RE: RE: Ideas for a Quick Forensic Audit Now roll back the clock to when the CEO and Director resigned earlier this year and ask yourself the question, why would someone have left a company with such spectacular drill results?
Perhaps the prospect of having to produce
HoleName | AdCentreZ | AU | | Scanner Result | Date Drilled |
CM11-102 | 4381.01 | | 25.03 | | xx.xx | | yyyy-mm |
CM11-102 | 4380.15 | | 25.03 | | yy.yy | | yyyy-mm |
CM11-102 | 4379.3 | | 25.03 | | zz.zz | | yyyy-mm |
had more than a little to do with why someone would have walked away from a mountain of trouble (ah, I meant to say mountain of gold but that sarcastic gene is hard to turn off :)
The next evolution in the audit evolution ot that table would be add columns to capture the driller repsonsible and the QA person involved with the logging and splitting of the core, just to see who was so amazingly lucky to have hit such good results.
HoleName | AdCentreZ | AU | Scanner Result | Date Drilled | Driller | QA Geo |
CM11-102 | 4381.01 | 25.03 | xx.xx | yyyy-mm | aaa | bbb |
CM11-102 | 4380.15 | 25.03 | yy.yy | yyyy-mm | aaa | bbb |
CM11-102 | 4379.3 | 25.03 | zz.zz | yyyy-mm | aaa | bbb |
Hey, maybe we can get a TV series -- we could call it MSI (Mining Site Investigations) and it could start bigbab as the lead investigator.... But seriously, don't you just love what is possible assuming that you have NI43-101 compliant records. It is just a pity that PG didn't exploit some of this data in the prep of his report.