TSX-V: GBR
VANCOUVER, BC, Oct. 25, 2021 /CNW/ - Great Bear Resources
Ltd. (the "Company" or "Great Bear"), (TSXV: GBR) (OTCQX: GTBAF)
today reported gold recovery test results from its 100% owned
flagship Dixie Project, in the Red
Lake district of Ontario.
Chris Taylor, President and CEO
of Great Bear said, "We selected what were anticipated to be the
'most difficult' mineralized domains to extract gold from at the LP
Fault, and are pleased to report very high gold recoveries at
all grades. This has strong positive implications for the
future development potential of the Dixie project. Similar very
high gold recoveries from the Dixie Limb and Hinge zones using
comparable grinding and cyanidation protocols indicates mineralized
material from all gold zones is likely amenable to processing
through the same extraction circuits. Initial LP Fault
cyanidation gold recovery tests confirm that non-refractory,
free gold dominates all low to high-grade domains tested
to-date. All Dixie gold zones have excellent potential for
significant gravity circuit gold recoveries, which will be
investigated in the next phase of metallurgical testing."
Highlights of Gold Recovery Results
Ten one kilogram representative samples were analyzed at Blue
Coast Research Ltd. ("Blue Coast") of Parksville, British Columbia (Table 1).
Samples were composited from 10 to 13 metre long core intervals and
were processed through a standard 48 hour bottle roll procedure at
40% solids, using a 1.0 g/L sodium cyanide solution.
- All tested combinations of grades, host rocks, sulphide
content and alteration styles recovered a very high percentage of
total gold, within a four percent range from 95.2% to 99.2%.
While high-grade gold samples recovered the highest percentage of
total gold during cyanidation, sub-gram low-grade gold
mineralization nonetheless achieved excellent recoveries of greater
than 95 percent. Table 2 and Figure 1.
- LP Fault gold mineralization is not refractory. All
samples, regardless of grade, were described as
"free-milling", indicating gold is not encapsulated in
sulphide accessory minerals. Free gold mineralization has
repeatedly been observed and reported by Great Bear, including
during petrographic/microscope analysis (see news release of
September 22, 2020).
Table 1: Metallurgical sample descriptions.
Test
ID
|
Grade
Range
(Au
g/t)
|
Total
Weight
(kg)
|
Core
length
(m)
|
Comments
|
CN21,22
|
0.50 – 1.0
|
19.62
|
12.30
|
Lower-grade bulk
tonnage halo, felsic volcanic with
trace sphalerite, < 3% pyrite
|
CN19,20
|
1.3 – 1.6
|
19.86
|
10.10
|
Bulk tonnage
halo, felsic volcanic/metasediment, < 2%
pyrite, trace arsenopyrite
|
CN17,18
|
4.1 – 4.2
|
21.26
|
10.65
|
Transitional
mid-grade mineralization proximal to
high-grade domains, felsic volcanic < 2.5% pyrite, trace
sphalerite,
< 1% arsenopyrite
|
CN13,14
|
9.2
|
21.46
|
13.00
|
High-grade
from the Auro2 domain which includes the
highest observed accessory arsenopyrite content,
felsic volcanic < 1% pyrite, trace pyrrhotite, 0.3 – 10%
arsenopyrite
|
CN15,16
|
> 20.0
|
21.28
|
11.85
|
High-grade from the Auro2 domain,
felsic volcanic.
Up to 10% arsenopyrite < 3% pyrite, trace sphalerite
|
Table 2: Gold recovery results from LP Fault
composite samples.
