Home /Search /Metadata

Subsurface Stratigraphic Picks for the Top of the Milk River 'shoulder', Alberta Plains (tabular data, tab delimited format, to accompany Open File Report 2013-17)

The dataset includes subsurface stratigraphic picks of the Milk River 'shoulder' in the Alberta Plains (Townships 1 to 73, Ranges 1W4 to 2W6) made from wireline geophysical well logs. The Milk River 'shoulder' is an informal term often used to refer to a distinctive 'shoulder' (deflection) on resistivity, sonic, density, and porosity logs. The Milk River 'shoulder' corresponds to the top of the Milk River Formation in southernmost Alberta, where it represents juxtaposition between paralic deposits of the underlying Deadhorse Coulee Member of the Milk River Formation and overlying marine shale of the Pakowki Formation. It is characterized by a leftward deflection (decreasing resistivity) upwards across the contact, forming the distinctive 'shoulder signature'. To the north, the Milk River 'shoulder' represents the boundary between the Alderson Member (lower Lea Park Formation) and the upper Lea Park Formation (Pakowki equivalent). In these areas, silty sands and mudstones of the Alderson Member are overlain by shales of the upper Lea Park Formation. Well data were screened to detect errors resulting from deviated wells, as well as incorrect ground and kelly bushing elevation data. We used statistical methods to identify local and regional statistical outliers, which we examined individually.

Metadata

Date Created

2014-05-08

Date Published

2014-05-08

Temporal Coverage

2008-01-01 - 2013-01-01

Access in last 30 days

0

All time access

513

Source(s) and Citation

Government of Alberta; Alberta Energy Regulator. (2014-05-08). Subsurface Stratigraphic Picks for the Top of the Milk River 'shoulder', Alberta Plains (tabular data, tab delimited format, to accompany Open File Report 2013-17). Government of Alberta; Alberta Energy Regulator. https://open.alberta.ca/opendata

Map

Resources

Select Category

Tell us what you think!

GEO.ca is committed to open dialogue and community building around location-based issues and topics that matter to you.
Please send us your feedback