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I like Roca in a way. 1 million tons of .94% moly and it's fairly pure. An adit into the ore zone. The only thing they are missing is a mill to process it. The vibrations I get is that they intend to pawn it off to a producer group once they get the interest to a point where it will sell. That sort of takes the thrill out of it for me. But it's a Hera's head sort of ore body. It deserves to be a higher price.
Wildcat has some Moly pretensions too. It will cost us a mega buck or two to prove we have what will support a mill, and our grade is not in the spectacular range, but it will suffice at these prices. A bit cheaper to get into.
There were all kinds of medium size Moly and Tungsten operations around in Canada after the war. They did not survive into the Millenium, as the balance had shifted to open pits in the States, but now that has changed. The pendulum will swing the other way for a while, I believe.
Roxmark on the CNQ (RMKL) has a good Moly body that they are currently on the road to exploiting. It is really high grade and close to surface. Plus they have a mill to work it. They are the most fast track of the Moly plays it would appear.
EC<:-}
$ Return would be more than noted in the website. (Ore in $ pre ton). On the other hand, while gold and copper credits are there, copper can also form a penalty in a Moly con. Copper can be depressed in flotation cheaply, however, and then re-activated I believe. Many mines have that "problem" and deal with it.
The downside of the deposits we are looking at, is that they are "poddy" and do not amount to high tonnage for this reason. On the other hand, the known type of mineralization where it has been mined occurs over a fair distance laterally. They would not be largest mines in the world.
Another downside is that this type of mineralization is even more nuggety than gold and does not respond well to drilling. It must be correlated with bulk sampling to establish grade. This model was developed at one of the two deposits we have in one area.
Three upsides could exist.
--------------------------
If there is a mining downturn (doubtful with Asian demand climbing still) -- we will change the name of the company to American Megapixel, move to Albania, hire a 100 Linux programmers and start making computer special effects for movies.
EC<:-}
Big?
As BIG as the SKY!
What's not to be big about?
Wildcat is the next Canadian Barrick.
If it gets the money.
Let's face it, mining is about burning money and comparing potentials. Once in a while you find a mine and make a
positive EBITDA.
http://www3.sympatico.ca/echarters/index.html
EC<:-}
You are never alone.
Frodo is watching you with 400 channels of IR Hyperspectral.
It's better than MRI.
So far we have determined that your credit card times out in 3 months and you have 11.50 in your wallet.
EC<:-}
The Noront-Fury Urban-Barry thing is an old play but has some good recent news that constitutes in government opinion a new discovery. The land positions are well taken and extensive, so to the smart money it is nothing earth shattering. MUG has had land there for some time. Their surface success recently I believe is new.
Beginning to sound interesting. In some eyes it is an area play.
EC<:-}
Baffinland Iron Mines.
TSX/BIM
I think about $160 million was mentioned at one point. Cannot say for sure. It is mostly port and infrastructure costs. Road inland is a fair distance too though cheap, and short season and isolation driving up costs is part of it. It can be done. Polaris, Marmorilik and Nansivik were built in the same neck of the woods or in the same conditions more or less. The idea is to direct ship lump ore direct to Europe. I am not sure how much high grade lump they have and how much they may have to uprade in the future. One thing they have to do is separate magnetite from hematite. They say they can do that in mining. One figure that stuck in my mind is that they have 24 million tons of the direct mine and ship stuff. Drilling is finding more HG I am told. If they need at any future point to do upgrading, then it is more problematic, as there are no coastal plants for that established nearby.
Iron is a good idea right now with Asian demand soaring. I believe the Aussies have that in mind as well. Their iron and coal is mostly west coast and rather isolated inland.
I know of a good iron deposit that could feed demand and is high grade for its type. Wish I were better heeled to take a look at it. During good price times, Iron can make a lot of money.
EC<:-}
I don't think they are pink, but what about that company doing the St. Mary's deposit in the CDN Arctic?
Rides are a definite possibility. You can put your name in with the company. Tbey may have to sling you behind the tail, as there is not much room in the Piper Cub with the instrumentation. Because of the weight of the aircraft, it must be kept scrupulously clean for maximum aerodynamic characteristics. The aircraft skin must be cleaned assiduously by tooth brush with a toxic chemical every day. They need volunteers for this task. Naturally gas masks will be supplied. Whatever you do, don't rip the rubber suit while applying the chemical.
