this Historic hole at the 2750 zone showing high grade Chalcocite, has been extended in all directions . The nine holes drilled last summer in-filled around the historic holes proving the continuity of Chalcocite at surface and depth. The hole of 44m @ 2.9% equals 132foot depth of continious copper at 58 pounds per tn...
The 10,000 M drilling with the new RC drill will target the surface zones to a depth of 200 m so we should see about 50 new holes which will also be drilled between the Historic holes on the 4 zones. The roughly 87 historic holes and the 9 holes drilled last summer will be added to the new 50 drill holes for a total of 146 to-be included into a new 43-101 report.
The 2 current drill rigs at the camp will be used for deeper drilling which will see drilling at the 4100n where hole # 10 caught the corner of shallow plate. The plate sits at about the 300 m depth and the Plubming is in place for the other 6 plates all near their zones.
The sub-level large plate South of the 2200 zone will see a drill this summer. This large 5/6k long plate is one of 7 plates below the 7near surface plates
In my opinion,.the new 43-101 will show a large surface reserve ready for mobile mining.
BAY,. Qualified to write a scientific 43-101 Report..
Thomas, CEO.> Mr. Ullrich also established the Ar-Ar geochronology lab at the University of British Columbia
.Director. writes Bays news releases,.Mr. Dufresne is the President of Apex Geoscience, an ~60-person geological consultancy. With over 25 years of professional experience in all aspects of project generation, geological interpretation and project management ranging from grassroots exploration projects to feasibility-stage projects. Mr. Dufresne has extensive experience with a wide range of commodities and types of deposits as well as involvement in a number of scientific government studies. Mr. Dufresne has conducted property audits across North America and Australia and authored independent technical reports. His client list has included senior and junior mining companies, and government geological surveys. Mr. Dufresne is a Professional Geologist with the Association of Professional Engineers, Geologists and Geophysicists of Alberta (since 1989). He is also a member of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, Geological Association of Canada, and Association of Exploration Geochemists. Mr. Dufresne obtained his M.Sc. in Economic Geology from the University of Alberta, and a B.Sc. in Geology with a minor in Chemistry, from UNC-Wilmington.
Director,.Dr. Broughton is an acknowledged expert in sediment-hosted copper deposits with over 30 years’ experience in mineral exploration. He was Geology Manager for Cyprus Amax’s Kansanshi pre-feasibility project, now Africa’s largest copper mine, and part of AMIRA P544’s research team focused on the Zambian Copperbelt. From 2008 to 2016 he was Executive Vice President Exploration for Ivanplats, now Ivanhoe Mines. During his tenure, the world-class Kamoa Cu (Central African Copperbelt) and Flatreef PGE-Ni-Cu-Au (Bushveld Complex) deposits were discovered. He was co-awarded PDAC’s 2015 Thayer Lindsley Award for International Mineral Discovery (Kamoa), and AME BC’s 2016 Colin Spence Award for Excellence in Global Mineral Exploration (Flatreef discovery). Dr. Broughton is currently a Senior Advisor for Ivanhoe Mines. Dr. Broughton is a Fellow of the Society of Economic Geologists and a Fellow of the Geological Association of Canada. He received a BSc. (Hons) and an MSc. in Earth Sciences from the University of Waterloo and a Ph.D. in Geology from the Colorado School of Mines.
Allen King.Alan received a B.Sc. in geology from the University of Toronto in 1976 and an M.Sc. in geophysics from Macquarie University in 1989. From 1976 to 1990 he worked as a geophysicist in exploration and resource development in Canada and Australasia. From 1990 to 2012 he was employed by Inco /Vale as a senior geophysicist and then as Manager of Geophysics with responsibility for global exploration. As Chief Geophysicist for Vale Global Exploration Alan worked on geophysical applications for base metals, iron, manganese, coal and fertilizers (potash and phosphate) as well as target generation using regional and global data sets. Alan is currently working as a consultant with his own company Geoscience North