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Blue River Resources Ltd V.BXR.H

Alternate Symbol(s):  BRVRF

Blue River Resources Ltd. is a Canada-based mineral exploration and development company. The Company is in the business of acquisition, exploration, and development of mineral properties. The Company is focusing on its Castle Copper project near Princeton, British Columbia (BC) and SWB Mining Claims in Ontario and is assessing additional opportunities in the mineral exploration sector and possible further opportunities with their investment in Global Satellite Integration Ltd (GSIL). The Castle Project is located in the Similkameen area of BC. The SWB Mining Claims include properties, such as Scruffy Lake Property, Wildrice Lake Property, and Bedivere Lake Property. The Company has no producing properties. The Company's wholly owned subsidiary is Blue River Resources Inc.


TSXV:BXR.H - Post by User

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Post by Oilseekeron Jan 23, 2017 12:02pm
138 Views
Post# 25741701

Angkor, Blue River assays show Au in 2 m thick layer

Angkor, Blue River assays show Au in 2 m thick layer
Angkor, Blue River assays show Au in 2 m thick layer 2017-01-23 11:01 ET - News Release See News Release (C-ANK) Angkor Gold Corp Mr. Stephen Burega of Angkor reports ANGKOR REPORTS DISCOVERY OF GOLD AT OKALLA WEST CONCENTRATED IN 2 METRE THICK SOIL LAYER Angkor Gold Corp. has provided recent exploration results from the Okalla West exploration prospect, Cambodia. The Okalla West surface gold zone is within the Company's 150 km2 Banlung Exploration license, Cambodia. Work on Okalla West is done under an agreement with Blue River Resources Ltd. (TSX VENTURE: BRX). New auger assay results in the Okalla West gold zone shows that gold mineralization is located in a 2 metre thick lateritic soil layer which is covered by soil organics from 0.1 to 0.5 metres thick. Of the 235 samples analysed from within the laterite soil layer, the highest grade returned was 2.45 g/t Au. As previously reported, a Very Low Frequency Electro-magnetic (VLF-EM) survey was conducted in December 2016 over a 1.1 km2 area within the previously discovered 4 km2 surface gold anomaly. Interpretation of the VLF-EM survey suggests two structural fault systems with the possibility of containing multiple quartz veins. Four assayed grab samples from field mapping show evidence of a quartz vein system in the surrounding area outside of the 1.1 km2 covered by the VLF-EM survey. The assays of these four grab samples returned results of 0.52 g/t Au, 0.09 g/t Au, 3.09 g/t Au and 1.83 g/t Au. Based on the field observation and assay results, much of the gold appears to be a secondary deposit formed by groundwater leaching from quartz vein systems in the underlying bed rock then re-precipitating the gold into the laterite. Some of the gold is also hosted by locally derived bedrock clasts. This will be further examined during the upcoming trenching program, which is planned to begin in the next month. This is expected to consist of linear trenches and/or pits over 5 lines totalling approximately 7,200 cubic metres. Total volume will depend upon soil conditions and sampling procedure as determined during the program. NEW RESULTS FROM RE-TESTED ASSAYS Duplicate assays using a slightly different technique, done as routine part of the QA/QC protocol, showed considerable variance of results within individual samples, which is suggestive of a strong nugget effect. This presence of erratic coarse gold (the nugget effect) was further confirmed by metallic screen analysis on 11 selected samples of 87 with exceptionally high gold panning concentration index. (See Table 1, below.) Screen analysis (*3) Gold Assay Checks Sample index (*2) Coarse Fine Mean No. Northing Easting (*1) g/t g/t g/t g/t g/t g/t S103251 711597 1502144 9 0.04 2.71 0.14 0.20 0.16 0.11 S103299 711239 1501819 7 0.03 5.19 0.09 0.20 0.05 0.13 S103201 711356 1502141 25 0.03 5.44 0.05 0.14 0.04 0.06 S103324 711315 1501621 9 0.11 0.09 0.14 0.14 0.13 0.14 S103268 711281 1501940 7 0.02 0.04 0.14 0.14 0.12 0.15 S103254 711638 1502140 14 0.06 0.24 0.13 0.13 0.14 0.12 S103252 711597 1502144 19 0.05 0.10 0.08 0.08 0.06 0.10 S103271 711239 1501940 17 0.07 0.19 0.06 0.06 0.08 0.04 S103276 711559 1501940 5 0.02 0.22 0.03 0.04 0.02 0.03 S103206 711400 1502138 11 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.01 S103304 711282 1501819 5 0.02 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 (*1) High gold panning concentration index (*2) Au-ICP22-AES 50g Fire Assay Inductively Coupled Plasma-Atomic Emission Spectrometry (*3) Au-SCR22AA Screen Fire Assay Atomic Absorption Spectrometry (*4) Au_AA26 50g Fire Assay Atomic Absorption Spectrometry Table 1 - List of 11 selected samples for multiple assay techniques and results The table above shows how different the gold assay results can be depending on the method used. Standard fire assay results showed minimal gold even when the pan concentrate gold index ("Gold Index") was high. For example, although low results for sample S103201 were returned in both different assay techniques ("Assay" and "Checks"), the weighted mean assay result by metallic screen test ("Screen Analysis") shows a gold grade of 0.14g Au/t, which is over twice the best value returned by conventional direct fire assay. This is a function of the high grade (5.44g Au/t) in the coarse fraction, a clear indication of strong nugget effect. These results also confirm that although the pan concentrate gold index is an inexpensive and fast qualitative method of determining the presence of gold in the auger samples, it is not quantitatively reliable and higher gold assay results may be obtained using alternate testing methods. Year of the Profit, Oilseeker
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