Chase drilling Taysan project

Drilling continues to delineate the Taysan copper-gold porphyry deposit in the Philippines.

Situated 100 km south of Manila in Batangas province, the project is owned by Taysan Copper, a company in which Vancouver-based Chase Resource (TSE) holds a 35% interest. Chase can acquire the remaining 65% of the shares through aggregate cash payments of US$1.5 million to various optioners. Under an agreement with the Philippine government, Chase can explore and develop properties within an 83,000-hectare area in Batangas for 25 years. Proven and probable reserves at Taysan are estimated at 336 million tonnes grading 0.31% copper, plus 0.31 gram gold per tonne. An additional 200 million tonnes are indicated by drilling.

Within the outlined reserve block is a near-surface, higher-grade zone hosting grades of up to 0.9% copper and 0.9 gram gold. Chase believes the zone may contain upwards of 150 million tonnes, and the waste-to-ore stripping ratio is estimated at less than 0.5-to-1.

Recent drilling tested the northwestern edge of the orebody, where it is believed to thin out. Intervals include 78 metres of 0.34% copper and 0.17 gram gold for hole CT-22; 61 metres of 0.24% copper and 0.12 gram gold for CT-23; 45 metres of 0.31% copper and 0.05 gram gold for CT-24; and 53 metres of 0.19% copper and 0.08 gram gold for CT-25.

The program succeeded in extending the higher-grade mineralization to the west, beyond the previously defined boundary. Hole CT-26 returned 94 metres of 0.71% copper and 0.65 gram gold, while hole CT-27 intersected 134 metres of 0.64% copper and 0.41 gram gold. Hole CT-28 returned a grade of 0.37% copper and 0.1 gram gold over 96 metres. The zone remains open to the west, south and at depth.

The orebody is hosted by a Miocene diorite which was intruded by a dacite porphyry. The intrusion is believed to have been controlled by a low-angle fault, with the copper mineralization occurring in a series of shallow-dipping zones up to 250 metres thick. The mineralization is associated with quartz-magnetite alteration. Three magnetic anomalies bear resemblance to the one overlying the Taysan deposit and, indeed, are believed to be dislocated extensions of it. They are scheduled to be drill-tested in April.

A preliminary study by engineering firm Fluor Daniel Wright, in 1992, calculated a reserve of 233 million tonnes grading 0.32% copper and 0.31 gram gold. This material is believed to be minable by open-pit methods, and the stripping ratio is estimated at 0.85-to-1. A daily milling rate of 50,000 tonnes would sustain the initial pit for at least 15 years.

The capital cost of such an operation is estimated at US$253 million, while operating expenses are projected at US$159 per oz. gold and 40 cents per lb. of copper.

Well-situated, the project is 14 km from Batangas Harbour, near existing infrastructure.

Meanwhile, in Chile, the company has completed the first phase of drilling on a portion of the 16,200-hectare Mejillones property. Four geophysical anomalies were tested with nine holes, totalling 1,412 metres. At the VT mine, holes VT-1 to VT-6 were drilled east and west of old workings. Significant intersections include 20 metres of 0.35% copper for VT-1; 2 metres of 0.5% copper for VT-3; and 10 metres of 0.66% copper (including an interval grading 1.48% copper plus 0.55 gram gold over 4 metres) for VT-6.

Hole VT-10 tested the Dos Papaya target, 5 km south of the VT mine, and returned 12 metres of 1.12% copper. A single hole, VT-7, tested the so-called Flats area, returning low-grade copper mineralization averaging 0.12% over separate intervals of 10 and 4 metres. The DAV prospect was tested with a single hole as well, but encountered no significant values.

A second phase of drilling, in addition to expanded geophysical surveys, is planned for the project, in which Chase can acquire a 75% interest. The company has 13 million shares outstanding (or 15.8 million on a fully diluted basis) and working capital of $5 million.

Print


 

Republish this article

Be the first to comment on "Chase drilling Taysan project"

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