Now rides with the observed fauna is also a possibility, so you might want to paint your phone number on your jumpsuit in large enough letters to be observed at flight height. Jumpsuit? Well of course, they cannot land with a sling outboard, so you have to jump before that manoeuver. You may wish to pack your own chute.
EC<°-}
Nevada is a no brainer. The aircraft instruments have been tuned to detect women in bikinis sunbathing in their backyard. Right now they are working on a VTOL concept carrier in order to take proper advantage of the detected resource where airfields are scarce.
They are not selling systems, they are exploring for companies/themsleves with their airborne system on 400 channels, which according to the company is the most dense channel system out there.
Right now they are experiencing problems getting listed on CDN exchanges due to the problem with whether they are a technology company or an exploration company with or sans property of merit. They have decided for now to go on the Pinks and then BB in the states. I would tend to go CDN if I were them, but it is not my decision. Lots of regulatory froofera north of the border, but not as good a market down south.
Interesting technology. Bound to hear more of it as time goes by as majors are using all kinds of new tech these days. Like flying gravity (Far West etc..).. stuff that was not even around 15 years ago.
Lots of applications in Kimberlites, gold base metals etc.. in the NWT to Patagonia. It's like satellite data but 256 times the resolution and many, many times the bandwidth. This raises correlational capability with known ground data by an order of magnitude or more because of the spatial AND mineralogical data that is known to exist. More minerals, and more showings can be correlated.
EC<:-}
In case you did not know department... Safe harbour refers to the provisions of the securities act and other acts (Litigation reform act) that lets hypothetical statements in forward looking statements to be protected as within the bounds of reasonable conjecture. In other words they can state legally things that may happen and not be held to them as promissory.
EC<:-}
An almost insidious proliferation of glow-in-the-dark
rock bursts forth like black winter flowers in the
frozen coast of Kanada -- the dread Labrador. Perhaps
this is why the Labrador Retriever is all black. He
is trained to bring back hot rocks and in time he has
become melanocratized.
I am getting a Golden Lab.
Some of these occurences appear to be IOCG. This
means Iron-Oxide Copper-Gold type. Really they don't
need those precise mix of base metals and precious.
They vary to include lead, Iron, Antimony, Cobalt,
PGM's and other varieties. One of the biggies of this
sort of deposit is in Australia at Roxby Downs. It
called the Olympic Dam deposit. It contains 100
billion dollars worth of metals including Copper,
Iron, Gold and Uranium. It's big.
Some Missouri lead-zinc deposits are of this type and
so is the Kiruna Iron Ore deposit in Sweden, which
constitutes the world's largest magnetic anomaly. Most
of the copper deposits of Chile are of the IOCG type
and are of large size. The Eldorado Uranium mine in NWT
is of this type as well. Interestingly, the copper and
silver in this mine was dumped to tails, although it
was economic to recover it. The mine was run by the
Gov't of Canada and they only wanted hot rock for bombs
and stuff.
The amounts of uranium found at these showings is
respectable given the recent price rise.
-- ed ... (Idiotor)
***************************************
Altius Minerals Corp.
---------------------
mailto:info@altiusminerals.com
http://www.altiusminerals.com
ALS/TSX
FRG/TSX
DECEMBER 8, 2004 - 11:15 ET
Altius and Fronteer Advance Eight Large Uranium
-----------------------------------------------
Targets in Labrador, Canada
---------------------------
ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR Altius Minerals Corporation
and Fronteer Development group are pleased to announce that they have identified widespread surface mineralization in eight target areas on their properties in the Central Mineral Belt of Labrador, Canada.
The 2004 exploration program involved a 13,000 line kilometer airborne magnetic and radiometric survey, followed by four weeks of geological mapping, prospecting, and the collection of 350 rock samples and 265 soil samples. Rock samples assayed up to 13.33% U3O8, and returned an average grade of 0.20% U3O8.
The exploration program confirmed widespread uranium mineralization, in association with radiometric anomalies identified from the airborne survey. The program identified Otter Lake, Jacque's Lake, Burnt Brook and Birch Brook, as project areas with high exploration potential. None of these areas have been drill tested.
