THE DRILL SERGEANT: Aurumin Limited (ASX: AUN) received assay results for a second hole of a recently completed reverse circulation (RC) and diamond drilling program at the company’s 100 per cent-owned Central Sandstone gold project in Western Australia.
Aurumin is conducting the drilling with the aims of both extending and better defining its previously reported Inferred underground Mineral Resource Estimate (MRE) of 14.2 million tonnes at 1.1 grams per tonne gold for 500,000 ounces of gold at Two Mile Hill.
Results from hole SN_TM_RD_22_0004 included a total intersection of:
224 metres at 1.5 grams per tonne gold from 229.6m down hole.
Highlights within this larger interval include:
49.6m at 2g/t gold from 269m;
20.2m at 2.6g/t gold from 325.2m;
12m at 3.7g/t gold from 381.4; and
9m at 2.2g/t gold from 427.2m.
“We are very happy with how Sandstone is progressing,” Aurumin managing director Brad Valiukas said in the company’s ASX announcement.
“We have been expanding our tenement footprint, looking for new deposits and advancing the currently inferred 500,000 ounces gold Two Mile Hill underground deposit with deep holes.
“This is another great result from Two Mile Hill.
“Like many other companies, we are frustrated by laboratory turnaround times on assays.
“We look forward to further results and, expect to see results for the final two diamond holes of the four hole program, this month.
“We continue to see the Two Mile Hill underground deposit as a key part of the project going forward, with the scale to potentially underpin future production.”
TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE
Email: admin@aurumin.com.au
Web: www.aurumin.com.au
THE DRILL SERGEANT: Sunshine Gold (ASX: SHN) received assay results from drilling recently undertaken on the Bank and Titov East prospects that are part of a 15 kilometres long mineralised corridor at the company’s Ravenswood West project in Queensland.
Sunshine Gold reported assay results have been returned for a five-hole reconnaissance RC drilling program at the Bank copper-gold-silver-molybdenum target, from which two holes, 22BKRC004 and 22BKRC005 contained increasing copper grades toward the end of hole, which the company interpreted to be suggesting a strengthening copper trend to the south of current drilling.
Further assay results were received from broad step off drilling at the Titov Main copper-gold-silver-molybdenum target that extended the length of mineralised zone to over 500 metres.
Titov Main is now defined to depths of 350m with an average intercept thickness of 81m.
Sunshine said assay results from hole 22TVRC012 had also confirmed continuity of a high-grade footwall zone the company had identified in previous drilling campaigns.
“The five RC hole reconnaissance program at the Bank has given us a solid vector to another porphyry copper-gold-silver-molybdenum system,” Sunshine Gold managing director Damien Keys said in the company’s ASX announcement.
“The 70 metres thick intercept of copper mineralisation at the end of 22BKRC005 is a fantastic result from limited drill metres and will allow us to effectively test the Bank in our September drilling campaign.
“The results from the eastern end of Titov Main have returned more solid copper and molybdenum mineralisation.
“Titov is a significant mineral system, now delineated over 500 metres of strike, to depths of 350 metres with an average intercept thickness of 81 metres.
“The next round of pending results will incorporate those drilled into a strong IP conductor at Titov Main.
“We eagerly await the outstanding assay results and have already commenced follow up drill planning at the Bank, and our first drilling at Gagarin copper-gold-silver-molybdenum and Wilburs Hill gold.”
TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE
Email: info@shngold.com.au
Web: www.shngold.com.au
THE DRILL SERGEANT: Ausgold (ASX: AUC) announced new gold hits from the company’s 100 per cent-owned Katanning Gold Project (KGP) in Western Australia.
Ausgold’s latest drilling results follow the recent release of a Pre-feasibility Study (PFS) which demonstrated strong economics for the KGP that was backed up by a maiden 1.28 million ounce Ore Reserve.
The company explained the new drilling at the KGP is designed to add to the near-surface Resource and further expand the scale of the current Ore Reserve.
Reverse circulation (RC) drilling of 41 holes targeted gold mineralisation within the KGP that intercepted several zones of gold mineralisation both at depth and near-surface.
High-grade extensions to the Jinkas lode identified further potential beneath the current optimised pits, with drill results including:
BSRC1535
4m at 17.05 grams per tonne gold from 207m, including 2m at 33.86g/t gold from 208m; and
BSRC1537
7m at 6.99g/t gold from 133m including 2m at 23.3g/t gold from 133m.
The company expects near-surface mineralisation intercepted within the Central Zone will extend beyond the current Resource adding high-grade mineralisation within multiple zones of gold mineralisation.
Results include:
BSRC1473
8m at 2.04g/t gold from 8m, including 5m at 2.96g/t gold from 10m; (Jackson)
BSRC1476
5m at 2.98g/t gold from 31m, including 2m at 6.82g/t gold from 34m; (Jackson)
BSRC1531
8m at 1.83g/t gold from 31m, including 2m at 6.26g/t gold from 37m; (Jinkas)
BSRC1473
5m at 2.59g/t gold from 36m, including 3m at 3.8g/t gold from 38m; and (Jackson)
BSRC1521
8m at 1.5g/t gold from 92m, including 2m at 4.33g/t gold from 96m (White Dam)
“Ausgold is clearly demonstrating the potential of the Katanning Gold Project with the recent PFS delivering a large 1.28 million ounces Ore Reserve and these high-grade results from new drilling,” Ausgold managing director Matthew Greentree said in the company’s ASX announcement.
“It is pleasing to continue this momentum with near surface high-grade gold intersected as well as expanding the depth potential which remains open.
“Both add to the significant multi-million-ounce Resource potential of the project.
“The KGP is now shaping up to be one of the largest free-milling undeveloped gold projects in Western Australia.”
TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE
Email: info@ausgoldlimited.com
THE DRILL SERGEANT: Miramar Resources (ASX: M2R) reported drill results from the company’s 80 per cent-owned Gidji JV project, located north of Kalgoorlie in the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia.
Miramar Resources’ latest Gidji drilling results come from the Highway target, the fourth large aircore gold footprint the company has outlined at the project since listing in 2020.
Results from the Highway target include:
