Vancouver — Good news follows bad for
Eight of a planned 15 infill holes have been drilled at Boston, where the measured and inferred resource was last estimated to be 1.4 million tonnes grading 15.4 grams gold per tonne. Highlights include the following:
— Hole 304 — 6.6 metres (from 410.6 metres) averaging 21.7 grams gold per tonne, including 2.9 metres of 47.4 grams gold;
— Hole 308 — 23.4 metres (from 304.4 metres) grading 7.3 grams gold, including two separate 1.4-metre sections of 33.9 and 21.1 grams gold;
— Hole 309 — 12.4 metres (from 374.4 metres) of 9.3 grams gold, including 5.6 metres of 18.7 grams;
— Hole 300W — 5.8 metres (from 918.7 metres) grading 7.1 grams gold, including 1.3 metres of 17.6 grams;
— Hole 301 — 2.8 metres (from 1,099.7 metres) averaging 32.7 grams gold, including a section of 1.8 metres grading 50 grams (visible gold was abundant in the core, and this hole will be used for drilling of multiple offsets);
— Hole 310 — 10.3 metres (from 664.5 metres) grading 8.7 grams, including 9 metres of 9.9 grams.
The results demonstrate the depth extent of the gold-mineralizing system at Boston, as well as the potential for extending the resource below its current boundary.
Elsewhere on the Hope Bay project, the company has offloaded its exploration effort on the Twin Peaks and Eastern Contacts areas.
The Twin Peaks and Eastern Contacts areas have several occurrences of high-grade, vein-hosted gold mineralization with multi-ounce-per-ton grab samples. They also have large-scale bulk-tonnage potential.
The Hope Bay project comprises more than 1,000 sq. km on the Arctic coast and consists of three deposits, Doris, Madrid and Boston, with a combined resource of 5.4 million oz. gold. Permitting is under way on Doris North, with production anticipated in 2006.
Miramar has 152 million shares outstanding.
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