The strata of the Minnes Group were originally described as the Minnes Formation[1] which was revised to group status by D.F. Stott.[4] Stott subdivided the group into four formations in the north as shown below. South of the Pine River the upper three formations are not readily divisible and those beds are included in the Gorman Creek Formation.[4][3]
The age of the Minnes Group strata has been determined from their fossil fauna, primarily species of the bivalveBuchia. Ammonites, plant fossils, palynomorphs, and microfossils have also been described from the Minnes Group.[4] Dinosaur trackways are present on bedding surfaces in the Gorman Creek Formation of the Minnes Group near the Narraway River:
"More than 200 fossil footprints are preserved in at least 8 trackways... The majority of the footprints were made by small theropods, but the most dramatic trackway was made by a large biped whose feet were more than a half meter in length."[6]
Thickness and distribution
The Minnes Group can be seen in outcrops in the northern foothills of the Canadian Rockies and is present beneath the adjacent plains from the Prophet River in northeastern British Columbia to the Berland River in west-central Alberta. It reaches a maximum thickness of 1,200 m (3,940 ft) in the foothills and thins eastward, reaching zero at its erosional edge.[3]
The Minnes Group contains natural gasreservoirs in the subsurface of the Peace River Plains and Deep Basin areas, where it is sometimes reported as "Nikanassin Formation". Coal seams and carbonaceousshales, which may have been the source for much of the gas, are also present in the Minnes Group, but none of the coal deposits have been found to be economically mineable.[4]
References
^ abcZiegler, W.H. and Pocock, S.A.J. 1960. The Minnes Formation. In: Second Annual Field Trip Guidebook, Rock Lake, August 1960. Edmonton Geological Society, p. 43-71.
^ abcdGlass, D.J. (editor) 1997. Lexicon of Canadian Stratigraphy, vol. 4, Western Canada including eastern British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and southern Manitoba. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists, Calgary, 1423 p. on CD-ROM. ISBN0-920230-23-7.
^ abcdefghijklStott, D.F. 1998. Fernie Formation and Minnes Group (Jurassic and lowermost Cretaceous), northern Rocky Mountain foothills, Alberta and British Columbia. Geological Survey of Canada, Bulletin 516.
^Weishampel, D.B., Dodson, P., and Osmólska, H. (eds.): The Dinosauria, 2nd ed., "Dinosaur distribution," pp. 517-607. Berkeley: University of California Press. 861 pp. ISBN0-520-24209-2.
^Currie, P.J. 1991. Dinosaur footprints of western Canada. In: Dinosaur tracks and traces, D.D. Gillette and M. Lockley (eds.), p. 294. Cambridge University Press, ISBN9780521407885, 476 p.