Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Kanguk Formation

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Type
  
Geological formation

Overlies
  
Hassel Formation

Country
  
Canada

Underlies
  
Eureka Sound Formation

Sub-units
  
Eglinton Member

Other
  
Sandstone

Region
  
North America

Primary
  
Slate, Siltstone

Kanguk Formation

Thickness
  
up to 365 metres (1,200 ft)

The Kanguk Formation is a geological formation in the Northwest Territories of Canada whose strata date back to the Late Cretaceous. Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation.

It was first described in the Kanguk Peninsula of the Axel Heiberg Island, along the shore of the Stand Fiord by Souther in 1963. The formation occurs throughout the Sverdrup Basin and the southern Queen Elizabeth Islands.

Lithology

The Kanguk Formation is composed of dark shale and siltstone with interbeds of sandstone, bentonite and tuff. Thicker sandstone and conglomerate beds occur in the western reaches in Eglinton Island.

References

Kanguk Formation Wikipedia