공시 • Mar 11
Mink Ventures Corporation Reports Diamond Drill Results At Warren Ni Cu Co Property
Mink Ventures Corporation announced results from the diamond drill program at its Warren Ni Cu Co Property, Timmins, Ontario. The successful drill program intersected mineralization in each drill hole on the A Zone as well as the D Zone, with the highlight of the program found in hole W26-13 which delivered a massive sulphide zone that returned 0.44% nickel (Ni), 0.28% copper (Cu) and 0.06% cobalt (Co) over 7.1 meters; including a higher-grade interval of 0.58% Ni, 0.18% Cu, and 0.08% Co over 4.0 meters. Numerous targets and multiple zones of mineralization have been identified on a property wide scale at Warren. This winter drill program was focused on the A Zone. Seven, shallow, drill holes (264 meters) were completed on the A Zone, and a single 111-meter hole tested the D Zone, a known, untested, historical surface nickel occurrence. The presence of nickel, copper, and particularly enriched cobalt within a massive sulphide zone in drill core at Warren supports the potential for the deposition of larger magmatic sulphide zones across the property. In addition, surface occurrences of nickel copper cobalt mineralization that are spatially associated with geophysical targets extend for approximately three (3) km of strike length on the property. Historical B Zone bulk samples returned 2.83% Cu, 0.96% Ni, & 0.11% Co. In the interim, the Company intends to purchase a historical VTEM survey, carried out across the property by previous operators, and have maxwell plate analysis conducted to rank and prioritize the VTEM anomalies. This information will complement the ground induced polarization (IP) surveys and magnetic surveys already in Mink’s data base. Compilation work will prioritize the VTEM responses with known surface mineralization and current ground geophysical data in a preparation for a major drilling campaign. A high level of priority will be given to higher grade occurrences such as the North Zone, with a 100-meter diameter “bulls eye” MALAM response, and assays by Mink geologists which returned grab samples as high as 0.967% Ni and 0.07% Co in massive sulphide. Access to the North Zone was hampered in the recent campaign and remains untested. Additionally, the VTEM survey will also assist in prioritizing potential copper (Cu)-zinc (Zn) volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) targets in a felsic package of rocks along the western flank of the property. In this location, a historical Morgain Minerals’ drill hole ML-1, in a VMS environment, returned 0.84% Cu over 4.3 meters on the periphery of a large chargeability response with a strike length for 1.3 km. This will be re-evaluated in conjunction with the new VTEM data. The primary focus of the recent drill program was the evaluation the highly prospective A Zone with multiple surface trenches hosting significant Ni, Cu, Co values, hosted in massive sulphide, exposed in outcrop trenches over 120 m of strike length. The surface expression of the A Zone is coincident with an exceptionally strong Mise-a-La-Masse (MALAM) anomaly, with a strike length of approximately 500 m and width of 200 m, suggesting the presence of a conductive zone. A series of shallow vertical holes were drilled to test the coincident MALAM anomaly and surface exposure of A Zone mineralization over the exposed 120 meters of strike length. Vertical holes were completed due an original interpretation suggesting the A Zone was a flat lying zone. New drill data suggests that Ni, Cu, Co bearing massive sulphides are present within a series of distinct lenses associated with a broad mineralized zone that returned anomalous to low grade Ni, Cu Co. The extent of this broad mineralized zone is unknown at this time. The highlight of the A Zone drilling was hole W-26-13 which returned a massive sulphide zone grading 0.44% Ni, 0.28% Cu and 0.06% Co over a 7.1 meter interval. A Zone drilling also returned some broader lower grade intercepts as shown in the accompanying table 2. The presence of Ni, Cu, Co within a massive sulphide zone in drill core at Warren is indicative of the potential for the deposition of a larger magmatic sulphide zones on the property. Further drill testing is warranted in the immediate A Zone area and on a property wide basis to test a number of occurrences and geophysical anomalies. A single drill hole tested the D Zone to evaluate a trenched surface zone of sulphide mineralization in excess of 50 meters in width with a documented historical chip sample that returned 0.5% Ni over 9.14 meters. Recent Mink drill hole W-26-17A intersected a 5.6 meter magmatic sulphide zone grading 0.23% Ni, 0.09% Cu, and 0.03% Co which included an interval that returned 2.5 meters averaging 0.35% Ni, 0.14% Cu and 0.06 Co. The narrow width of the W-26-17A relative to the surface expression of the D Zone suggests a more complex geometry to the mineralized zone. The D Zone is associated with a broad geophysical trend extending from the Shaft Zone and SW Zone. Further drilling at D Zone is being considered to evaluate the mineralized zone further along strike in order to determine the potential for more significant widths to the zone comparable to the surface expression. All core logging and sampling were conducted in a secure core logging facility in Timmins Ontario. The core logging and sample selection were carried out by a professional geologist. A professional geologist also supervised an experienced core sawing technician once samples were selected. Core logging and sampling adhered to 43-101 protocols and industry standard best practices. Certain drill holes were sampled entirely and others selectively sampled as warranted. Drill core was sawn with a diamond saw, tagged, and placed in securely sealed bags. Samples were transported to Actlabs facility in Timmins, Ontario by Mink Ventures personnel. Half of the core was retained for reference purposes. Gold, platinum and palladium analysis completed from samples in all holes was completed using Actlabs 1COES analysis. Multi element analysis was completed on all samples submitted and analyzed using Actlabs 1E3 ICP-OES analysis. With each batch of samples, blanks and Oreas standards for precious metals and/or a multi element standard was submitted for analysis for QA/QC purposes. QA/QC samples were within reasonable tolerance levels. Full details on Actlabs analysis procedures and associated sample preparation can be reviewed on their website.