Overview of the Tectonic Evolution of Canada’s Beaufort –Mackenzie Region
By
L.S. Lane (Geological Survey of Canada)
The Canadian 
Beaufort Sea continental margin is well known, based on interpretation of 
multiple datasets defining the deep crustal architecture, regional structural 
trends and temporal-spatial tectonic evolution. Of 53 hyrdocarbon discoveries, 
most are trapped in structures formed during either Jurassic-Cretaceous rifting 
or Tertiary orogenesis. Normal faults, active from Late Jurassic to 
mid-Cretaceous time, accommodated northwestward extension and continent margin 
formation in post-Albian time. The most prominent of these structures is the 
Eskimo Lakes 
Fault
 Zone, beneath the Mackenzie Delta and Tuktoyaktuk Peninsula. 
This zone marks the cratonward limit of thick Jurassic to Tertiary syn-rift and 
post-rift successions, and traps significant oil and gas accumulations including 
the Parsons Lake gas field. From latest Cretaceous to Late Miocene time, five 
pulses of orogenic deformation are documented. The two most significant pulses 
are Paleocene to middle Eocene, and Late Miocene in age. The earlier event 
produced an arcuate array of structures onshore in northwestern Yukon, and 
offshore in the basin. These structures did not develop exclusively by 
Cordilleran orogenesis because they include an important component of east-west 
shortening which probably was a response to North Atlantic tectonics of latest 
Cretaceous and early Tertiary age. The Late Miocene pulse represents the final 
deformation event for much of the region (Holocene deformation occurs locally). 
Miocene structures form linear folds in the distal part of the 
Beaufort-Mackenzie basin. Folds and secondary faults related to Tertiary 
deformation 
trap
 oil and gas beneath the Mackenzie Delta, in the central 
Beaufort and at Amauligak in the eastern Beaufort. 
 
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.