GJAC717
5m at 0.87 grams per tonne gold from 48m, including 1m at 1.87g/t gold;
GJAC718
1m at 2.9g/t gold from 52m;
GJAC721
4m at 2.95g/t gold from 48m, including 3m at 3.78g/t gold;
GJAC725
8m at 0.77g/t gold from 48m, 4m at 1.13g/t gold; and
GJAC727
1m at 2.53g/t gold from 51m.
“The new results from the Highway target emphasise the significant gold potential at Gidji being realised by Miramar through systematic exploration,” Miramar Resources executive chairman Allan Kelly said in the company’s ASX announcement.
“Over the last 18 months, we have outlined four large new gold targets at Gidji, each at least one kilometre long, and with multiple bedrock aircore intersections including several high-grade gold results.
“Despite straddling the Goldfields Highway and being located less than a 10-minute drive from Kalgoorlie, the Gidji project has clearly not been effectively explored until now.
“With only a handful of deeper holes completed to date, and many more planned, we look forward to continuing to uncover the full potential of the Gidji JV project.”
Miramar is set to commence a 12,000m aircore drilling campaign over the Boorara North target, which includes a further 4km long underexplored segment of the Boorara Shear Zone.
The company has interpreted th local geology of the Boorara North target to match that of the Paddington and Panglo deposits, and the Marylebone-Blackfriars-Highway area, and believes it has potential for gold and/or nickel sulphide mineralisation.
TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE
Email: info@miramarresources.com.au
Web: www.miramarresources.com.au
THE DRILL SERGEANT: Alto Metals (ASX: AME) announced further high-grade gold results from ongoing drilling at the Indomitable Camp, within the company’s 100 per cent-owned Sandstone gold project in Western Australia.
Alto Metals reported recent drilling has extended known mineralisation outside the current resource Indomitable Camp Inferred Mineral Resource of 1.7 million tonnes at 1.3 grams per tonne gold for 74,000 ounces (based on an A$2,000 pit shell) with 28 of 29 RC holes intersecting gold
mineralisation.
Results include:
SRC674
20 metres at 6.9 grams per tonne gold from 35m, including 1m at 97.8g/t gold from 38m;
SRC687
10m at 3.2g/t gold from 69m, including 2m at 11.3g/t gold from 72m;
SRC664
10m at 2.8g/t gold from 27m, including 1m at 19.5g/t gold from 34m; and
SRC665
10m at 1.1g/t gold from 8m and 4m at 9.1 g/t gold from 83m, including 1m at 27.1g/t gold from 84m.
“These new results from our ongoing drill program at Indomitable have again delivered multiple, shallow high-grade gold results in oxide, outside the current resource, with SRC674 a particular a standout result of 20 metres at 6.9 grams per tonne gold from just 35 metres depth,” Alto Metals managing director Matthew Bowles said in the company’s ASX announcement.
“Shareholders can look forward to further results in the near term following the recently completed first pass drilling over the Indomitable East prospect and we have now moved the rig to the exciting Musketeer target.
“Indomitable is consistently delivering shallow, high-grade gold results and we are looking forward to incorporating all of these results into the updated mineral resource estimate planned for the end of the year.”
TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE
Email: admin@altometals.com.au
THE DRILL SERGEANT: BlackEarth Minerals (ASX: BEM) announced an increase to the graphite inventory, by both tonnes and grade at the company’s 100 per cent-owned Maniry graphite project in Southern Madagascar.
BlackEarth Minerals explained the increase came via completion of an upgraded JORC Code-compliant Mineral Resource estimation for the Razafy Northwest (NW) graphite deposit consisting of an Indicated and Inferred Mineral Resource of 5.3 million tonnes at 8.5 per cent total graphitic carbon (TGC) at a 3 per cent TGC cut-off grade for 452,000 tonnes of contained graphite.
The majority of the Mineral Resource, 3.1 million tonnes at 8.6 per cent TGC for 266,000 tonnes contained graphite has been classified in the higher confidence Indicated classification, with the remainder classified as Inferred.
Total Mineral Resources for the Maniry project now stand at 40 million tonnes at 6.5 per cent TGC for approx. 2.7 million tonnes contained graphite.
“We have again added both grade and tonnes to our Maniry graphite inventory,” BlackEarth Minerals managing director Tom Revy said in the company’s ASX announcement.
“The current plan within the DFS is to run the first stage (years 1-3) of the project using high-grade feed material sourced from Razafy NW.
“The more we explore in the area, the more we are excited about the real potential of the area and the value enhancement it can ultimately bring to our Maniry graphite project.
“The current resources at the project are within an exploration target of 260-280 million tonnes of TGC.
“We will continue to invest in exploration in the future to continually grow our resource base and demonstrate the true potential of this project.
“Since listing the company in January 2018, we have developed a resource base of over 40 million tonnes from zero, and will continue to build on this existing resource.”
TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE
Email: info@blackearthminerals.com.au
Web: www.blackearthminerals.com.au
ON THE ROAD: In the lead up to the annual Diggers & Dealers Forum in Kalgoorlie, Mr and Mrs Roadhouse took the opportunity to take a road trip through the Golden Outback of Western Australia.
All aboard The Prospector! Our tour of the Golden Outback began in East Perth as we boarded The Prospector train that would deliver us to the regional gold mining hub of Kalgoorlie.
Jump on the TransWA web page for some info about your upcoming journey and you will be told that the “state-of-the-art high-speed train departs from Perth and Kalgoorlie stations once a day, twice on Monday and Friday”.
This is followed by some interesting history – “The Perth to Kalgoorlie standard gauge train line first opened in 1971, replacing the overnight sleeper service and cutting the 653 kilometres journey from fourteen hours to only eight—making it the fastest service in Australia at the time.”
Since then, there has not been much improvement in time saving, except nowadays the trip takes just seven hours.
Claiming its “modern Prospector” to have left the 70s far behind, TransWA tells us the updated version now boasts, “air-conditioning, power points for charging your electronic devices, full buffet service and on-demand personal entertainment systems, complete with new release movies”.