Test
ID
|
Purpose
|
NaCN
Conc
(g/L)
|
%
Solids
|
Primary
Grind
(p80,
µm)
|
NaCN
Consumption
(kg/t)
|
48 hr Au
Recovery
(%)
|
Residue
Grade (Au,
g/t)
|
Calculated
Head Grade
(Au, g/t)
|
CN-13
|
Baseline
|
1
|
40
|
77
|
0.19
|
98.0
|
0.18
|
9.24
|
CN-14
|
Lead
Nitrate
|
1
|
40
|
75
|
0.22
|
97.7
|
0.21
|
9.23
|
CN-15
|
Baseline
|
1
|
40
|
75
|
0.23
|
99.2
|
0.19
|
22.98
|
CN-16
|
Lead
Nitrate
|
1
|
40
|
74
|
0.27
|
98.7
|
0.34
|
26.58
|
CN-17
|
Baseline
|
1
|
40
|
75
|
0.18
|
97.5
|
0.11
|
4.19
|
CN-18
|
Lead
Nitrate
|
1
|
40
|
74
|
0.12
|
97.3
|
0.11
|
4.08
|
CN-19
|
Baseline
|
1
|
40
|
75
|
0.12
|
96.3
|
0.06
|
1.59
|
CN-20
|
Lead
Nitrate
|
1
|
40
|
74
|
0.19
|
96.4
|
0.05
|
1.36
|
CN-21
|
Baseline
|
1
|
40
|
77
|
0.23
|
95.2
|
0.04
|
0.75
|
CN-22
|
Lead
Nitrate
|
1
|
40
|
74
|
0.12
|
95.9
|
0.04
|
0.97
|
Ongoing Metallurgical Testing
The samples reported here represent the most mineralogically
complex intervals drilled to date at the LP Fault and have
higher accessory sulphide content than the zone's average. In
most gold deposits, zones with higher sulphide content have lower
gold recoveries than zones with lower sulphide content.
- Accessory sulphide content had no measurable effect on gold
recoveries, confirming that gold is not present within sulphide
mineral crystal structures.
- Autoclave processing will not be required for LP Fault
mineralized material.
- Additional gold recovery testing of low-sulphide material is
now also underway, which is expected to yield comparable high gold
recoveries.
- Great Bear management notes that current cyanidation gold
recovery results are in line with the high reported operational
gold recoveries at mines in the Red
Lake district, which generally recover +90%.
- Ongoing testing also includes "gold-only" LP Fault
mineralization such as that observed within high-grade intervals in
LP Fault discovery drill hole DNW-011 (see news release of
May 28, 2019) where gold is observed
without significant accessory sulphides in many samples. In most
gold deposits, gold-only mineralization yields the highest gold
recoveries.
Gravity gold recovery circuits are important,
low-cost components of many gold processing operations. Due
to the free gold character of all grade ranges of LP Fault
mineralization, the mineralized material is expected to be
amenable to gravity-based gold separation. Gravity
amenability is currently being tested by Great Bear.
Results of ongoing metallurgical testing will be reported
periodically as completed through 2022.
Gold recoveries from the Hinge and Dixie Limb
zones were originally disclosed by the Company on
November 12, 2020 and January 27, 2021, and are provided in Table
3.
Table 3: Gold recoveries from the Dixie Limb and Hinge
zones previously reported by Great Bear.
