The Buchans base metal camp in central Newfoundland has historically been one of relatively small but high-grade massive sulphide deposits. The original Buchans deposit, to take only one example, was just over half a million tonnes but averaged nearly 15% zinc, 7.7% lead, and 1.4% copper; the largest, Lucky Strike, was only 6 million tonnes but sported higher grades still.
Camps with mines like that can produce some exciting drill holes.
Recent drilling by
The mid-1980s was when
The new activity is largely being driven by smaller companies, many of which are based in Newfoundland and all of which are keenly interested in developments at Phelps Dodge’s property and at Duck Pond.
Billiton started work on the properties in April and will be testing electromagnetic (EM) and induced-polarization anomalies discovered in previous geophysical surveys.
Phelps Dodge has also started drilling on its own Mary March property, from a collar on the partners’ Millertown property. Phelps Dodge will be giving the core from that part of the hole on the Celtic-Billiton ground to Celtic and Billiton for their own use.
Billiton’s work on the Altius properties, in the Victoria River belt, southwest of the Celtic land package, has also started. The program includes drilling, trenching and geophysics. Four holes on the Victoria River North property did not find any mineralization, and interpretations of the geology suggest that a separate faulted block, about 1 km away, may hold the favourable volcanic horizon.
Nearby, at Taylor Brook, trenching is investigating recently discovered EM anomalies. Also at Taylor Brook, a very-low-frequency EM anomaly, trenched this season, turned out to be a disseminated sulphide showing in mafic rocks, which returned low nickel-copper-cobalt values with some platinum and palladium.
Meanwhile, on the southern shore of Red Indian Lake, immediately southwest of the Celtic land package, privately owned
Kelmet’s agreement with Noranda, signed in February 1999, allows it to earn a full interest in the property by spending $1.8 million over five years. Noranda will receive 500,000 Kelmet shares once the interest is earned, as well as 1 million shares should anything be brought into production. The major also retains a 1.5% net smelter return royalty, and it has entered into a back-in agreement (similar to its Duck Pond option) that allows it to form a joint operating company with Kelmet if the junior finds an economic reserve of 15 million tonnes or more.
Kelmet’s own work on the property has centred on another showing, Parking Lot, which lies southwest of the Daniel’s Pond deposit, about 2 km along strike. There, some preliminary drilling revealed stringer-style pyrite-sphalerite mineralization near the Daniel’s Pond horizon, as well as a chlorite-altered zone with stringers of chalcopyrite stratigraphically below.
Another private company,
South Coast, headed by St. John’s-based geologist Charles Dearin, also holds the Burnt Pond prospect, which adjoins the Duck Pond-Boundary property on the northeast. Burnt Pond, a 1970s Noranda discovery, yielded some narrow intersections of massive sulphide on the Duck Pond horizon.
Farther to the southeast,
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