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White Rock Minerals Chasing Global Commodities

COMMODITY CAPERS: White Rock Minerals (ASX: WRM) describes itself as being a near-stage gold producer and poly-metallic and precious metals explorer.

The company’s aspirations are spread across a portfolio of three projects: the Woods Point gold project in Victoria, the Red Mountain silver-zinc VMS and Last Chance IRGS gold projects in Alaska USA, and the advanced gold and silver Mt Carrington project in News South Wales.

White Rock believes its portfolio provides investors with diversification through high-quality projects at differing developmental stages, exposed to different commodities, in two first world jurisdictions.

White Rock recently updated the Inferred Mineral Resource estimate for the Red Mountain project thanks to a doubling of the Dry Creek deposit high-grade Inferred Mineral Resource to 4.9 million tonnes at 8.4 per cent zinc equivalent or 393 grams per tonne silver equivalent (at a 3% Zn cut-off).

Dry Creek joins the West Tundra Flats as the most significant deposits within the Red Mountain project combining for a high-grade Inferred Resource of 11.6 million tonnes at 12 per cent zinc equivalent or 555g/t silver equivalent (at a 3% Zn cut-off).

The global Inferred Mineral Resource for Red Mountain now stands at 21.3 million tonnes at 8.5 per cent zinc equivalent for 1.8 million tonnes of contained zinc equivalent or 393g/t silver equivalent for 207 million ounces of contained silver equivalent.

Much of White Rock’s attention of late, however, has been focused on advancing its Woods Point gold project north-east of Melbourne in Victoria, which the company acquired in 2021.

Woods Point contains 660 square kilometres of highly prospective exploration ground that has seen historical production of more than 1,600,000 ounces of gold.

Along with the land holding, Woods Point also contains the Morning Star gold mine, which came complete with mining licenses, operational shaft and winder, underground workings, and a gold processing plant.

Over its lifetime, the Morning Star mine produced over 883,000 ounces of gold at an average grade of 26.5g/t.

 

 

 

 

With production now halted, White Rock has taken on the project with its focus on in-mine exploration, with the goal of following up high-grade gold potential in specific zones of the mine to define a long-term resource and mine plan, before considering a restart of production.

The most recent news from Morning Star came from an underground drilling foray that produced further assay results from the Kenny’s target area.

The Kenny’s target area includes multiple high-grade gold structures including the Whitelaw Reef, the Upper and Lower Burns Reefs, and the Upper and Lower Campbell Reefs.

This target area is located between 6 Level and 9 Level, where existing development provides access to the Whitelaw Reef and the immediate high-grade target area that White Rock is currently assessing for its future mining potential.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recent drill intersection assay results from the Whitelaw Reef, include:

22KPL9002
4.3 metres at 9.3 grams per tonne gold, including 0.3m at 68.3g/t gold (true width); and

22KPL9004
0.2m at 56.6g/t gold (true width).

These results followed previous drilling results from the Whitelaw Reef, which included:

21L7006
0.8m at 34.1g/t gold, including 0.3m at 107g/t gold (true width); and

MS402
0.6m at 74.8g/t gold (true width).

White Rock has since moved the underground drill rig to the southern end of the mine, still on 9 Level, where it is completing definition drilling on extensions to the recently mined McNally Reef with a view to re-commencing mining in the near term.

The underground drill rig will then resume drill testing the prospective Gap Zone between 10 Level and 14 Level in conjunction with continuing to drill nearer-term production targets above 9 Level as it progresses through different drill sites along 9 Level.

While the McNally Reef is being drilled, White Rock will undertake a mining assessment of the Whitelaw Reef to determine whether it can be included in future development and production plans or requires additional drilling to reach a decision point.

The company believes these current drill programs potentially deliver four working areas for future mining, dependent on the outcome of an assessment of drilling results for each, providing a pathway to recommence mining at:

1. McNally Reef extensions where development is in place to commence mining immediately;

2. Dickenson Reef where sufficient development is in place to commence mining in the short term;

3. Stacpoole / Age of Progress Reefs where development is in place and minor infrastructure requirements will allow mining to commence in the short term; and

4. Whitelaw Reef where minor development is required, and more substantial infrastructure is needed to enable mining to commence in the mid-term.

