Carnaby Resources Confirms Mount Hope Copper Discovery

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Carnaby Resources (ASX: CNB) has claimed confirmation of the Mount Hope copper gold discovery at the company’s Greater Duchess copper gold project in Mt Isa, Queensland.

The Mount Hope discovery is the third discovery by Carnaby Resources since it first announced the Nil Desperandum discovery, also at Greater Duchess, in December 2021.

Carnaby Resources received results have been received from RC drilling that intersected a 75 metres downhole zone of strong quartz copper sulphide mineralisation with assays outlining a very broad and high-grade zone of:

MHRC025
75 metres at 1.7 per cent copper, 0.2 grams per tonne gold from 221m, including 53m at 1.9 per cent copper, 0.2g/t gold from 221m.

“The outstanding drill result of 75 metres at 1.7 per cent copper in MHRC025 is the first indication that we are dealing with another significant copper gold discovery at Mount Hope to add to our Nil Desperandum and Lady Fanny discoveries,” Carnaby Resources managing director Rob Watkins said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“These results confirm our belief that the greater than 10 kilometres Nil Desperandum to Mount Hope IOCG corridor is a very special belt where IP geophysics is working exceptionally well assisting our search for more new discoveries.”

 

 

 

 

Web: www.carnabyresources.com.au

 

BlackEarth Minerals Commences Maniry Graphite Fines Scoping Study

THE DRILL SERGEANT: BlackEarth Minerals (ASX: BEM) has started a Scoping Study on building a plant to process graphite from its Maniry project in Madagascar.

BlackEarth Minerals explained the study hopes to confirm the commercial viability of processing fines from its Maniry graphite project into Battery Anode Material (BAM).

The BAM Study will assess the viability of building a manufacturing plant which will produce the spheronised and purified graphite that will be required for lithium batteries, in Europe where demand for BAM is expected to greatly increase.

The company believes the BAM plant will potentially add value to Maniry fines, which up to now it has planned to sell as a raw product to processors.

Preliminary studies carried out by BlackEarth concluded the BAM could sell for approx. US$3500 per tonne compared with approx. US$850 per tonne for the concentrate fines.

“We believe there is an exceptional opportunity to become a vital supplier to the lithium battery industry by processing Maniry fines into BAM,” BlackEarth Managing Director Tom Revy said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“This would allow us to sell a portion of our fines for around four times the price we would realise by selling them as a raw product to others to process into BAM.

“By becoming vertically integrated in this manner, we stand to substantially increase our revenues, margins and free cashflow while becoming an integral part of the booming lithium battery industry in Europe.

“The BAM strategy is designed to provide valuable income diversity and increased overall financial returns from Maniry.

“At the same time, we will proceed as planned with our strategy to process our coarse graphite via our joint venture in India for sale of expandable graphite into Europe next year.”

 

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

 

Web: www.blackearthminerals.com.au

 

Coal Elimination Makes Room for Gas and Renewables Emission Reduction

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: RISC managing director Martin Wilkes opened his address at the 2022 RIU Good Oil and Gas Energy Conference in Perth by telling the crowd that although he has green tendencies, he is a pragmatist rather than an activist.

This, he said, enabled him to approach the thesis of his presentation, Emissions Reduction and Energy Security, Can We Have Both?

Confident that he would not alienate the industry types in the audience, Wilkes began by showing a graph that demonstrated the energy intensity use for a number of western countries.

France, he explained, was way below the average due mainly to its reliance on nuclear energy.

In first and second place respectively, Australia and the US share similar trajectories, the difference between the two being our nuclear moratorium, but both have introduced limited restrictions on coal-fired power, sending each graph on negative downturns.

England has recently lowered its energy use by almost eliminating coal entirely from the power reliance equation.

“If you can take coal out of the mix, you will see a significant drop in emissions,” Wilkes said.

By replacing coal with variable renewables and gas to the point where power demand for 100 per cent for any one point in time, emissions are reduced to a point where they are negligible.

“Keeping gas in the mx is a good idea,” he said.

“If you don’t keep gas in the mix, and you keep coal in the mix, you actually don’t do much in terms of emissions reduction.”

Wilkes used the analogy of a home BBQ compared to a power station.

Using a gas BBQ, he said provided the advantage of turning on the gas lighting the flame, cooking then turning the gas off.