Test
ID
|
Feed
|
Purpose
|
NaCN
Conc
(g/L)
|
%
Solids
|
Primary
Grind
(p80, µm)
|
NaCN
Cons
(kg/t)
|
48 hr Au
Recovery
(%)
|
Residue
Grade
(Au, g/t)
|
Calculated
Head
Grade
(Au, g/t)
|
CN-1
|
Hinge Zone
Comp
|
Effect of
Primary Grind
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
112
|
0.37
|
95.4
|
0.64
|
13.96
|
CN-2
|
Hinge Zone
Comp
|
Effect of
Primary Grind
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
74
|
0.43
|
97.2
|
0.39
|
13.94
|
CN-3
|
DL Argillite
Comp
|
Effect of
Primary Grind
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
138
|
1.10
|
92.9
|
0.72
|
10.07
|
CN-4
|
DL Argillite
Comp
|
Effect of
Primary Grind
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
77
|
4.47
|
88.3
|
1.27
|
10.89
|
CN-5
|
DL High Sulphide
Comp
|
Effect of
Primary Grind
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
121
|
1.11
|
93.1
|
0.62
|
8.99
|
CN-6
|
DL High Sulphide
Comp
|
Effect of
Primary Grind
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
74
|
1.91
|
96.1
|
0.35
|
8.92
|
CN-7
|
DL Argillite
Comp
|
Effect of Lead
Nitrate
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
78
|
1.66
|
97.0
|
0.31
|
10.37
|
CN-8
|
DL Argillite
Comp
|
Effect of Lead
Nitrate
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
76
|
1.43
|
97.4
|
0.29
|
11.06
|
CN-9
|
DL Argillite
Comp
|
Effect of
Cyanide
Concentration
|
2.00
|
40.0
|
74
|
3.30
|
97.5
|
0.29
|
11.49
|
CN-10
|
DL Argillite
Comp
|
Effect of Lead
Nitrate / Pre-
treatment
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
79
|
1.56
|
97.1
|
0.29
|
10.06
|
CN-11
|
DL High Sulphide
Comp
|
Effect of Lead
Nitrate
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
76
|
1.55
|
96.9
|
0.29
|
9.35
|
CN-12
|
DL High Sulphide
Comp
|
Effect of Lead
Nitrate / Pre-
treatment
|
1.00
|
40.0
|
77
|
1.35
|
96.7
|
0.29
|
8.80
|
About the Dixie Project
The 100% owned flagship Dixie project boasts one of the largest
recent gold discoveries in a Canadian mining jurisdiction.
Proximal to major infrastructure near the town of Red Lake, Ontario, the Dixie property
comprises over 91.4 square kilometres of contiguous claims that
extend over 22 kilometres with a paved highway and provincial power
and natural gas lines. The property also hosts a network of
well-maintained logging roads which facilitate access.
23 high-grade domains are structurally and geologically
distinctive from the surrounding lower grade, bulk tonnage style
gold mineralization. Together, they span a strike length of
4.2 kilometres and occur within larger stratigraphically controlled
lower grade domains. They are characterized by high degrees
of strain and/or transposed quartz vein zones following two
distinct structural fabrics and transition from upper greenschist
to lower amphibolite facies metamorphism. Gold in the
high-grade domains is generally observed as free gold, is often
transposed into, and overgrows the dominant structural fabrics, and
is higher-grade on average than the surrounding bulk tonnage gold
zones.
To date, Great Bear has completed a total of 672 drill holes,
identifying three high-grade gold discoveries. The most
significant discovery is the large-scale "LP Fault" zone, which
comprises high-grade disseminated gold mineralization within broad
moderate-to-lower-grade envelopes in felsic volcanic and sediment
units. LP Fault drilling has identified gold mineralization
along 11 kilometres of strike length to date, and a detailed drill
grid is being completed along approximately 4 kilometres of strike
length. The nearby "Hinge" and "Limb" gold zones are more
characteristic of the renowned Red
Lake mined deposits, comprising gold-bearing quartz veins
and silica-sulphide replacement zones hosted by mafic volcanic
units. Over 80% of the Company's drill holes into the LP
Fault, Dixie Limb and Hinge zones contain visible gold
mineralization. Gold occurs mainly as free gold, neither
bound to nor within sulphide minerals.
Great Bear adheres to industry-leading quality assurance /
quality control (QA/QC) practices in data collection, analysis and
disclosure, and detailed assays including all historical LP Fault
drill hole data are available on the Company's website at
https://greatbearresources.ca/projects/overview/dixie-project-data/.
About Great Bear
Great Bear Resources Ltd. is a Vancouver-based gold exploration company
focused on advancing its 100% owned Dixie project in Northwestern Ontario, Canada. A
significant exploration drill program is currently underway to
define the mineralization within a large-scale, high-grade
disseminated gold discovery made in 2019, the LP Fault.