 

Email: info@whiterockminerals.com.au
Web: www.whiterockminerals.com.au
Directors: Peter Lester, Matt Gill, Jeremy Gray, Lord Christopher Wellesley, Paul McNally

 

White Rock Minerals Sees Red Mountain Potential in Alaska

THE INSIDE STORY: White Rock Minerals (ASX: WRM) is based in the historic mining town of Ballarat in Victoria, yet is exploring in New South Wales and Alaska.

White Rock Minerals owns the Red Mountain project in central Alaska – a high-grade zinc-silver-lead-gold project – and the advanced Mt Carrington gold-silver project in NSW.

Red Mountain has a Mineral Resource estimate of 9 million tonnes at 13 per cent zinc equivalent.

The company describes Red Mountain as being a quality advanced exploration project in an established mining district with plenty of potential to discover large zinc-silver-lead-gold-copper deposits in addition to extending the known zinc-silver-lead-gold deposits at Dry Creek and West Tundra Flats deposits.

There are already two high-grade deposits at the Red Mountain project, with an Inferred Mineral Resource of 9.1 million tonnes at 12.9 per cent zinc equivalent for 1.1 million tonnes of contained zinc equivalent at Dry Creek and West Tundra Flats.

This VMS polymetallic Resource zinc equivalent grade is made up of 5.8 per cent zinc, 2.6 per cent lead, 157 grams per tonne silver and 0.9g/t gold.

Recent drilling at Dry Creek intersected 1.4 metres at 13.9 per cent zinc, 4.4 per cent lead, 115g/t silver, 0.8g/t gold and 0.3 per cent copper for 21.6 per cent zinc equivalent.

White Rock reported assays from this drill core confirmed high-grade mineralisation had been intersected in massive sulphide over 200 metres down-dip from its previous drilling efforts.

The company interpreted this deepest intersection in the Dry Creek deposit to indicate a possible steeper dip to mineralisation than first interpreted, suggesting the deposit could be wide open down dip along its entire 1,200 metre strike length.

The massive sulphide intersected was interpreted to be the extension to the high-grade Fosters lens, the upper of two lenses in the Dry Creek deposit.

“This aggressive step-out drill hole at Dry Creek has shown that the deposit is wide open with fantastic high-grade zinc and silver persisting over 200 metres deeper than previously drilled,” White Rock Minerals managing director Matt Gill said when announcing the results.

“While this particular intersection is narrow, we know that typical VMS lenses pinch and swell along strike and down dip, as evidenced by previous drilling where true width intersections of up to 40 metres at the Fosters lens have been recorded.

“The majority of the current Inferred Resource is drilled to a depth of just 200 metres so a further step out of over 200 metres suggests considerable upside is possible in expanding the size of the deposit.

“Furthermore, ground conditions and the onset of winter terminated the drill hole prematurely with the high-grade Discovery lens remaining untested at this depth.

“This leaves considerable additional potential to this down dip position in the deposit, especially when considering the Resource footprint extends for 1,200 metres of strike.

“A targeted drill program early in the 2020 field season could unlock just how significant the Resource expansion potential could be.”

White Rock’s Mt Carrington project is underpinned by a Mineral Resource estimate of more than 340,000 ounces of gold and 23 million ounces of silver.

The Mineral Resources are situated in seven surface deposits, all located on granted Mining Leases and with developed infrastructure.

The company completed at Pre-Feasibility Study for Mt Carrington in late 2017, from which it has commenced progressing Mt Carrington through a Definitive Feasibility Study and permitting process prior to a Decision to Mine, at which point a construction and commissioning finance package is available, subject to certain conditions.

 

Email: info@whiterockminerals.com.au

 

Web: www.whiterockminerals.com.au