The program also examined the Michelin, Post Hill, White Bear Lake and Melody Hill project areas. These areas have all seen previous exploration work, which identified several deposits in the Michelin and Post Hill areas that have historical resource estimates. Altius and Fronteer believe that each of these areas exhibit excellent potential for further uranium discoveries.
The eastern part of the Central Mineral Belt is a uranium-rich example of an Iron-Oxide-Copper-Gold District with potential for large tonnage, breccia-style uranium deposits. Please visit the Altius website (www.altiusminerals.com) for a direct link to our detailed project map.
Stupendous sample highlights and descriptions of the eight project areas are listed below:
Otter Lake
-----------
The project area is situated around the largest radiometric anomaly in
the district. The Otter Lake anomaly is a strong circular feature with
an area covering 4 square kilometres. Rock samples were collected over
several mineralized zones and have returned some exceptional uranium
values. This project area has never been drilled. Sample highlights
include:
- 4.36% U3O8 , 0.62 g/t gold, 80.4 g/t silver, 0.63 g/t palladium and
4.0% lead from grab sample of brecciated volcanic rock
- 2.02% U3O8 over a 1.0 metre chip sample
- 0.55% U3O8, 0.42 g/t gold and 87.6 g/t silver from grab sample of
brecciated volcanic rock
- 0.54% U3O8 average grade of the 65 radiometric rock samples assayed
Jacque's Lake
-------------
The project area includes the second largest radiometric anomaly in the district. The Jacque's Lake anomaly has a strike length of 5,000 metres, and a width of up to 500 metres. It is defined on the ground by mineralized boulders and limited mineralized outcrop, which may reflect a corridor of underlying in-situ uranium mineralization. Targets in this area have never been drilled. Sample highlights are as follows:
- 0.40% U3O8 was the maximum value returned
- 0.10% U3O8 was the average grade of the 54 rock samples assayed
- 170 boulders were measured with radiometric readings in the range 1,000 to 15,000 counts per second along a strike length of five kilometres
Burnt Brook
------------
The project area encompasses a circular anomaly measuring 500 metres in
diameter, and corresponds with widespread uranium mineralization in
outcrop, and large, locally derived, uranium-copper bearing boulders.
Targets in this area have never been drilled. Sample highlights include:
- 0.54% U3O8 was the maximum value returned
- 0.14% U3O8 was the average grade of the 18 samples assayed
- 0.15% U3O8 over 1.4 metre chip sample
Birch Brook
-----------
The project area features linear radiometric anomalies that occur over a
distance of approximately 1,800 metres, and correspond to uranium
mineralization in bedrock. Targets in this area have never been drilled.
Results of sampling include:
- 13.3% U3O8 was the maximum value returned and included 0.42% copper
and 2.8% lead
- 0.79% U3O8 was the average grade of the 11 samples assayed
Michelin
---------
The Michelin deposit has seen partial underground development and a
historic resource defined by approximately 300 drill holes over a strike
length of 1,000 metres. Mineralization is open below a depth of 150
metres. This project area includes:
- A historical resource of 6.4 million tonnes @ 0.13% U3O8.
- The Rainbow deposit which has a historical resource of 0.27 million tonnes @ 0.10% U3O8, and lies 2,500 metres southwest of the Michelin deposit
Post Hill
---------
The Post Hill Belt includes three small deposits with historically defined resources including
- Nash Lake historical resource of 0.23 million tonnes @ 0.22% U3O8,
- Inda Lake historical resource of 0.50 million tonnes @ 0.16% U3O8
- Gear Lake also includes a small defined historic resource
Melody Hill
------------
Melody Hill features a high-grade boulder train that seem to end in nearby Melody Lake
- Samples assayed up to 28.2% U3O8 from the boulder train.
- A historic drill hole from this target area returned 0.14% U3O8 over 6.0 metres
White Bear Lake
---------------
Several uranium prospects including one with a modest, near surface resource define this project.
The potential for exploration near known uranium deposits is being evaluated using models constructed from historical drill information. Compilation of previous work and analytical results continues, and will be reported in future releases on a project area basis. Future releases will also include details of planned exploration activities for 2005.
Altius and Fronteer are equal partners in the Central Mineral Belt with mineral claims covering an area of 200,000 acres (780 square kilometres).