There are many positives to riding The Prospector: it is affordable for all travellers, provides a necessary connection between Kal and the state’s capital of Perth, and allows passengers the advantage of being able to stand up to walk around and stretch during the seven-hour trip, as opposed to bus or car passengers that may not share that privilege.
One advantage said car and bus passengers hold over those on the train, however, is to be connected to WiFi for a healthy percentage of the trip.
Not so a trip on The Prospector, which would be greatly enhanced by the ability of those aboard to get some work done, perhaps just answer emails, or stream some better viewing options than what is available in the seat back before them.
It would also save the difficulties some passengers had trying to pay for food and drink at the buffet using their electronic credit cards with some having to wait until the train turned certain corners for coverage to penetrate.
Arriving in Kalgoorlie was seamless enough, although the fact the train arrived on time seemed to take the town’s limited taxi fleet by surprise and there were none waiting to meet us.
Luckily, we had booked a car through the local AVIS franchise and they kindly drove around the corner to pick us up. Soon enough we were in our car zooming up the Goldfields Highway to the gold mining ghost town of Gwalia.
Gold was discovered at Gwalia in 1896, quickly after which a syndicate formed to develop a mine, registered by Thomas Tobias and others who named it Sons of Gwalia in honour of Tobias’ Welsh heritage – Gwalia being an old name for Wales.
Sons of Gwalia Ltd, was established and by 1898 the nearby town of Leonora boasted three hotels, two banks, a telegraph office and many shops and businesses.
Even back then the commute to work was a high priority for workers and many of the mine workers opted living closer to the mine rather than in Leonora.
This led to the construction of timber and iron cottages lined with canvas, many of which line the road to the Gwalia Museum as a reminder of the conditions, both living and working these early pioneers endured.

