Gold potential growing at Oromin’s Sabodala

Vancouver – A rapid-fire drill campaign at Oromin Explorations‘ (OLE-V) Sabodala project in Senegal continues to produce well-mineralized intercepts in advance of a resource estimate due out in late May.

The Sabodala concession surrounds a smaller concession where Mineral Deposits (MDL-A) is developing an open pit operation to mine the 2.74-million oz. gold resource within its Sabodala and Niakafiri deposits. Oromin’s project covers the structurally-controlled extensions of those deposits, as well as numerous other gold zones.

The main focus within Oromin’s Sabodala project is Golouma, a series of structurally-controlled, outcropping vein systems. The Golouma South zone is centred along a 30km long northeast-trending geochemical anomaly that flanks the southeast side of the extensive Golouma geochemical anomaly. Recent drill results from Golouma South include 19 metres grading 8.82 grams gold per tonne from 78 metres downhole in hole RC-194, 18 metres of 8.41 grams gold from 120 metres depth in hole RC-192, and 14 metres grading 8.74 grams gold from 61 metres below surface in hole DH-192

The Northeast zone of Golouma South is an easterly trending and south-dipping zone outlined over a 100-metre extent and to 150 metres depth, still open in all directions. To date the mineralized zone is narrower than other zones on the property but the grade is significantly higher. Hole DH-68 cut 1 metre grading 162.3 grams gold from 109 metres depth, hole DH-782 returned 3 metres grading 98.37 grams gold from 81 metres, and hole DH-73 cut 8 metres grading 17.61 grams gold.

Oromin expects the Northeast zone will intersect the extrapolated extension of the Golouma South main zone; currently some 250 metres of untested area lies between the two zones.

At Golouma West, the zone has been traced over 1,500 metres on surface and to over 300 metres depth, and remains open in all directions. Hole RC-216 returned 8 metres grading 14.57 grams gold from 45 metres depth; hole DH-199 intercepted 27 metres grading 3.47 grams gold from 126 metres below surface.

The Masato gold zone is coincident with a 2.6-km long, 1.2-km wide gold-in-soil anomaly roughly 1 km east of Mineral Deposit’s Sabodala operation. The mineralized structure trends northeast and dips moderately steeply to the west. Recent drill results have consistently demonstrated that mineralization at Masato is thicker than in other Sabodala zones.

Hole RC-189 cut 30 metres grading 3.33 grams gold from 87 metres depth. Hole RC-201 cut 23 metres grading 6.47 grams gold from 70 metres, followed by 20 metres grading 2.59 grams gold from 96 metres depth and 16 metres grading 2.87 grams gold from 120 metres downhole. And RC-206 hit 7 metres grading 6.29 grams gold from 97 metres depth followed by 29 metres of 1.8 grams gold from 151 metres below surface.

And Oromin’s work trenching at other gold targets on the property produced some promising results. At the Sekoto target a 12-metre trench interval averaged 3.78 grams gold, at the Korolo target a 13-metre trench returned 3.22 grams gold, and at the Clover Leaf zone a 7-metre trench interval graded 6.48 grams gold. The company plans to drill these targets, among others, in the 2008 drill program.

SRK Consulting recently informed Oromin that the Sabodala resource estimate, initially expected out in April, will not be complete until late May. SRK has been hindered of late due to the industry-wide lack of technical professionals and laboratory availability.

Oromin has four drill rigs turning at Sabodala, with two more expected on site by the end of the month. The drills are advancing a 140,000-metre drill program that got underway in early January.

Oromin holds 43.5% of the Sabodala project, with an equal portion held by Saudi-controlled Bendon International. Badr Investment & Finance holds the remaining 13% of the project. The government of Senegal retains a US$6.50-per-oz. royalty on any future production and a free carried interest after repayment of capital.

Oromin and partners were initially expected to spend US$8 million on exploration by April 2007 and then complete a feasibility study by February 2008. In March, the government of Senegal gave the Sabodala partners a 20-month exploration extension. They can now drill until December 2008 and then must finalise a feasibility study within ten months.

Print

Be the first to comment on "Gold potential growing at Oromin’s Sabodala"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. To learn more, click more information

Dear user, please be aware that we use cookies to help users navigate our website content and to help us understand how we can improve the user experience. If you have ideas for how we can improve our services, we’d love to hear from you. Click here to email us. By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. Please see our Privacy & Cookie Usage Policy to learn more.

Close