Puneet Varma (Editor)

La Biche Group

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Type
  
Geological formation

Country
  
Canada

Named by
  
R.G. McConnell, 1892

Underlies
  
Belly River Group

Overlies
  
Pelican Formation

Named for
  
La Biche River

Primary
  
Slate

Thickness
  
up to 420 metres (1,380 ft)

Region
  
Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin

The Labiche Formation is a stratigraphical unit of late Albian to Santonian age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.

Contents

It takes the name from La Biche River, a tributary of the Athabasca River, and was first described in outcrop in the Athabasca River valley by R.G. McConnell in 1892.

Lithology

The Labiche Formation is composed shale with flakes of coccolithic debris, Inoceramus prisms, pyrite.

Distribution

The Labiche Formation reaches a maximum thickness of 420 metres (1,380 ft) in the sub-surface of northern Alberta.

Relationship to other units

The Labiche Formation is overlain by the Belly River Formation and conformably overlays the Pelican Formation.

It is equivalent to the parts of the Colorado Group in central Alberta and to the sum of Smoky Group, Dunvegan Formation and Shaftesbury Formation in north-western Alberta.

References

La Biche Group Wikipedia