Heritage Community Foundation Presents
Alberta Online Encyclopedia
Top Left of Navigation Bar The Canadian Shield Region Title
Species at Risk in AlbertaView our site layout to navigate to specific areasSearch our site for informationObtain help for navigating our sitePlease emails us your questions and comments!View our partners that helped us in this project

Back to Natural Regions map
The Boreal Forest Region
The Canadian Shield Region
The Foothills Region
The Grassland Region
The Parkland Region
The Rocky Mountain Region

Visit Alberta Source!
Visit the Heritage Community Foundation
Visit Canada's Digital Collections

The Kazan Upland Subregion

Canadian ShieldThe distinctive feature of the Kazan Upland Subregion is the extensive outcrops of plutonic (granitoid) Precambrian bedrock. The bedrock plays a direct role in the vegetation pattern because of the extent of the outcrops and its acidic nature. The Canadian Shield in northeastern Alberta is dominated by a complex of crystalline plutonic, igneous and metamorphic rocks that are part of the Churchill Structural Province of the Shield. The composition averages between granite and granodiorite. Granitoids comprise about 65% of the outcrops, with gneisses being about 25% and metasediments about 10%.

The predominant rocks are distributed in three major north-south trending belts - the western granitoids, the eastern granitoids, and the central granitic gneisses. Topographic linear features are related to regional faults and bands of relatively soft metasediments.

The topography, is rolling and ranges in altitude from 220 - 400Colin Lake metres. Local relief can be as great as 90 metres. The bedrock is covered with patches of outwash or morainal deposits, and there are also eskers and roche moutonee knobs. Glacial outwash sands occur near Cornwall, Colin and Andrew lakes. Glacial erosion produced highly-polished, striated and grooved rock surfaces. Rock-basin lakes are common throughout the Subregion.

Rivers are small and not common. Most are of the slow-moving "muskeg" type.

Information provided by and printed with the permission of Alberta Community Development, Provincial Parks and Protected Areas.

Albertasource.ca | Contact Us | Partnerships
            For more on the natural history of Alberta, visit Peel’s Prairie Provinces.
Copyright © Heritage Community Foundation All Rights Reserved