Post by
Wangotango67 on Mar 26, 2023 10:14pm
CANADA PROMOTES CLEAN NICKEL vs INDONESIA
MARCH 15 2023
Here's a recent video explaining the issues in, Indonesia
mining nickel - people are fighting back....
There are several world major players,
who are using Indonesia nickel.
All the more reason for larger companies to point thier
compass to - Canada - where ethics and ensuring clean
nickel is performed with a conscience of, enviroment.
DARK SIDE OF MINING NICKEL IN - INDONESIA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNVwomMO7xY
China's been given th boot in Congo,
can't mine nickel or cobalt.
Again... all the more reason for Companies to begin
entertaining Canada to supply - battery metals.
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ONE LAST METNION OF - ACIDS AND ASSAYING
As pointed out in previous posts -
sodium peroxide has the extra element of, sodium
along with the hydrogen peroxide.
If chemical equation calcs reveal - sodium peroxide
does bond with nickel but also keeps the sodium attached,
it could / might go undetected by the spectrometer machine.
CNC has 3.5 million tonnes of ( metal ) nickel ) all categories
EVNI has 2.3 million tonnes of ( metals ) nickel all categories
Using EVNI's 1 billion tonnes of ore ( combined categories )
with - .25% - grade....
It would only take an extra ( 0.10% ) to match CNC's
3.5 million ( nickel metal ) value.
Which is why i feel it's important to at least pull a few cores
and see if ( standard ) 4 part acid would be better detection
with a fire assaying turing ores to - oxides and testing the
oxides for nickel content - old school way....
Veruss - few drops of a mist whereas, a larger molecule
bond would limit how much nickel can host with in one droplette.
1 billion tonnes
x 0.0035% ( 0.10 % more ) ( etra zero added ) for multiplcation
3,500,000 metal tonnes - same as cnc
Could the olivine nickel ( which is a nickel chloride salt )
have boneded to the sodium peroxide and gone undetected
by the labs spectrometer machine ?
One would only know... if they performed a few more assays.
Indifferent assays. For what it costs... and the potential to
find more nickel - i say... it's worh it.
Keep in mind... historical reports state - upto 15% of the 85%
sulphide nickel is locked up in the silicates... wink.
Do, excuse the few extra posts...
But it appears it was a busy weekend with - nickel news.
Lots going on.
Cheers...