Purcell Supergroup


The Purcell Supergroup is composed primarily of argillites, carbonate rocks, quartzites, and mafic igneous rocks of late Precambrian age. It is present in an area of about 15,000 km2 in southwestern Alberta and southeastern British Columbia, Canada, and it extends into the northwestern United States where it is called the Belt Supergroup. It was named for the Purcell Mountains of British Columbia by R.A. Daly in 1912. Fossil stromatolites and algal structures are common in some of the Purcell Supergroup rocks, and the Sullivan ore body at Kimberley, British Columbia, a world-class deposit of lead, zinc, and silver, lies within the Alderidge Formation in the lower part of the Purcell.
Spectacular outcrops of Purcell and Belt Supergroup rocks can be seen in Glacier National Park in northwestern Montana and Waterton Lakes National Park in southwestern Alberta.

Stratigraphy and lithology

The Purcell Supergroup consists primarily of argillites, carbonate rocks, and quartzites, and includes localized occurrences of igneous rocks. Sedimentary structures are well preserved in the Purcell rocks despite their great age.
In the southern Canadian Rockies, the supergroup is subdivided as follows:
Geological unitLithologyEnvironment of DepositionMaximum
Thickness
Reference
Roosville Formationgreen and grey argillite; dolomitic argillite, siltstone and sandstone; argillaceous and stromatolitic dolomite; mudcracks and ripple marks are common.shallow marine
Phillips Formationred, thin-bedded quartz sandstone; siltstone interbedded with argillite and conglomerate; mudcracks and ripple marks are common.marginal marine to nonmarine
Gateway Formationred siltstone and argillite; green argillite; dolomitic argillite; dolomitic sandstone; dolomite; and sandy dolomite; casts of salt crystals, mudcracks, ripple marks, and rip-up clasts are locally abundant.marginal marine
Sheppard Formationlight grey dolomite and stromatolitic dolosmite; red dolomitic siltstone and sandstone; dolomitic argillite.shallow marine
Purcell Lavadark green and reddish green to purple chloritized mafic lava flows, pillow basalts, gabbroic sills and dikes; amygdules of quartz, chlorite, and calcite are common.shallow marine
Siyeh Formationargillaceous limestone and dolomite; black and green argillite; dolomitic quartzite; stromatolitic dolomite.marginal marine
Appekunny Formationgreen and maroon argillite; white, grey, green, and pale red sandstone; quartz-pebble conglomerate.marginal marine
Altyn Formationgrey, thin-bedded argillaceous limestone and dolomite; massive sandy dolomite and stromatolitic dolomite; dark grey to black argillite.shallow marine
Waterton Formationgrey, green and red argillaceous dolomite; banded and streaked limestone and dolomite; grey and green, thin-bedded argillite.marine
Tombstone Mountain Formationdark grey argillite; dolomitic argillite; argillaceous dolomite and limestone.marine
Haig Brook Formationlight colored, cliff-forming sequence of dolomite; banded and streaked limestone and dolomite; minor argillite; base of formation is not exposed.marine

In the southern Purcell Mountains, the supergroup is subdivided as follows:
Geological unitLithologyEnvironment of DepositionMaximum
Thickness
Reference
Roosville Formationdolomitic argillite; siltstone; sandstone; and argillaceous and stromatolitic dolomite.intertidal
Phillips Formationred, thin-bedded quartz sandstone; siltstone interbedded with argillite; ripple marks and mud cracks are abundant locally.shallow water to subaerial
Gateway Formationgrey-green, red, and purple siltstone; dolomitic siltstone; minor interbeds of argillite; casts of salt crystals, mudcracks, ripple marks, and rip-up clasts are locally abundant.lagoonal
Sheppard Formationlight grey stromatolitic dolomite, interbedded with dolomitic siltstone and argillite; stromatolite mounds up to thick; mudcracks, ripple marks, and rip-up clasts are locally abundant; casts of salt crystals are rare.intertidal
Intrusive rocksfine- to coarse-grained sills and dikes of gabbro and diorite intrude the Aldridge to Van Creek Formations.intrusive
Nichol Creek Formationgreen and purple argillite and siltstone; green volcanic sandstone and tuff interlayered with green or maroon, chloritized and sericitized basaltic to andesitic lavas, some with amygdules of quartz and chlorite.subaerial
Van Creek Formationgreen to purple argillite and siltstone; mud cracks, ripple marks, and rip-up clasts are locally abundant.intertidal
Kitchner Formationcalcareous and dolomitic siltstone and argillite; silty dolomite and limestone; minor quartzite.shallow subtidal
Creston Formationgreen, grey, and purple siltstone and argillite; mud cracks, ripple marks, and rip-up clasts are locally abundant.shallow subtidal
Aldridge Formationfine-grained quartzite; argillaceous quartzite; rusty-weathering grey siltstone; dark grey argillite; base of formation not exposed.marine >

Environment of deposition

The Purcell Supergroup was probably deposited in subsiding deltaic to marine environments along the margin of the North American craton, possibly in an intracratonic basin where North America and another landmass were joined in a supercontinent called Columbia/Nuna. Deposition occurred during the Mesoproterozoic era, much of it probably between about 1470 and 1400 Ma ago.

Distribution and thickness

In Canada, the Purcell Supergroup is present in an area of about 15,000 km2 that reaches from the southern Purcell Mountains in southeastern British Columbia to the southern Canadian Rockies in the southwestern Alberta. It extends southward into the United States where it is called the Belt Supergroup. It reaches a maximum thickness of more than 10,000 metres in the Purcell Mountains.

Relationship to other units

The Purcell Supergroup is equivalent to the Belt Supergroup of the northwestern United States. The base of the Purcell is not exposed in Canada, but it is inferred to rest unconformably on the Canadian Shield. The Purcell is unconformably overlain by the Neoproterozoic Windermere Supergroup in most areas, or by younger Cambrian or Devonian formations where the Windermere is absent.

Economic resources

The now-closed Sullivan Mine at Kimberley, British Columbia, worked a world-class sedimentary exhalative deposit that is hosted in the lower part of the Purcell Supergroup. During the life of the mine, the Sullivan ore body is reported to have yielded 8,412,077 tonnes of lead, 7,944,446 tones of zinc, and 9,264 tonnes of silver, as well as significant quantities of tin and other metals.