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Preliminary lithostratigraphy of the Laberge Group (Jurassic), south-central Yukon: Implications concerning the petroleum potential of the Whitehorse Trough.
The Whitehorse Trough, a Mesozoic sedimentary basin in south-central Yukon that has potential for gas and oil, consists of the Lewes River Group (Triassic), the Laberge Group (Jurassic), and the Tantalus Formation (Jura-Cretaceous). The Laberge Group in the Carmacks (115I) and Laberge (105E) map areas is subdivided into four informal lithostratigraphic units: the Richthofen, Tanglefoot, Conglomerate and Nordenskiold formations. The Richthofen formation, distinguished by siltstone to very fine sandstone and mudstone couplets, is exposed in the southern part of the Laberge map area where it rests unconformably to conformably on the Lewes River Group and is unconformably and/or conformably overlain by the Tanglefoot formation. The Tanglefoot formation, distinguished by coalbearing, interbedded sandstone and mudstone, is exposed in the northern part of the Laberge map area and the southern part of the Carmacks map area where it rests unconformably on the Lewes River Group, and is overlain by the Tantalus Formation. The Conglomerate (conglomerate) and Nordenskiold (dacite tuff) formations occur as minor units within the Tanglefoot formation. The Richthofen-Tanglefoot formation unconformity and/or conformity is a potential petroleum play in the central Whitehorse Trough, whereas the Lewes River Group-Tanglefoot formation unconformity is a potential petroleum play in the northern Whitehorse Trough.
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Summary of the stratigraphy, sedimentology and hydrocarbon potential of the Laberge Group (Lower-Middle Jurassic), Whitehorse trough, Yukon.
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Whitehorse trough is a northwestward-tapering belt of Upper Triassic to Lower Cretaceous volcanic and sedimentary rocks extending ~650 km from the British Columbia–Yukon border, north to the vicinity of Carmacks in south-central Yukon. It consists of three main stratigraphic units (i.e., the Lewes River Group, Laberge Group and Tantalus Formation) representing three sedimentary basins, partially overlapping in space and time. The Laberge Group (Lower-Middle Jurassic), informally subdivided into the Richthofen, Tanglefoot and Nordenskiold formations, was deposited in the Laberge basin, a collapsing fore-arc basin in which the arc was undergoing uplift and erosion. The Richthofen formation consists of conglomerate, massive sandstone, sandstone-mudstone couplets, volcaniclastic rocks and minor limestone interpreted as submarine fan systems. The Tanglefoot formation consists of coal-bearing sandstone, mudstone, conglomerate, volcaniclastic rocks and minor limestone interpreted as delta systems and shallow marine deposits. The Richthofen and Tanglefoot formations are the same age (i.e., Sinemurian to Bajocian), but the Richthofen formation is restricted to the southern half of the basin, whereas the Tanglefoot formation occurs in the northern half. The Nordenskiold formation consists of subaerially erupted, resedimented volcaniclastics deposited mainly during Pliensbachian time. The Richthofen formation is interpreted as a spent source rock and the Nordenskiold formation is not a source rock. The Tanglefoot formation is interpreted as a potential source rock and possibly an effective source rock. It contains petroleum fluid inclusions (mainly 23°- 32° and 40°- 44° API gravity) indicating a minimum trapping temperature of 110-115°C. The Tanglefoot formation is also a potential reservoir rock.
Whitehorse trough: Past, present and future petroleum research – with a focus on reservoir characterization of the northern Laberge Group
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Sedimentology, stratigraphy and source rock potential of the Richthofen formation (Jurassic), northern Whitehorse Trough, Yukon
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Whitehorse Trough is a frontier basin in south-central Yukon that is thought to contain gas and possibly oil. It formed in the early Triassic as an arc-marginal basin between the ancient North American margin to the east and the volcano-plutonic Stikine Terrane to the west. Three stratigraphic units, termed the Lewes River Group (Upper Triassic), the Laberge Group (Lower-Middle Jurassic) and the Tantalus Formation (Upper Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous), are recognized in the Whitehorse Trough. The Laberge Group is informally subdivided into four units, which, from the base upwards includes the Richthofen, Conglomerate, Nordenskiold and Tanglefoot formations. The Richthofen formation in the Laberge map area (NTS 105E) is characterized by thin- to mediumbedded turbidites, massive sandstone, matrix- and clast-supported conglomerate, scarce ammonites and belemnites, and abundant trace fossils, particularly Chondrites. No comprehensive stratigraphic section exists for the Richthofen formation, but it is estimated to be at least 500 m thick and appears to consist of a lower clast-supported conglomerate unit, a middle unit dominated by thin- to-medium bedded turbidites with minor amounts of massive sandstone and clast- and matrix-supported conglomerate, and an upper clast-supported conglomerate unit. The Richthofen formation unconformably overlies the Lewes River Group and was deposited by a southeast-prograding submarine fan (or fans) during the Early Jurassic. It is correlative with the Inklin Formation in northwestern British Columbia. Programmed pyrolysis using Rock-Eval 6 analysis of 63 samples from the Richthofen formation indicates that it is a poor to fair source rock and is gas-prone.
Summary of Rock-Eval data for the Whitehorse trough, Yukon: implications concerning the hydrocarbon potential of a frontier basin
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Whitehorse Trough is a frontier basin in south-central Yukon that is thought to contain gas and possibly oil. Over 400 samples from the Whitehorse Trough have been analysed by programmed pyrolysis and combustion, which together with coal rank, vitrinite reflectance, and the colour of microfossils indicate the following: the Povoas formation has no source rock potential; the Aksala formation is a poor source rock, probably gas-prone and postmature; the Richthofen formation is a poor to fair source rock, gas-prone and postmature; the Nordenskiold formation has no source rock potential; and the Tanglefoot and Tantalus formations are potentially good to very good source rocks, mainly gas-prone with a possibility of oil and mature. The Aksala and Richthofen formations are interpreted as spent source rocks, whereas the Tanglefoot and Tantalus formations are interpreted as potential source rocks and possibly effective source rocks. The most prospective areas for hydrocarbon exploration are Division Mountain, Tantalus Butte and Five Finger Rapids.