Richard Hall Ph.D., P.Eng., is the Qualified Person for Altius and Fronteer on this project. Uranium resources referred to for the Post Hill, Michelin, and other deposits are historical in nature, and were estimated prior to NI 43-101. Altius or Fronteer has not undertaken an independent investigation of the resource estimate or independently analyzed the results of the previous exploration work in order to verify the classification of the resources, and therefore the historical estimates should not be relied upon.
Samples were analyzed by ALS Chemex and also the Saskatchewan Research Council.
Altius Minerals Corporation has a royalty interest in the Voisey's Bay Ni-Cu-Co deposit in Labrador, Canada, from which first production is expected next year.
Altius also has exposure to gold, base metals, and uranium through a focused exploration portfolio that is largely funded by senior joint venture partners.
Altius Minerals Corporation
Brian Dalton
709-576-3440
Toll Free 1-877-576-2209
Altius Minerals Corporation
Chad Wells
709-576-3440
Toll Free 1-877-576-2209
mailto:info@altiusminerals.com
http://www.altiusminerals.com
*************************************
Anyone wishing to get ahold of me may review my contact
information and email address at my silicon investor profile
"echarter" at http://siliconinvestor.com
I cannot send or reply to private messages on investorshub and prefer to work by email at my email address echarters@sympatico.ca
EC<:-}
If ZND had a million more bucks and got its thinking cap on, it could appreciate big time. The opportunities are there.
Shield Gold might make it, if the people step up to it. I know it has languished of late. Got sidewinded by people who do not deserve to remain nameless, but for now shall.
If a company wants to go mining, it can go mining. Capital is all it takes.
EC<:-}
And you damn well deserve it. 5 bucks is a lot of money. At any Starbucks it will buy you a double latte with whipped cream and some of those sprinkly bits. Through in a few bits more and you can get a piece of carrot cake and spend 45 minutes looking cool downloading your palm pilot to your laptop and surf the net. Nobody can stare you down. You can even ignore the new-agers breast feeding their future self indulgent white collar criminal in your lateral vision.
And if your stock is at five bucks, relax and have a nice holiday. Maybe even buy some more and get me out of my SI hook.
The true way to guess the number_of_shares_out is to take the SI number, and multiply by two. Works for me, and its better than delving all the way through the option history of the stock. Calling the CFO is sooooo labour intensive.
Is there some site that where can dig into it?
EC<:-}
oh my gawd...
PGM's sound good boss.
Jes enuff copper to be a PIA, but
lawdie lawdie lawdie miss claudie, deys platinums soun'
inaressin' don' they?
phone, write, email, or simply defame in print the poster of this message if you agree or disagree with he. This has not been posted as an incentive to buy stock, or otherwise lose what money you have. (you can't take it with you)
Making hoops?
How about paper weights? With the number of bureacrats in China that should be a booming industry.
Perhaps someone should invent white out and paper weights for compooterz. Next billionaire.
Not sure about 45% Fe in Magnetite. It needs a 69.2% con with low phosphorous and up to 3% silica. How they gonna get there without a biggie plant and/ore roaster? Power needs? This ain't Pensacola. It's Perusicola.
The Brazilians gots 58% in the mine, or easily upgradeable. That is why their pellets are so cheap. Way back in the 70's they were building expensive European plants there and in Argentia to outbeat our costs. Why were our taconite costs so high%? We were mostly about 21 to 30% Fe and needed flotation upgrading, except in Wabush. Also small scale. Really the rest of our cost structure was bad plant design and partly a mystery. Still the pellet quality could not be exceeded, so it was a small increment of feed that contributed to electric furnace "sweetness". In high demand. Corp Brazil really dumps Fe on the US market for penny margins just to ensure they have a market. But We have the edge in the Chinese market. Even over the Aussies if we can get it there in the right scale. Wabush is the wrong coast.
EC<:-}
I don't unnerstan. What's iron good fer?
