The Pika Formation is present in the Rocky Mountains of Alberta and British Columbia, from south of Mount Assiniboine to the Kakwa area in the north. It thickens westward, reaching a maximum thickness of about 361 metres (1,184 feet) near the Chaba River, and thins to zero in the subsurface of the Alberta plains. It is in gradational contact with the underlying Eldon Formation in the south, Titkana Formation in the north, and the Earlie Formation in the east. In the mountains it is overlain by the Arctomys Formation; the contact is abrupt and may be unconformable. In the plains to the east it is unconformably overlain by the Sullivan Formation or, farther east, by the Deadwood Formation.[1][3][8]
References
^ abcGlass, 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.
^ abDeiss, C.F. 1939. Cambrian formations of southwestern Alberta and southeastern British Columbia. Geological Society of America Bulletin, vol. 50, p. 951-1019.
^ abMelzak, A. and Westrop, S.R. 1994. Mid-Cambrian (Marjuman) from the Pika Formation, southern Canadian Rocky Mountains, Alberta. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, vol. 31, p. 969-985.
^Leckie, D.A. 2017. Rocks, ridges and rivers – Geological wonders of Banff, Yoho, and Jasper National Parks. Brokenpoplars, Calgary, Alberta, 217 pp. ISBN978-0-9959082-0-8.
^Aitken, J.D. 1966. Middle Cambrian to Middle Ordovician cyclic sedimentation, southern Rocky Mountains of Alberta. Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, vol. 14, no. 6, p. 405-441.
^Aitken, J.D. 1997. Stratigraphy of the Middle Cambrian platformal succession, southern Rocky Mountains. Geological Survey of Canada, Bulletin 398, 322 p.