When using a charcoal BBQ, he said, meant lighting the beads, waiting for them to reach a suitable heat, cooking your meal then leaving the charcoal to cool down in its own time.

“It’s the same with power stations,” he suggested.

“Gas-fired power stations turn on and off easily,” he said.

“Coal-fired power stations don’t.”

New South Wales, Queensland and Victoria, the states most reliant on coal-fired power generation, account for a vast majority of the Australia’s emissions.

Western Australia, with around sixty per cent gas generated power produces much less while Tasmania, which operates on around 90 per cent renewables due to hydro-electricity is a big winner.

South Australia produced renewable-fired power headlines when it removed coal from its power mix, giving column space that spruiked the state’s moments of 100 per cent renewable generation.

“That’s all great,” Wilkes said.

“But the reality of it is that they are still reliant on gas for about 40-odd per cent of their power generation.

“They installed the world’s largest battery in 2018 – it is still one of the top four or five – but it doesn’t actually provide storage capacity or dispatchable capacity.

“It provides firming and grid stability and what they call ‘inertia’.”

What the data appears to be telling us is that there is an avenue for Australia to substantially reduce its emissions while eating its energy security cake.

Coal-fired power generation can be replaced, at the moment, with a combination of renewables and gas.

“Beyond that, I don’t believe we yet have a viable solution to get to net zero,” Wilkes said.

“It may come, but I think for the next ten to fifteen years we should concentrate on what we can do, and that is getting coal out of the mix.”

“Which, I think means we do need to accept the fact that we might need to increase gas-fired power generation.”

 

Podium Minerals Drills High-Grade Central Ore Zone Results

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Podium Minerals (ASX: POD) released new results from drilling at the company’s Parks Reef 5E PGM project in Western Australia.

Podium Minerals reported the intercepts that were returned from six of nine holes drilled into the Central Ore Zone of Parks Reef orebody.

Highlights include:

PRRC262
16 metres at 2.51 grams per tonne 3E platinum group metals (PGM) (1.69g/t platinum (Pt), 0.8g/t palladium (Pd) and 0.01g/t gold (Au)) from 76m, including 2m at 11.48g/t 3E PGM (8.52g/t Pt, 2.94g/t Pd and 0.03g/t Au) from 88m; and

PRRC259
4m at 2.19g/t 3E PGM (1.57g/t Pt, 0.62g/t Pd and 0.01g/t Au) from 42m, including 2m at 2.87g/t 3E PGM (2.08g/t Pt, 0.78g/t Pd and 0.01g/t Au) from 42m.

“The Central Ore Zone was previously identified to potentially contain higher grade than the surrounding resource, so it is pleasing to see the geological model supported with these results,” Podium Minerals managing director and CEO Sam Rodda said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“More importantly, if the remaining three holes due in early September continue to confirm the consistent ore grade, it will provide significant data for our ongoing assessment and planning for an initial mining approach.

“The ability to target high-grade zones in the early years of mining will benefit any economic assessment of the project significantly.

“Therefore, the company has been focused on defining these higher-grade zones along the 15 kilometres strike.

“With multiple high-grade zones now identified, our experienced project development team will incorporate these results into the ongoing conceptual mine design work and hydrometallurgy test work that is underway.”

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

 

Web: www.podiumminerals.com

 

Medallion Metals Drills Harbour View Extension

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Medallion Metals (ASX: MM8) reported assay results from recent drilling undertaken at the company’s Ravensthorpe gold project in Western Australia.

The latest results stem from diamond drilling completed at the Harbour View deposit within the project’s Kundip Mining Centre (KMC).

Medallion Metals explained the step out drilling was carried out to test both the periphery and beyond the limit of the existing Mineral Resource Estimate (MRE) at the Harbour View deposit.

Continued high-grade gold and copper results were achieved, reinforcing potential at depth and along strike.

Highlights include:

DD22KP1149
7.15 metres at 3.61 grams per tonne gold, 1.55 per cent copper, 7.69g/t silver from 142.37m;

DD22KP1092
6m at 3.56 g/t gold, 0.1 per cent copper, 3 g/t silver from 43m;

DD21KP1073
3.43m at 5.68 g/t gold, 2.07 per cent copper, 17 g/t silver from 207.3m; and

DD21KP1073
5m at 3.16 g/t gold, 0.84 per cent copper, 5.3 g/t silver from 41m.