EC<:-}
And what is more, big boy, you done asked for it. <---- joke, or facetious statement -- not meant to heart>
(see respondent's late message about Pt -- "well, slap my face")
And what is more, your mother wears army boots. <-- here I am stepping way out on a limb. With statements like these, you can run into real trouble. He may not have had a mother, or perhaps his mother died of cancer when he was young and he since he got out of jail he has kept a 5 ounce gold locket containing a picshur of this maw in her wedding dress and anyone dissing her will discover why he went to jail in the first place. Or worse still, she did wear army boots every day in her job as a captain in the marines. Still worse, she was a hand-to-hand combat instructor, and since TF was an only child she doted on him and taught the young lad everything the marines and five years in Vietnam had taught her about unarmed combat. TF is a good friend of the admin on this site and has your address. This can't be good. Kids, don't do this at home -->
And now back to the unlimited potential of Pt-Pd stocks in the new third world indsutrial and high tech revolution. (Never mind we are going to run out of all conceivable fuels three minutes after the third world finally completes its upgrades. Go cold fusion! )
EC<:-}
I don't post fact on Roxmark as a rule, but I can tell you that Ferau, Hardrock, and G-L-LL were grass roots properties that were drilled. One had some success, but they did not own a mill at the time, and development dollars for the one resource, or underground exploration dollars were not available. This was common to about 70 Canadian resource-developed companies at the time, so it was not surprising. Right now the Roxmark has a mill, and is going on stuff that for the most part has some development done, and will be less capital intensive to get going. This is based on their SEDAR stuff, and what is evident from observation of their activity and capital equipment that anyone can do. Roxmark is looking at doing an extension of the existing resources in gold, and also we understand looking at developing a possibly feasible Moly resource. I believe their philosophy is low cost development, quick return at the present. Seeing as they have held it together in the area for 20 years, and in net expanded their position, it seems likely that they will continue in that vein. Looking at the area in general, one can see much very advanced exploration going on. This is quite surprising for the low key nature of the announcements coming out of the camp.
Well we did not ask for ten cents from au. I have not said ever that I hate Peter Brown or Claude Cormier! Or anyone else for that matter Where did you get that? Please quote...
I sadly know very well that other industries are just as corrupt and divestment oriented as the mining promotion industry. Theft if rife in business generally. I have lost more money in the office equipment business than in mining. In mining the patent or claim is relatively cheap.
Other than that, I agree with much of what you say wholeheartedly.
If Tom is what he says, then fine. If he takes what is said on these sites that seriously, he can leave his sense of humour at home totally. It is amusing that I said beforehand, that the louder they scream about (inside info) the more I know I am close to the mark.
I was not born yesterday. Much of what investors get on mining companies is leaked to them by brokers, through "analysts" many of whom have never been inside a mine, prospected or developed, degrees notwithstanding. What we see on most sites is cheerleading, which is fine I guess, of paper flurries that have little hope of being good grass roots exploration, let alone become mines.
The main complaint, which is very apropos, is that many do not know on many "tips" that they are at the bottom of the tier, not at the top by the time they get it on SI or here. Brokers and other load up at ten to 30 cents and way down the road we hear about after the run. I am just hinting to a lot of people to wake up.
I know you could have heard much bout my ops, or their advisability. They are very much closer to production and have more metal mine viability than 99% of the paper on the TSX. I know that because I worked in mines, mills and in exploration for 30 years. And I took a mineralogical and engineering education from three colleges. And I have sold and staked many of the claims that had paper flurries in the last 10 or more years. I have been in on them and from the bush to Bay street. I know what the language means of promotion and can compare it to the reality very sanguinely.
I hardly disparage all that goes on in companies. But I know most investors don't know that the money game is very cruel and does not often back quality geology. It is very hard for a good group of engineers of geologists to get backing on a good idea that is cheap to develop. The can look totally forlorn in the market.
Contrary to what you might think, professional lenders actually like Wildcat's properties and ideas. I wouldn't say the brokers are crazy about them, but some have expressed interest. We are doing alright.
EC<:-}
I am all in favour of deleting them all if you are moderator. Go ahead. It is not productive as the point was missed, so I might as well not let it stand.
This I don't know. Ambatovy could be in Siberia for all I know. I don't know about Dynatec getting the money. Presumably they have some European partners as I don't think they can lay their hands on that much cash themselves all of a sudden. Dynatec does get interested in the profits of mines as they made KGI some kind of offer based on a mining method.. so I had heard.
Let me see, most famous person I ever met, was Liona Boyd. Also met Bill White, and a few random politicos. Nobody special. Most famous person you have ever met, you lucky devil, is me.
