Drilling between two mineralized zones at Soho Resources’ (SOH-V) Tahuehueto polymetallic project in Durango, Mexico, has resulted in the discovery of a third zone.
The newly named Catorce zone is halfway between the southern end of the El Creston zone and the north end of the Cinco de Mayo zone, which lie all along the continuous Cinco de Mayo-Perdido-Santiago structure.
The best intersection so far from Catorce is 5 metres grading 13.56 grams gold per tonne, 88.6 grams silver, 0.61% copper, 0.97% lead and 6.99% zinc.
The latest drill results from El Creston include a 7.1-metre intersection grading 3.79 grams gold per tonne, 27.6 grams silver, 0.41% copper, 0.89% lead and 0.66% zinc.
Another drill hole returned a 16.3-metre section grading 1.78 grams gold per tonne, 69.7 grams silver, 0.01% copper, 0.81% lead and 0.91% zinc, as well as 16.3 metres from a deeper portion of the hole that averaged 1.88 grams gold per tonne, 5.9 grams silver, 0.03% copper, 1.25% lead and 1.79% zinc.
Soho still has two drills turning at El Creston and plans to have an independent resource calculation done later this year.
Tahuehueto covers 90 sq. km in the Sierra Madre mountain range and has 12 known mineralized zones within a structurally controlled epithermal system traced for more than 6 km.
Be the first to comment on "Soho Plans for Resource at Tahuehueto"