“These assays, which confirm previously reported visual results, demonstrate the significant depth and plunge extensions of the Harbour View and May structures and build further confidence in the structural and geological continuity of the deposit,” Medallion Metals managing director Paul Bennett said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“Shareholders should expect to see further resource growth in this area following these results and further drilling planned for the area.”

The KMC hosts Mineral Resources totalling 16.5 million tonnes at 2.1g/t gold and 0.3 per cent copper for 1.1 million ounce of gold and 50,000 tonnes of copper metal contained.

The KMC mineralised system extends over 2.5 kilometres and remains open at depth, along strike and is shallowly drilled.

Medallion has drilling scheduled to recommence Ravensthorpe gold project in September 2022 that will be targeting extensions to established Mineral Resources at the Gem and Harbour View deposits in addition to priority near mine and regional targets.

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

 

 

Web: www.medallionmetals.com.au

 

Dreadnought Resources greets Monday Market with Mangaroon Double Header

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Dreadnought Resources (ASX: DRE) burst out of a self-imposed trading halt with an announcement double banger from the company’s 100 per cent-owned Mangaroon rare earth project in the Gascoyne Region of Western Australia.

The first announcement concerned assays received for an additional 35 RC holes from 120 drilled at the Yin ironstone discovery that have continued to confirm thick, high-grade, rare-earth element (REE) mineralisation.

“Yin continues to deliver exceptional REE results that exceed expectations for the ironstones of the Gifford Creek Carbonatite Complex,” Dreadnought Resources managing director Dean Tuck said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“We look forward to receiving the remaining assay results from the 120 RC holes drilled to date which will comprise our initial JORC resource at Yin.

“Importantly this initial JORC resource will only cover approx. three kilometres of the approx. 16 kilometres of strike of the Yin Trend.

“We are also excited to announce in a parallel announcement the discovery at Sabre (formally known as Y3) and look forward to drilling the C1-5 carbonatite targets.”

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

The company’s second announcement was about Sabre, where RC drilling has intersected thick, rare earth element (REE) mineralisation over some 1km strike that is open in all directions.

Dreadnought has interpreted Sabre to be a 2-3km long REE bearing ironstone swarm that both outcrops and extends under shallow cover.

First pass, wide spaced drilling at Sabre and Y8 (possible extension of Sabre) is expected to finish in mid-September 2022.

“The significant scale potential of the Mangaroon rare earth project continues to be underscored with thick mineralised REE ironstones at the Sabre discovery (the prospect formally known as Y3),” Tuck said.

“With two Rare Earth discoveries in hand now at the Mangaroon REE Project we look forward to continuing the discovery drilling program with additional drilling at Sabre, Y8 and then the C1-C5 carbonatite targets all commencing this month.”

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

 

Email:

 

Web: www.dreadnoughtresources.com.au

 

 

Aurumin Drills Lengthy Two Mile Hill Gold Encounter

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Aurumin Limited (ASX: AUN) has delivered an impressive drilling result from the third hole of recently completed reverse circulation (RC) and diamond drilling at the company’s 100 per cent-owned Central Sandstone gold project in Western Australia.

Aurumin is conducting the drilling hoping to both extend and better define the company’s 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 the Two Mile Hill deposit.

The company’s hopes were heightened after drilling hole SN_TM_RD_22_0003 that returned an intersection of 352.8 metres at 1.5g/t gold from 267.2m down hole.

As a bonus, mineralisation continued beyond that interval with a further 145.2m at 0.5g/t gold returned.

Highlights within the larger interval included:

12.8m at 2.9g/t gold from 298.2m;
8.4m at 9.3g/t gold from 392.2m, including 0.6m at 119g/t gold from 396.4m;
14.8m at 2.2g/t gold from 461.2m; and
25m at 5.4g/t gold from 531.2m including 0.85m at 80.6g/t gold from 532.1m.

“This is another great result and, along with the previously released diamond results, continues to add to the picture at Two Mile Hill,” Aurumin managing director Brad Valiukas said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“Along with the recently completed RC drilling at Shillington, this sets us up to now model the Shillington and Two Mile Hill deposits as a single geological complex, with known grade in the banded iron formation, mafic and tonalite.

“We anticipate results for the final diamond hole and RC pre collars shortly.

