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Archer Exploration – Campoona graphite deposit: Drilling update

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:18 AM on Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Highlights

  • Wide intercepts of graphite intersected in all seven holes drilled to date covering 500 metres of the estimated greater than 6km of strike of the deposit.
  • Visible flake component to the drill intercepts.
  • Graphite occurs as highly graphitic schist within graphitic gneiss.
  • The drilling reinforces the importance of Campoona as a high priority resource target.
  • Resource drilling is continuing.

The directors of Archer Exploration Limited (“Company“) are pleased to provide an update on the resource drill program at the Company’s 100% owned Campoona Graphite Project located approximately 12km north of the township of Cleve on Eyre Peninsula, South Australia.

On 15 March 2012 the Company announced that it had commenced a resource drilling program at Campoona. This drilling program was accelerated as a result of the discovery of visible flake graphite during the Company’s February drilling campaign. In the announcement of 15 March 2012 the Company reported wide intervals of exceptional grade graphite including:

  • 21m @ 15.0%C from 46m downhole in hole CSRC12_006.
  • 24m @ 10.4%C from 49m downhole, including 10m @ 16.7%C from 48m and 3m @ 13.9%C from 70m in hole CSRC12_003.

The current 2,000m RC and aircore resource drilling program at Campoona is designed to test the consistency of the graphite mineralisation along strike and to form the basis for subsequent infill drilling programmes designed to enable the estimation of a JORC Resource.

Drilling Completed to Date

The current Campoona drilling programme commenced on 14 March 2012 targeting outcropping graphite south of the historic Campoona graphite shaft. Graphite is observed at the surface over the 500m of strike and in places reaches more than 20m wide.

The summary of drill holes drilled in Campoona North is shown in Table 1. Drill holes CSRC12_008 – CSRC12_014 have been drilled since 14 March 2012.

Table 1. Campoona North Drill Hole Details

Hole ID Easting Northing RL Depth Dip Azimuth
CSRC12_006 637355 6289256 359 69 -60 130
CSRC12_007 637352 6289263 361 121 -60 130
CSRC12_008 637281 6289152 361 38 -60 110
CSRC12_009 637258 6289157 369 73 -60 110
CSRC12_010 637243 6289164 362 72 -60 110
CSRC12_011 637202 6289068 368 21 -60 110
CSRC12_012 637186 6289075 372 55 -60 100
CSRC12_013 637175 6289076 366 59 -60 100
CSRC12_014 637027 6288890 370 97 -60 110

All holes drilled in this current round of drilling (CSRC12_008 onwards) have intersected graphite including sections carrying visible flake.

Table 2. Campoona North Graphite Intercept Summary

Hole ID EOH(m) From(m) To(m) Graphite Interval(m)
CSRC12_008 38 0 31 31
CSRC12_009 73 0 67 67
CSRC12_010 72 24 67 43
CSRC12_011 21 0 10 10
CSRC12_012 55 0 35 35
CSRC12_013 59 20 55 35
CSRC12_014 97 75 90 15

Geological Observations

The current drilling indicates:

  • The Campoona graphite deposit dips steeply to the west.
  • The graphite unit shows strong correlation between drill holes in having a coarser graphite unit (about 10m true width) overlying finer grained graphite.
  • The graphite unit varies in width from 15m to greater than 25m.
  • The graphite footwall is marked by a thin hematite unit possibly reflecting a primary sulphide-rich sediment.
  • Graphite outcrops over the full 500m of strike drilled to date. The weathering seen in the pavement outcrop accentuates the flake component of the unit.

Figure 1. Drill hole location of Campoona Shaft holes.

Figure 1 shows the location of the holes drilled to date over the 500m of strike.

The next phase of drilling will include:

  • Additional drill holes to confirm graphite at holes 006 and 007.
  • Drilling to the north of the Campoona shaft.
  • Systematic drilling from the Campoona South outcrop to the Campoona shaft (a distance of 6kms) on 200m and 400m drill lines until the full strike of the deposit is covered.

The results of this phase of drilling will be used to design the Resource drill out.

Drill Results

Assay results for holes 008 to 013 are anticipated within a week.

