The Folster Lake Formation consists of Paleoproterozoic-age sedimentary cover units unconformably deposited on deeply weathered Archean basement of the Rae craton on Melville Peninsula, Nunavut. It comprises a lower member, formed of basal conglomerate, hematite-specularite iron-formation, mudstone, siltstone, silty limestone, and cross-bedded arkose, and an upper member dominated by arkose with planar and trough cross-beds, including giant (up to 10 m thick) compound cross-beds, overlain by quartz arenite with heavy mineral laminae. The entire succession has been historically interpreted as a near-shore, tide-dominated succession derived from a source to the southeast. Our field observations, supported by SHRIMP U–Pb analyses on detrital zircon, suggest that the Folster Lake Formation represents the remnants of a 1.91–1.88 Ga sand-dominated delta advancing on a tide-dominated shoreline, sourced by detritus eroded from the Thelon, Queen Maud, and Boothia-Somerset uplift to the west-northwest. This fluvio-deltaic system transported sediments to the Upper Penrhyn Group, which was contemporaneously being deposited in a basin opened to the southeast.