“We look forward to releasing those results and commencing an updated resource model directly after.”

 

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

 

Web: www.aurumin.com.au

 

Austral Resources Reports New Drilling Results from Lady Colleen

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Austral Resources (ASX: AR1) reported new assay results from a reverse circulation (RC) drilling program currently underway at the company’s Lady Annie copper project at Mt Isa, Queensland.

Austral Resources has been drilling the Lady Colleen copper prospect within the Mt Kelly deposit at Lady Annie that has produced assay results of:

MTKC0628
18 metres at 4.21 per cent copper (from 160m downhole), including 5m at 7.1 per cent copper (from 164m downhole);

MTKC0627
8m at 3.05 per cent copper (from 139m downhole); and

MTKC0626
4m at 3.16 per cent copper (from 107m downhole) and 6m at 1.75 per cent copper (from 120m downhole).

Austral said the results received to date had confirmed the continuity and extent of the high-grade core at Lady Colleen that remains open along strike in both directions.

As the Lady Colleen drilling program continues, further assay results are expected over the coming weeks.

“These drill results combined with known high-grade mineralisation only 100 metres from the surface augurs well for the development of the resource,” Austral Resources CEO Dan Jauncey said in the company’s ASX announcement.

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

 

Web: www.australres.com

 

 

Tambourah Metals Expanding Lithium Projects at Russian Jack

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Tambourah Metals (ASX: TMB) is demonstrating lithium promise on the company’s Russian Jack project in Western Australia.

Tambourah Metals announced results of recent rock chip sampling at Russian Jack that produced assay grades up to 1,420ppm lithium.

The company has had two new exploration licenses recently granted taking the total tenement area to approximately 250 square kilometres of the Bonney Downs Monzogranite.

Located approximately 220 kilometres from Port Hedland and 75km from Nullagine the Russian Jack project has historic tin and tantalum prospects and is considered by Tambourah to be highly prospective for hosting lithium / spodumene bearing pegmatites.

“The initial pegmatites sampled from Russian Jack are very encouraging and demonstrate the potential of the tenure to host pegmatite swarms,” Tambourah Metals executive chairperson Rita Brooks said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“The Split Rocks Supersuite is the engine room of the East Pilbara for the emplacement of pegmatites and the granting of these two exploration licenses will provide the impetus for accelerated lithium exploration within this large tenement package.

“The granting of these tenements enables Tambourah to implement the planned project scale exploration program that commences with the analysis of hyperspectral data leading to site location and sampling of prospective pegmatites and culminating in drilling targets.”

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

Email: admin@tambourahmetals.com.au

 

Web: www.tambourahmetals.com.au

 

Mt Monger Resources Reviews REE potential at East Laverton Project

THE DRILL SERGEANT: Mt Monger Resources (ASX: MTM) is becoming increasingly confident of the REE potential of the Pt Kidman prospect, part of the company’s East Laverton project in Western Australia.

Mt Monger Resources recently completed a review of rare earth element (REE) potential Pt Kidman that entailed drilling that intersected encouraging widths and grades of REE mineralisation in all areas that were tested.

The area of known REE anomalies extends over and area of more than 20km by 10km, which the company has interpreted to indicate the Pt Kidman area represents a potentially large-scale, rare earth element project.

The recent drilling program only tested a small part of this prospective terrane but has locally shown good continuity and grade within the mineralised zone within the weathering profile over Archaean granitoid rocks.

“Since listing in July 2021 Mt Monger has been excited to test the potential for shallow, rare earth element mineralisation at our East Laverton project,” Mt Monger Resources managing director Lachlan Reynolds said in the company’s ASX announcement.

“A work program since that time has recently culminated in a reconnaissance aircore drilling program that confirmed the presence of broad, shallow mineralisation in the weathering profile over parts of the target area.

“The successful drilling has emphasised the potential scale of the REE mineralised terrane.

“The company’s exploration team now have identified numerous opportunities to test for both extensions of the known mineralisation and for new zones of mineralisation.

“Planning and permitting is currently underway to undertake further drilling and we are keen to understand if the area contains higher-grade zones and what variations exist in the ‘basket’ of rare earth elements that the mineralisation contains.”

 

TO READ THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT: CLICK HERE

 

Email: admin@mtmongerresources.com.au

 

Web: www.mtmongerresources.com.au