For further information please contact:

Mr Greg EnglishChairman

Archer Exploration Limited

Tel: (08) 8272 3288

Mr Gerard AndersonManaging Director

Archer Exploration Limited

Tel: (08) 8272 3288

The exploration results reported herein, insofar as they relate to mineralisation, are based on information compiled by Mr. Wade Bollenhagen, Exploration Manager of Archer Exploration Limited. Mr. Bollenhagen is a Member of the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy who has more than seventeen years experience in the field of activity being reported. Mr. Bollenhagen consents to the inclusion in the report of matters based on his information in the form and context in which it appears.

Graphene and DNA

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:42 PM on Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

1:58 p.m., March 22, 2012–Look at the tip of that old pencil in your desk drawer, and what you’ll see are layers of graphite that are thousands of atoms thick. Use the pencil to draw a line on a piece of paper, and the mark you’ll see on the page is made up of hundreds of one-atom layers.

But when scientists found a way—using, essentially, a piece of ordinary sticky tape—to peel off a layer of graphite that was just a single atom thick, they called the two-dimensional material graphene and, in 2010, won the Nobel Prize in physics for the discovery.

Now, researchers at the University of Delaware have conducted high-performance computer modeling to investigate a new approach for ultrafast DNA sequencing based on tiny holes, called nanopores, drilled into a sheet of graphene.

“Graphene is a two-dimensional sheet of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb pattern” Branislav Nikolic, associate professor of physics and astronomy, said. “The mechanical stability of graphene makes it possible to use an electron beam to sculpt a nanopore in a suspended sheet of graphene, as demonstrated in 2008 by Marija Drndić at the University of Pennsylvania.”

Graphene has been among the fastest-growing areas of study in nanoscience and technology over the past five years, Nikolic said. He calls it a wonder material that has remarkable mechanical, electronic and optical properties and is being investigated for a variety of applications as diverse as plastic packaging and next-generation gigahertz transistors.

In the sequencing that he and other physicists have proposed, a tiny hole a few nanometers in diameter is drilled into a sheet of graphene and DNA is threaded through that nanopore. Then, a current of ions flowing vertically through the pore or an electronic current flowing transversely through the graphene is used to detect the presence of different DNA bases within the nanopore.

“Since graphene is only one atom thick, the nanopore through which DNA is threaded has contact with only a single DNA base,” Nikolic said.

In 2010, three experimental teams—led by Jene Golovchenko of Harvard, Cees Dekker of Delft and Drndić—demonstrated DNA detection using nanopores in large-area graphene. However, Nikolic said, the process moved too quickly for the existing electronics to detect single DNA bases.

The new device concept proposed by the UD researchers uses graphene nanoribbons—thin strips of graphene that are less than 10 nanometers wide—with a nanopore drilled in their interior. Chemists, engineers, materials scientists and physicists have devised various methods over the past three years to fabricate nanoribbons with a specific zigzag pattern of carbon atoms along their edges, Nikolic said. Nanoribbons could enable fast and low-cost (less than $1,000) DNA sequencing, he said, because of the quantum-mechanically generated electronic currents that flow along those edges.

Such quick and inexpensive DNA sequencing could usher in an era of personalized medicine, Nikolic said.

“We used the knowledge acquired from several years of theoretical and computational research on the electronic transport in graphene to increase the magnitude of the detection current in our biosensor by a thousand to million times when compared to other recently considered devices,” Nikolic said. “Two years ago, scientists would have told me our device was impossible, but there are so many people working on graphene that nothing is impossible anymore.

“Every time physicists think something is impossible, materials scientists or chemists come to the rescue—and vice versa.”

Nikolic said he and postdoctoral researcher Kamal Saha have employed their home-grown massively parallel computational codes to simulate the operation of the proposed nanoelectronic biosensor from first principles, using the supercomputer Chimera that UD acquired with support from a National Science Foundation grant.

“This project has to run on 500-1,000 processors for several months continuously,” he said. “We couldn’t have done it without UD Chimera becoming fully operational in early 2011.”

