interesting read
Highlighted " blow the cover"...hopefully we get some exciting results..
GLTA
At Colombia Mines (TSX: V.CMJ, Stock Forum), President Bob Carrington, in my estimation, is about to blow the cover off rock-chip and other copper-zinc-gold samples from his El Dovio project in northern Colombia. In addition, Mr. Carrington and CEO Nate Tewalt have identified four prime holes on La Escuela portion of Yuramalito in Antioquia, not more than an hour by rocky road from El Marmato
Bob is pragmatic. “Some may say we are doing too little drilling to test the Yuramalito target. Nate and I want to do success-oriented drilling at La Escuela. Four holes over 1,200 meters. If we see good results on those, we continue drilling. If not, we re-evaluate.”
As for about 3,000 hectares at CMJ’s Rio Negro just north of Bucaramanga, the concession is “on trend with the California district and we expect sampling results in the near future. (Rock chips from outcrop.)” Bob says.
On EL Dovio: “El Dovio has had a geologic team on-site taking surface channel samples … and as soon as we can plot map points we shall have a press release,” he says.
For those who know, as I acknowledge, that I am no geologist nor am I a metallurgist, I quote my friend Rodrigo, who has joined me today in a hunt for commercial and residential real estate in a suburb of Medellin not from the president’s finca. The quote: “I do not know how to make empanadas, but I know where to find them.”
El Dovio in the Department of Valle del Cauca presents the possibility of a besshi class of deposit that can be potentially intensely high gold. Samples are due as we write and speak from an SGS lab in Lima.
Says Carrington, a geologist who has been in Colombia since 1993 or so, “The rocks at El Dovio look the same as Windy Craggy in British Columbia.”
CMJ holds a 100% ownership interest in mineral exploration contracts covering 5,000 hectares situated along the border of the Department of El Valle and EL Choco in the Western Cordillera of Colombia and centered on the El Dovio VMS deposit.
Photo of Georges Juilland, forefront, and Carrington, middle, above – at Titiribi. Snapped by Thom Calandra with a Droid Motorola. Photo of Thom Calandra, also at Titiribi seven days ago – taken by Robert Carrington. Also a Droid. Motorola that is.)