Whenever you say you have been to Gwalia, the first question from people who know the area is, ‘Did you stay at the Herbert Hoover B&B?’, to which we can now respond in the affirmative.
The house was designed in 1897 by the Sons of Gwalia mine’s then manager, Herbert Hoover, who later became the 31st President of the United States of America.
Hoover never got to actually live in the house due to his taking up a job in China before its completion; however, he was fortunate enough to get to stay there when he returned for a visit.
The manager who had replaced him kindly vacated the main bedroom for Hoover and his wife and the room has since been known as the Hoover Room and is the flashiest of the three rooms available.

Source: Gwalia Ghost Town & Museum www.gwalia.org.au
A continental breakfast is available and although shelves in the fridge are allocated for each room, guests should be wary of leaving any foodstuffs on said shelves, especially if hungry pensioners are also staying, as you may very well wake the next morning to find both them and your home-made comestibles long gone.
Hoover House shares it grounds with the Gwalia Museum, which combined with the Gwalia Ghost Town that lines the street as you drive to the Historical Precinct gives you two to three hours, at least, to explore the history of the region.

In the afternoon we drove down to Kookynie to the Grand Hotel, where we greeted by Willie the grumpy former trotting horse who now spends his day as the pub’s doorperson and being highly selective as to whom he may or may not allow to cross the threshold.
Pub owner Margaret came to our rescue and shooed Willie away so we could sneak through to the bar where she duly poured us an icy coldie liquid goldie, which she then told us we had to finish quickly as it was 2pm and she was about to close for her afternoon nap – something none of the Golden Outback web pages tell you about.
Margaret is a legend, and it is worth the drive out to the town just to meet her and hear her stories.

We had read about the famous Kookynie burgers that Margaret makes for hungry travellers, but alas, at present these are off the menu due to staff shortages, although she did run us through the recipe, which left us salivating and feeling a touch disappointed.
Another useful tip to know about Kookynie is that it is the only place between Kalgoorlie and Leonora that you are able to purchase petrol – only diesel fuel is available at the interim town of Menzies, which probably explains why people drive through without stopping, only slowing down to take the turn out to Lake Ballard.
This is what we did after our second, and last night at the Hoover B&B.
The drive out to Lake Ballard is, these days, bituminised with only a small fraction, about ten kilometres as you approach the Lake still a dirt road.
At the end of the drive, you are standing on the perimeter of the Inside Australia art installation of UK artist Antony Gormley, an exhibition that was commissioned to mark the 50th anniversary celebrations of the Perth International Arts Festival in 2003.
Gormley planted 51 sculptures over 10 square kilometres of the Lake Ballard salt lake all based on inhabitants of Menzies.
You can spend anywhere from 10 minutes to four hours investigating the exhibition, depending on how far you want to walk and how much mud you are prepared to carry on the bottom of your shoes.
It had been sporadically raining leading up to our visit, which meant the surface of the lake was fairly muddy, but others I know who have been when it is dry say it is much easier to trek around.
Other times when rain has been heavier, water provides a reflective element to the many photographs you will no doubt take of these statues.

The statues are deceptively close to each other which makes the walk to the next, then the next almost addictive, but be warned: when you stop to take stock of how far out on the lake you are, you will be surprised to find that you have quite a lengthy stroll back.
Fear not, there are plenty of statues left to make the walk back as varied as the walk in.
Our last stop before heading to Kalgoorlie was the Broad Arrow Tavern. Again, we felt a touch misled by official tourist pages that had said you could write your name on the pub’s walls with reckless abandon.

Not true and hasn’t been since 2020 when the pub was told by the licensing heavyweights that the rude comments some folk had written put the establishment’s license at risk.
Still, we received a warm welcome and a cold beer and joyed scoping the bar and its paraphernalia.
That signalled the end of the first half of our Golden Outback adventure, so it was back in the car and off to the big smoke of Kalgoorlie to see what awaited us there.
THE CONFERENCE CALLER: A famous puppet once famously said, ‘it’s not that easy being green’, a sentiment that rings true in the modern mining landscape as companies strive to have the potential of their new technology-focused projects recognised.
Australian Strategic Materials (ASX: ASM) was just one of the companies presenting at Diggers & Dealers on Day One spruiking new technologies and the commodities needed to keep them greening the planet.
It is also one of several, over the three-day gabfest, to lay claim to being set to become a provider to the world’s growing greening with its contribution anticipated to advance electric vehicle and wind turbine operations.
Non-executive chairman Ian Gandel told his audience of phase one commissioning of the company’s Korean Metals Plant that will produce neodymium products initially aiming to produce both metals and alloys utilising refined material from the company’s Dubbo mine in New South Wales.
Hyundai Engineering in Korea has awarded engineering, procurement and construction work and funding to advance the plant in Ochang which was officially opened by Australian Strategic with the Koreans in May.
Gandel reeled off the variety of high purity metal products to be produced including permanent magnet alloys, neodymium, praseodymian, dysprosium and terbium.
IGO (ASX: IGO) managing director and CEO Peter Bradford used his turn at the lectern on Day Two to espouse the green virtues of his company.
Bradford has been on something of a green technology crusade in recent times, holding the reins of the company’s transformation from gold and base metals to what he declared as being a “fantastic” portfolio of upstream and downstream clean energy projects covering lithium, nickel, copper and cobalt.

