Puneet Varma (Editor)

Muskiki Formation

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Type
  
Geological formation

Region
  
Alberta

Named for
  
Muskiki Lake

Overlies
  
Cardium Formation

Unit of
  
Smoky Group

Other
  
Sandstone

Country
  
Canada

Primary
  
Slate

Underlies
  
Smoky Group

Muskiki Formation httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Thickness
  
up to 99 metres (320 ft)

The Muskiki Formation is a stratigraphical unit of Late Cretaceous age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.

Contents

It takes the name from Muskiki Lake and Muskiki Creek, a tributary of the Cardinal River, and was first described in an outcrop along the Thistle Creek, north of Muskiki Lake, in the Bighorn Range, by D.F. Stott in 1963. The name is of Cree origin ("maskihkîy"), meaning medicine.

Lithology

The Muskiki Formationis composed of shale with pebbly mudstone. Poorly sorted sandstone and concretionary beds also occur. In the western areal it becomes more silty.

Distribution

The Muskiki Formation is 99 metres (320 ft) thick at its type locality at Thistle Creek. It thins out towards the south and east. It occurs in the Canadian Rockies foothills from the Highwood River in the south to the Berland River, north of the Athabasca River and into north-eastern British Columbia.

Relationship to other units

The Muskiki Formationis is part of the Smoky Group. It is conformably underlain by the Cardium Formation and conformably overlain by the Bad Heart Formation.

The Kaskapau Formation in northern Alberta replaces the upper Blackstone Formation, the Cardium Formation, and the Muskiki Formation. Where the Kaskapau Formation includes post Cardium beds, the Muskiki is considered a member of the Wapiabi Formation.

References

Muskiki Formation Wikipedia