Specimen HH 2017.010.002, an ankylosaur femur discovered along the Murray River in 1993 and described in 2024.[5]
Specimen CMN 59667, a block containing two vertebrae and two ribs from an ankylosaur that was discovered along the Pine River in 1930 and was described in 2020.[6]
The Dunvegan Formation had an initial established recoverable oilreserve of 9.9 million m³, with 3.1 million m³ already produced as of 2008.[10]Gas reserves totaled 18.7 million m³, with 4.5 million m³ already produced.[11]
The Dunvegan Formation is exposed in outcrop along and near the Peace River east of the foothills, in the Peace River Country and the Chinchaga area, as well as patches in north-western Alberta and south of the Caribou Mountains.
Relationship to other units
The Dunvegan Formation is conformably overlain by marine shales of the Kaskapau Formation in the Peace River Country and overlies conformably and transitionally the shale of the Fort St. John Group. The relationship between the Dunvegan and the overlying/underlying units is diachronous and the boundaries of the Dunvegan are placed at the first and last appearances of sandstone within the shale-dominated succession.[12]
^Dawson, G.M., 1881. Report on the exploration from Port Simpson on the Pacific Coast to Edmonton on the Saskatchewan River, Embracing a portion of the northern part of British Columbia and the Peace River Country, with Maps 150 and 152; Geological Survey of Canada, Report of Progress 1879-1880, Part B, p. 1-77.
^ abCross, E.C; Arbour, V.M (2024). "An ankylosaur femur from the mid-Cretaceous of the Peace Region of northeastern British Columbia". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. doi:10.1139/cjes-2023-0118. S2CID267961368.