EC<:-}
Let me answer for "Loantech". (I am sure he won't mind). During the day, Loantech is the bored and crachity head of a CDN independent brokerage. In order to post here, as it is strictly forbidden by the VSE, he rather cleverly routes his posts through an unused computer in the States and adopts the persona of a mortgage loans officer of some unnamed organization. "Laundered" so to speak. All those inside tips on stocks his brokerage backs could come from no other place so early in their game. We won't reveal his true identity, but we think he favours checked suits horn rim glasses and slicked back hair.
By night his constant absinthe drinking makes his hands shake so badly that he changes clothing so that he will not be recognized in his gas town parkside haunts, where in rags and tatters he skulks the alleyways begging butts, and listening to the scuttlebut amongst the street denizens. These impoverished wretches maddeningly seem to have the jump on Greenspan as to the true direction of the economy. He has confided in me that he is close to breaking their secret as they are not blinded by the societal norms, so they can see through all the games that keeps financiers hanging on when it is well past the time to divest.
EC<:-}
Ker-Slappa Bong!
There. Yoh face red?
Who is Marathon?
Sounds like the Fleck stuff revisited. I worked briefly on that stuff for Johnny McGoran after he bought it off Anaconda Canada. It has lowish Cu-NI values and some Pt-Pd. McGoran found that by doing NAA a la Hoffman of Inco-Slowpoke fame, that Pt-Pd values could be booted up by 30% or more. One thing about these pits is that there are plenty of them and they have screw-all ( a scientific term for a very small amount) overburden and fair width (20 feet or more). Production is snap if you have a handy-dandy concentrator. Tonnage is fair.
EC<:-}
echarters@sympatico.ca
416-428-4260 (Cell)
Wildcat has been in the bush this summer. Drumming up Moly, Gold and other properties. A bit of success, a bit of sobering insight.
Some reports out and some due. Pre-production properties with resources identified and acquired.
Nothing uraniferous or in Mongolia though.
EC<:-}
We definitely have them in a corner. Pretty soon we will picking our teeth with silver and gold toothpicks and drinking Mum's for breakfast, lunch and supper.
On the other hand except for the general malaise in golden stocks we don't know why their stock should be off. We don't know why any stocks should be off at all, except that the bloom is off the wildly speculative rose, sui generis.
Quite seriously we do have a goodie-good good good KL property that has both surficial tailings AND bedrock potential that is palapable. We have drilled 16 'overburden' holes in it and the results are 'encouraging'
There is lots of high grade drilling that could be done in KL that was not followed up in times gone by as the concentration during the brief heyday of the camp was always on the main E-W break. Those following the play in detail have realized that there is a whole new world in South breaks, North Breaks, North -North breaks, and particularly N-S breaks that are finding high-G gold, time and again.
KL was always a HIGH GRADE camp with a large mine (16 million ounces) running consistently at 0.50 ounces per ton. Large nuggets of gold -as big as your fist- were not uncommon in these mines in the old and new days. KL is 'VG' country.
We are looking at a N-S break going through our claims and it is a vein that KGI is working on. NO guff. We don't know the tenor of it, however. We have to drill it this winter. There are other H-G breaks we could explore in other areas as well. Zenda has one of these from its last program that is very tantalizing. You just don't know where it could go.
KGI is Canada's best gold mine exploration project, long term, if we ignore Goldcorp, which of course cannot be exceeded in the HIGH-G category at present. The holes KGI is drilling are really astounding for the grade and consistency, however.
EC<:-}
Sort of.
Next Canadian Barrick. Wildcat Res.
You heard it first here.
EC<:-}
Hey! that goes right thru my claims!
EC<:-}
.72% over one foot is hopeful. There is U in the system.
14 lbs of Uranium is worth money.
We are looking at 0.30% Moly and we think that is fabulous. Of course it is 30 feet wide, so it makes a difference.
EC<:-}
uh-huh
So how does that Absinthe taste Vincent?
EC<:-}
http://www.siliconinvestor.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=20767656
Wair yu bin lately -- Likely?
Will they find any Hey Hey in that stack of needles?
EC<:-?
Unlikely -- is that near Likely, BC?
Beshi is good. Width is an indicator of better things we hope.
Barker is barking, but when will they bite?
EC<:-}