New investigations of basal Laberge Group stratigraphy, Whitehorse trough, central Yukon
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The tectonic evolution of the Whitehorse trough in central Yukon is largely preserved by the Early to Middle Jurassic Laberge Group, an ~3000-m thick succession of synorogenic clastic strata that unconformably overlies arc and arc marginal rocks of the Lewes River Group. A two-year project was initiated to test a Sinemurian to Toarcian transgression of basal Laberge Group strata westward across the Whitehorse trough and examine the regional relationships between the timing of Jurassic exhumation, sedimentation, and terrane accretion in the northern Canadian Cordillera. Field studies in 2017 targeted basal Laberge Group strata at seven locations in central Yukon. At each field locality, basal Laberge Group strata are known or inferred to unconformably overlie the Povoas formation and multiple units of the Aksala formation. Pre-Early Jurassic unconformities may indicate variable basin topography due to the complex internal stratigraphy of the Lewes River Group, or that regional exhumation and erosion affected the Whitehorse trough prior to Laberge Group sedimentation.
Facies and Depositional Setting of Laberge Conglomerates (Jurassic), Whitehorse Trough
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The Whitehorse Trough, south-central Yukon, originated as a Mesozoic fore-arc basin separating the allochthonous Stikine Terrane to the west from the North American craton. Late Triassic erosion of a volcanic arc supplied detritus to the basin. Subsequent cessation of volcanism, unroofing and deep erosion of the arc into the Middle Jurassic resulted in a progressive increase in granodioritic sediment. Late Triassic-Jurassic Laberge conglomerate within the Whitehorse Trough are coarse, polymictic and typically massive. Inverse or normal grading, planar stratification and cross-bedding are less common. Conglomerates are debris flow, sheet-flood and bar deposits of braided alluvial fan-deltas. These conglomerates usually overlie and grade basinward into feldspathic graywacke or arkosic sandstone. Crystal tuffs grade laterally into sandstone and occur as interbeds as well. Sandstones commonly display trough cross-bedding or planar stratification. Hummocky cross-stratification rarely occurs in sandstones interbedded with bioturbated silty mudstone. Other facies include graded sandstone-mudstone with Bouma BC(E) sequences; float-stone/micritic limestone and rare calcarenite/rudite. Sandstone-conglomerate facies transitions indicate a vertical progression from shallow marine and shoreface sedimentary strata of Late Triassic age to coarse alluvial fan conglomerates of Jurassic age, reflecting progradation of fan-delta systems with progressive infilling of the basin. The Stikine Terrane accreted to North America in the Late Jurassic with basin shallowing and closure reflected by changes in the sedimentary sequences.
Structural constraints for oil and gas assessment in the Whitehorse Trough: New results from seismic profiling
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The Whitehorse Trough is a Mesozoic sedimentary basin in south-central Yukon that has been identified as an immature, gas-prone basin, based on a limited geoscience database. A total of 170 km of regional, multi-channel, multi-component Vibroseis seismic reflection data were acquired in 2004 across the northern Whitehorse Trough in order to improve understanding of its structural architecture. The shallow seismic images appear to depict broad antiformal and synformal structures, truncated by relatively steep faults. Strata interpreted as the Lewes River and Laberge groups seem to attain a maximum thickness of 6000-7000 m toward the west side of the Trough, with interpreted Laberge Group accounting for up to ~3000 m of this total. Maximum vertical relief of the structures is ~4000 m.
Petroleum Source Rock Potential of Whitehorse Trough: A Frontier Basin in South-central Yukon
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for a copy of this paper please contact the Yukon Geological Survey; geology@gov.yk.ca.
Petroleum resource assessment of Whitehorse trough, Yukon, Canada
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An evaluation of coal-bearing strata at Division Mountain (115 H/8 east-half, 105 E/5 west-half), south-central Yukon
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The Division Mountain area is underlain primarily by Jurassic to Cretaceous(?) sedimentary rocks of the Laberge Group and Tantalus Formation. The Laberge Group is divisible into the following informal units: the Richthofen, Nordenskiöld, Conglomerate, and Tanglefoot formations. The Tanglefoot, which comprises a large portion of the exposed strata at Division Mountain, is here subdivided into the lower and upper members. The lower member consists of quartz-rich sandstone, grit, polymicitic conglomerate and laminated siltstone. The upper member is coal-bearing and typified by white grit, sandstone, and carbonaceous shale. The overlying Tantalus Formation is characterized by thick packages of resistant chert pebble conglomerate with intercalated sandstone beds, which form local highlands at Cub, Corduroy, Division, and Vowel mountains. The strata at Division Mountain are folded into several upright, tight northwest-trending anticlines and synclines with amplitudes of 2 to 7 km. The folded strata are intruded by feldspar-hornblende andesite sills and dykes. Organic matter identified within coal and siltstone of the Tanglefoot and Tantalus formations consists of Type III and subordinate Type I kerogen, suggesting the material is largely gas-prone. A combination of thermal maturation indicators (vitrinite reflectance and Tmax ) suggests that the coal and related strata are in the early to late stages of thermal diagenesis. Samples of the underlying Richthofen formation contain Type III kerogen matured beyond the oil window. Local folding and thickening of the Tanglefoot and Tantalus strata, as well as local intrusions in the Tanglefoot, may play a key role in the determination of hydrocarbon potential of the Division Mountain area.