Additional exploration drilling is also in progress to expand and
infill nearby high-grade gold zones, as well as to test new
regional targets. The Company is currently in the process of
compiling all historical data together with incoming assay results,
with the goal of publishing an initial multi-million ounce mineral
resource estimate in accordance with NI 43-101 for the Dixie
project in early 2022.
Great Bear is a committed partner to all stakeholders, with a
long-term vision of sustainable exploration to advance the Dixie
project in a manner that demonstrates good stewardship of land,
operational excellence and accountability.
QA/QC and Core Sampling Protocols
Drill core is logged and sampled in a secure core storage
facility located in Red Lake Ontario. Core samples from the
program are cut in half, using a diamond cutting saw, and are sent
to Activation Laboratories in Ontario, an accredited mineral analysis
laboratory, for analysis. All samples are analysed for gold using
standard Fire Assay-AA techniques. Samples returning over 10.0 g/t
gold are analysed utilizing standard Fire Assay-Gravimetric
methods. Pulps from approximately 5% of the gold mineralized
samples are submitted for check analysis to a second lab.
Selected samples are also chosen for duplicate assay from the
coarse reject of the original sample. Selected samples with
visible gold are also analyzed with a standard 1 kg metallic screen
fire assay. Certified gold reference standards, blanks and
field duplicates are routinely inserted into the sample stream, as
part of Great Bear's quality control/quality assurance program
(QAQC). No QAQC issues were noted with the results reported
herein.
Qualified Person and NI 43-101 Disclosure
Mr. R. Bob Singh, P.Geo, VP
Exploration, and Ms. Andrea Diakow
P.Geo, VP Projects for Great Bear are the Qualified Persons
as defined by National Instrument 43-101 responsible for the
accuracy of technical information contained in this news
release.
Results for the metallurgical test program were provided and
approved by Andrew Kelly, P.Eng., of
Blue Coast Research Ltd., a Qualified Person for the purpose of
National Instrument 43-101.
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
"Chris
Taylor"
Chris Taylor, President and
CEO
Cautionary note regarding forward-looking
statements
This release contains certain "forward looking statements"
and certain "forward-looking information" as defined under
applicable Canadian and U.S. securities laws. Forward-looking
statements and information can generally be identified by the use
of forward-looking terminology such as "may", "will", "should",
"expect", "intend", "estimate", "anticipate", "believe",
"continue", "plans" or similar terminology. The forward-looking
information contained herein is provided for the purpose of
assisting readers in understanding management's current
expectations and plans relating to the future. Readers are
cautioned that such information may not be appropriate for other
purposes.
Forward-looking information are based on management of the
parties' reasonable assumptions, estimates, expectations, analyses
and opinions, which are based on such management's experience and
perception of trends, current conditions and expected developments,
and other factors that management believes are relevant and
reasonable in the circumstances, but which may prove to be
incorrect.
Such factors, among other things, include: impacts arising
from the global disruption caused by the Covid-19 coronavirus
outbreak, business integration risks; fluctuations in general
macroeconomic conditions; fluctuations in securities markets;
fluctuations in spot and forward prices of gold or certain other
commodities; change in national and local government, legislation,
taxation, controls, regulations and political or economic
developments; risks and hazards associated with the business of
mineral exploration, development and mining (including
environmental hazards, industrial accidents, unusual or unexpected
formations pressures, cave-ins and flooding); discrepancies between
actual and estimated metallurgical recoveries; inability to obtain
adequate insurance to cover risks and hazards; the presence of laws
and regulations that may impose restrictions on mining; employee
relations; relationships with and claims by local communities and
indigenous populations; availability of increasing costs associated
with mining inputs and labour; the speculative nature of mineral
exploration and development (including the risks of obtaining
necessary licenses, permits and approvals from government
authorities); and title to properties.
Great Bear undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking
information except as required by applicable law. Such
forward-looking information represents management's best judgment
based on information currently available. No forward-looking
statement can be guaranteed and actual future results may vary
materially. Accordingly, readers are advised not to place undue
reliance on forward-looking statements or information.
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SOURCE Great Bear Resources Ltd.