Sulphur Mountain Formation
The Sulphur Mountain Formation is a geologic formation of Early to Middle Triassic age. It is present on the western edge of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin in the foothills and Rocky Mountains of western Alberta and northeastern British Columbia. It includes marine fossils from the time shortly after the Permian-Triassic extinction event.
The Sulphur Mountain Formation was first described as a member of the Spray River Formation by P.S. Warren in 1945, who named it for Sulphur Mountain in Banff National Park. It was later raised to formation status. Its type section is located in the Spray River gorge at the southern end of Sulphur Mountain.
Lithology and stratigraphy
The Sulphur Mountain Formation was deposited on the continental shelf along the western margin of the North American craton, which at that time was part of the supercontinent of Pangaea. It consists primarily of grey to rusty brown dolomitic and calcareous quartz siltstone, with interbeds of silty sandstone, silty dolomite, mudstone, shale, carbonaceous shale, and minor fine-grained quartz sandstone. Cross-bedding and ripple marks are common in its strata.The Sulphur Mountain Formation is subdivided into the following members:
Geological Unit | Age | Lithology | Thickness | Reference |
Llama Member | Middle Triassic | Yellowish grey-brown silty dolomite, silty shale, and minor very fine-grained quartz sandstone | 3 – 64 m | |
Whistler Member | Middle Triassic | Dark grey to black silty dolomite and dolomitic quartz siltstone | 13 – 23 m | |
Vega Siltstone Member | Early Triassic | Grey to rusty brown dolomitic and calcareous siltstone, silty limestone, and shale | 52 – 363 m | |
Mackenzie Dolomite Lentil | Early Triassic | Light grey to yellowish grey, slightly calcareous, silty to sandy dolomite, with minor dolomitic quartz siltstone and sandstone | 0 – 24 m | |
Phroso Siltstone Member | Early Triassic | Grey-brown to dark grey quartz siltstone and silty shale | 30 – 244 m |
Paleontology
The Sulphur Mountain Formation has yielded fossils that provide a record of Triassic life shortly after the Permian-Triassic extinction event. Remains of extinct marine reptiles and fish have been found in its strata, as well as conodonts; shells of brachiopods and bivalves; teeth of Hybodus; shells of ammonoids; the ichnofossils Thalassinoides, Planolites, and Zoophycos; and traces of microbial mats.Remains of the following marine reptiles have been found in the Sulphur Mountain Formation:
Taxon | Material | Notes |
Agkistrognathus campbelli | A disarticulated skull | A thalattosaurian |
Grippia longirostris | Several skulls and forelimbs | A basal ichthyosaur |
Paralonectes merriami | A thalattosaurian | |
Thalattosaurus borealis | Anterior skull, partial mandible, vertebral centra, isolated ribs, left pterygoid | A thalattosaurian |