It is a thick sequence of marine sediments that was first described in outcrop on the banks of the Horn River, a tributary of the Mackenzie River, in the Northwest Territories (at the time District of Mackenzie) by Whittaker in 1922,[3] and it takes its name from that river. In 1963 it was redefined in the subsurface of the Fort Nelson area of British Columbia (well Fort Nelson a-95-J/94-J-10) by F.F. Gray and J.R. Kassube.[4] It is significant for its shale gas resources.
The Horn River Formation is present in the subsurface in northeastern British Columbia and extends to Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories, where it outcrops.[2] It reaches a maximum thickness of 320 metres (1,050 ft) in the subsurface of the Fort Nelson area.[1]
Shale gas is present in the siliceous shales of all three members of the Horn River Formation in northeastern British Columbia, and it is produced in the Greater Sierra oil field north of Fort Nelson. Horizontal drilling and fracturing techniques are used to extract the gas from the low permeability shales.[8] The original-gas-in-place volumes are estimated to be up to 500 Tcf,[9] making it the third largest North American natural gas accumulation discovered prior to 2010.[10] Companies involved in the extraction of natural gas from the Horn River Shale include Ovintiv, EOG Resources, Stone Mountain Resources, ExxonMobil, Quicksilver Resources, and CNOOC Petroleum North America ULC. Horn River gas contains 10-12% CO2, much higher than the 2–4.5% of conventional natural gas. If this gas is processed normally about 500 million tonnes of CO2 will be released into the atmosphere.[11][12]
^Whittaker, E.J., 1922. Mackenzie River District between Great Slave Lake and Simpson. Geological Survey of Canada Summary Report 1921, Part B, p. 45-56.
^Gray, F.F. and Kassube, J R., 1963. Geology and stratigraphy of Clarke Lake gas field, northeastern British Columbia. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, v. 47, p. 467-483.
^Cant, Douglas J.; Ethier, Valerie G. (August 1984), "Lithology-dependent diagenetic control of reservoir properties of conglomerates, Falher member, Elmworth Field, Alberta", American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 68 (8)