Great Bear starts metallurgical testing at Dixie

Aerial view of Dixie Lake in northwestern Ontario's Red Lake gold district. Credit: Great Bear Resources.Aerial view of Dixie Lake in northwestern Ontario's Red Lake gold district. Credit: Great Bear Resources.

Great Bear Resources (TSXV: GBR; US-OTC: GTBAF) has retained B.C.-based Blue Coast Research to complete metallurgical test work and consulting for its Dixie gold project in Ontario’s Red Lake district.

The test work is expected to provide the gold explorer with metallurgical recovery estimates and processing flow sheet recommendations for the Dixie project zones, which are required to publish an initial resource estimate for the property.

According to Great Bear, to date, over 80% of the holes drilled into the LP fault, Dixie Limb and Hinge zones returned visible gold, with the mineralization in the form of free gold, and not bound to or within sulphides. Free gold-dominated deposits in the Red Lake area typically return high gold recoveries. A 2015 technical report on Evolution Mining’s Red Lake mine suggested typical recoveries of 94% to 97% for the operation.

Chris Taylor, Great Bear’s president and chief executive, says the company has catalogued over 7,000 free visible gold occurrences in its drill core. Over 99% of the time, “gold occurs freely or on the edges of sulphide grains, suggesting potential for very high metallurgical recoveries, as has been observed at other free gold-hosting deposits in the Red Lake district.”

Taylor added that petrographic (using rock thin sections under a microscope) studies also show unencapsulated gold, where the gold appears to be associated with silicate minerals.

Great Bear continues to collect samples for testing from veins, replacement zones and dissemination in both sedimentary and felsic host rocks from the LP fault, Dixie Limb and Hinge zones.

Based on 136,000 geochemical samples analyzed so far, results indicate lower concentrations of trace elements (such as arsenic, zinc and lead) within the mineralized system at Dixie than across other deposits in the Red Lake district, due to a lower accessory sulphide mineral content.

A 2004 historical report completed on the Dixie Limb zone identified sulphides (pyrrhotite) attached to the gold mineralization, but “none (of the gold) was encapsulated.”

There are two exploration targets at the 91.4-sq.-km Dixie property: mafic-rock hosted high-grade gold in quartz veins and replacement zones at the Dixie Limb and Hinge and Arrow zones as well as felsic sediment and volcanic-hosted high-grade disseminated gold with broad envelopes at the LP fault. The latter is interpreted to cover up to 18 km of strike at Dixie.

— This article first appeared in the Canadian Mining Journal. CMJ is part of Glacier Resource Innovation Group.

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