Red Rock Coulee is a Provincial Natural Area in southeastern Alberta, Canada, 54 kilometres (30 mi) south-southwest of the city of Medicine Hat and 26 kilometres (20 mi) south of the hamlet of Seven Persons on Alberta Highway 887. The main feature of this natural landscape is the large spherical reddish boulders (concretions), some of which measure 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) in diameter.[1] They are scattered across the badlands and coulees, and can be seen along the hiking trails, as well as from the viewpoint on Highway 887.
The concretions formed after the sediments had been deposited, when mineral cement, primarily calcite and ironstone, precipitated around bits of shell, bone, and other biological debris.[5] The concretions grew outward as circulating waters deposited more layers of cement. The cement makes the concretions resistant to erosion compared to the surrounding sediments, and the iron minerals give them their reddish color. Close examination of the concretions may reveal traces of the original bedding and other sedimentary structures. There may also be "growth rings" produced by the layers of cement, as well as remnants of the fossils that were the nucleus for cementation.[2][3]
^ abcBenham, P., Froestad, B. and Miller, T. 2019. Hike 24, Red Rock Coulee; In: Benham, P. McKenzie, B., Chatellier, J.Y., and Tippet, C. (editors); Go Take A Hike, the Geology of Trails in the Canadian Rockies and Surrounding Areas, p. 96-99. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists, 284 p. ISBN978-0-9869425-4-9.
^Tsujita, Cameron J. 1995. Stratigraphy, taphonomy, and paleoecology of the Upper Cretaceous Bearpaw Formation in southern Alberta, p. 131-138. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, 357 p.