The company’s recent friendly $1.26 billion takeover of independent nickel producer Western Areas added the producing Forrestania mine and Cosmos development project to IGO’s high-quality, low-cost Nova operation and its likely Silver Knight satellite source.
They sit alongside a 25 per cent stake in the Greenbushes hard rock lithium mine and 49 per cent interest in Australia’s first fully automated battery-grade lithium hydroxide plant in Kwinana, both in Joint Venture with Chinese major Tianqi Lithium Energy Australia.
“Our strategy … is creating a company that’s globally relevant in the supply of clean energy metals, and we do that because we want to create a better planet,” Bradford said.
Neometals (ASX: NMT) has long been a trend setter in the recycling of battery materials.
Neometals managing director Chris Reed outlined recent advances made by the company at Diggers & Dealers, including its Primobius battery recycling Joint Venture in Germany with SMS group.
This partnership resulted in Mercedes Benz selecting Primobius as a battery recycling partner that will design and construct an integrated hydromet plant at Mercedes production facilities in Kuppenheim.
Neometals has developed three business units supporting energy transition in the electric vehicle (EV) and energy storage system (ESS) supply chains, encapsulating lithium-ion battery recycling, nickel-cobalt recovery and lithium chemicals.
As well as its German alliances, Neometals is advancing vanadium recovery in Finland, lithium chemicals in Portugal and lithium battery recycling with Stelco in Canada.
Kicking the dew off the grass on Day Three, Chalice Mining (ASX: CHN) continued running the ‘greener than the rest’ theme at the Forum, claiming its Julimar project to be the embryo that will be first born of a new green metals province in WA.
Chalice Mining is advancing strategic planning for the development of a starter mine at the company’s 100 per cent-owned Julimar project just 70km from Perth.

Chalice Mining managing director Alex Dorsch the final day crowd at Diggers & Dealers that the company’s work since its initial discovery two and a half years ago was confirming Julimar as WA’s first major platinum discovery and the starting point for a world-class multi-district green metals province.
Dorsch boasted the unique composition of platinum group elements, nickel, copper, cobalt at Julimar would deliver the green metals essential for the de-carbonisation of the world, feeding technologies such as batteries, electric vehicles and hydrogen production.
Liontown Resources (ASX: LTR) managing director Tony Ottaviano outlined the targeted production start for the company’s Kathleen Valley lithium project in Western Australia’s north eastern goldfields, which is pencilled in for the second quarter of 2024.
Ottaviano told Diggers & Dealers the company had now ticked major development milestones at Kathleen Valley, including completing a definitive feasibility study, raising required equity, securing debt funding and gaining three major offtake agreements.
Kathleen Valley currently has a Resource estimated at 156 million tonnes at 1.4 per cent lithium oxide, while the company’s other lithium deposit at Buldania in WA’s central south east has a resource of 15 million tonnes at one per cent lithium oxide.
Lynas Rare Earths (ASX: LYC) has accepted the challenge laid out by the accelerating pace of global demand for rare earth materials by bringing forward a $500 million expansion of the company’s Mt Weld mine and concentrate plant in Western Australia’s north-eastern Goldfields.
The expansion was announced by managing director-CEO Amanda Lacaze on Day Three of Diggers & Dealers, which she indicated aims to lift Mt Weld’s rare earth concentrate production capacity to 12,000 tonnes per annum by 2024 from its current level of 7,000 tonnes per annum.

This is a leapfrog of Commonwealth Games winning standard over the company’s previous expansion target of 10,500 tonnes per annum, which was laid out in the Lynas 2025 growth plan launched three years ago.
The neodynium-praseodymium concentrate produced at Mt Weld is shipped to Lynas’s advanced minerals plant in Malaysia for processing into high-quality rare earth materials for the manufacture of electric vehicles, wind turbines and other electronic applications.




