Stoddart Group


The Stoddart Group is a stratigraphical unit of Mississippian to Early Pennsylvanian age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.
It takes the name from the Stoddart Creek, a creek that flows into Charlie Lake north of Fort St. John, and was first described in well Pacific Fort St. John #23 by A.T.C. Rutgers in 1958.

Lithology

The Formation is composed of both carbonate and clastic facies.

Distribution

The Stoddart Group reaches a maximum thickness of in the sub-surface north of Fort St. John in north-eastern British Columbia. It is present in the sub-surface from the foothills of the Northern Rockies and eastwards into the Peace River Country in north-western Alberta.

Subdivisions

The Stoddart Group is composed of the following formations, from top to bottom:
Sub-unitAgeLithologyMax.
Thickness
Reference
Taylor Flat FormationEarly Pennsylvanianlimestone, dolomite, occasional sandstone, calcareous shale
Kiskatinaw FormationChesterianquartzose sandstone, dark grey shale, rare carbonate
Golata Formationlate Meramecian-Chesterianfossiliferous limestone, shales, occasional siltstone, coal and anhydrite

Relationship to other units

The Stoddart Group is overlain by the Ishbel Group in the foothills and the Prophet Formation in the northern plains; it conformably overlays the Debolt Formation.
It can be correlated with the Tunnel Mountain Formation, the Kananaskis Formation, the Mattson Formation and the Mount Head Formation of the southern Canadian Rockies, and with the Amsden Formation in Montana.