Probe Mine’s results add lustre to chromium in the Ring of Fire

One day after Cliffs Natural Resources (CLF-N) announced its takeover bid for Freewest Resources Canada (FWR-V) and its chromium assets in the Ring of Fire, drill results from Probe Mines (PRB-V) chromium property are drawing even more attention to the chromite in the ground in the McFauld’s Lake area of northern Ontario.

All eleven drill holes intersected Probe’s Black Creek chromite horizon and returned significant values over considerable widths. Highlights include Hole MJV09-12, which returned an average of 34.6% chromite over 42.6 metres, including 43.1% chromite over 21.7 metres, and hole MJV09-11, which cut an average of 33.8% chromite over 34.5 metres, including 43.7% over 15 metres.

Hole MJV09-13 intersected an average grade of 33.9% chromite over 63.6 metres metres, including 41.4% chromite over 34.7 metres, while hole MJV09-14 returned 36.8% over 39.3 metres including 42.8% over 24.2 metres.

News of the drill results sent Probe up 17.11% or 6.5¢ to close at 44.5¢ per share. The junior has traded in a 52-week range of 5.5¢-49¢ per share. “It was great timing with Cliffs’ announcement yesterday and our results coming out today — it was really fortuitous,” David Palmer, Probe’s president and chief executive, said in an interview.

“Investors are starting to realize the potential value of the chromite to the Rig of Fire,” he added. “Up until now it’s really been a nickel story but now with a major like Cliffs coming in investors are seeing a big part of the value of that belt is actually chromite.”

The Black Creek horizon has been delineated over a 200-metre strike length and to a vertical depth of 200 metres, and is open in all directions. The chromite-bearing horizon, which is hosted by a thick package of olivine-bearing peridotites and pyroxenites, lies directly between Freewest’s Black Thor chromite discovery and the Big Daddy chromite zone of the joint venture between Freewest, Spider Resources (SPQ-V) and KWG Resources (KWG-V).

“We’re smack in the middle of Black Thor and Big Daddy – I believe they’re all part of the same zone and we have the central portion of that zone — it’s all part of the same horizon,” Palmer explained. “We’re essentially tied to Freewest so it’s conceivable that Cliffs or whoever does start to consolidate the chromite would start to look at us as an interesting acquisition possibility.”

In addition, precious metal results for the chromite zones at Black Creek indicate anomalous values for platinum and palladium, with maximums of 0.5 gram platinum per tonne and 1.1 grams palladium per tonne, respectively.

Fifteen drill holes, totaling almost 4,000 metres, have been completed on the Black Creek zone, with all intersecting significant widths of chromite.

At the time Probe staked the Black Creek claims in 2006, the junior was looking at the region as a VMS play for copper, lead and zinc mineralization. “At the time they were basically buffer claims [to tie other blocks together] but as it turns out they were sitting right in the ultramafic horizon of the Ring of Fire,” Palmer said. “At that time we didn’t have any idea of the value that was sitting there.”

Probe has about $4 million in the bank. It owns 931 claims in the McFauld’s Lake area covering almost 15,000 hectares, including joint venture properties with Noront Resources (NOT-V) covering 87 of these claims.

 

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2 Comments on "Probe Mine’s results add lustre to chromium in the Ring of Fire"

  1. Harlan B. Niles | November 25, 2009 at 9:11 am | Reply

    What is the general chemical composition of the chromite? How much Al, Mg, Fe, and Cr? Chemistry will effect the value of the mineral.

  2. Anbody have any comment how they see kwg and spider playing out.
    KWG major shareholder Cliffs. Interlink on JV property with Spider.

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