | Late Triassic | Grey silty to sandy quartzose dolomite, with minor beds of quartz siltstone | 4 – 44 m | |
Brewster Limestone Member | Late Triassic | Grey, cliff-forming fossiliferous limestone with local interbeds of silty to sandy dolomite | 0 – 63 m | |
Starlight Evaporite Member | Late Triassic | Interbedded dolomite, limestone, sandstone, siltstone, and minor gypsum | 6 – 402 m | |
Olympus Sandstone lentil | Late Triassic | Cliff-forming, slightly dolomitic quartz sandstone and, locally, sandy dolomite | 0 – 140 m |