Nikolic, Saha and Drndić have recently published the results of this research in an article in the prestigious Nano Letters, a journal with an impact factor of 12.219 published by the American Chemical Society. Colleagues, led by Drndić at the University of Pennsylvania, will now seek to fabricate the biosensors in their lab, guided by the simulations presented in the article. Nikolic said that this research synergy will, in turn, allow for simulations of improved device designs.

Nikolic is also organizing an interdisciplinary workshop, sponsored by the Centre Européen de Calcul Atomique et Moléculaire, to be held in June in Pisa, Italy. The workshop will bring together some of the world’s leading experts in computational modeling and in the experimental investigation of nanodevices for third-generation DNA sequencing technologies.

Article by Ann Manser

Photo by Evan Krape

Source: http://www.udel.edu/udaily/2012/mar/graphene-genetic-sequencing-032212.html

AGORACOM Client Feature – Donner Metals Ltd. (DON: TSX-V)

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:28 AM on Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

DON: TSX-V

Donner Metals Ltd. is a Canadian development and exploration company focused on base and precious metal projects in Québec. Donner’s flagship project is a partnership with Xstrata Canada Corporation in the world-class Matagami Mining Camp district, covering both the current development of a new mine and on-going exploration activities. The area is host to historical production of 8.6 billion pounds of zinc and 853 million pounds of copper since 1963. The Matagami project is located in the Abitibi region of central Québec and it is supported by Xstrata’s existing mine infrastructure, a highly experienced workforce and an operating 2,950 tonne per day mill. As well, the area is serviced by highway, power, airport, railway and town site infrastructure. The Bracemac-McLeod deposit is located 6 kilometres from Xstrata’s Matagami mill complex. Mineral concentrates produced in Matagami are processed and refined at Xstrata’s facilities in Rouyn – Noranda and Montreal.

Bracemac-McLeod Mine

  • 35% Donner, 65% Xstrata Zinc
  • Production scheduled for January 2013
  • Initial mine life of 4 years on current mining reserve (diluted) of 3.73 million tonnes grading 9.60% zinc, 1.26% copper, and 28.25g/t silver and 0.43g/t gold
  • Positive ROR at base case = $0.80Zinc, $2.50 Copper

Mine Expansion

  • + 2.5 million tonnes in upside highgrade inferred resources identified
  • Inferred resources are open with high exploration potential
  • Numerous high-grade intersections outside of current resource envelope

The main access ramp reached 2,300 metres at Bracemac in early December, in advance of the scheduled year-end target, allowing full multi-face development to begin later in January. Total development now stands at 2,500 metres, including the main ramp to McLeod, three ramps turned off to the Bracemac Zones, and a turn-off to the backfill raise. The backfill raise, when completed, will be used as temporary ventilation until the ventilation raise is completed in the fall of 2012. Multi-faced development will now continue to the Bracemac Zones and the in the main ramps accessing the McLeod Zone.

VIEW Bracemac-McLeod Feasibility Report on SEDAR

Corporate Website / Hub on AGORACOM

Golden Hope Intersects 3.08 g/t Au Over 25 Metres and 2.01 g/t Au Over 32 Metres at Bellechasse-Timmins, Quebec

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:51 AM on Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

 

Golden Hope Mines (TSX VENTURE: GNH)( Pink Sheets: GOLHF)

Golden Hope Mines Limited recently announced further significant results from its 2011 drill campaign in southeastern, Quebec. The company is pleased to present the following highlights from holes BD2011-174, 175, 176 and 177.

Hole Number From To Length (m) Au (g/t)
BD2011-174 23 25 2 2.24
BD2011-174 106 107 1 2.97
BD2011-174 221 253 32 2.01
Including 233 238 5 10.18
Including 249 253 4 1.93
BD2011-174 266 267 1 2.33
BD2011-174 406 431 25 3.08
“The results continue to confirm significant widespread mineralization at Bellechasse-Timmins. We are pleased with the amount of important information that we continue to accumulate as we move closer to our initial goal of a resource estimate at Bellechasse-Timmins” states Frank Candido, President, Golden Hope Mines Limited.

Investment Highlights

  • New discovery resulting in 20km mineralized gold belt
  • 10,000+meter drill program currently in progress
  • Recent Drilling Intersects 6140 g/t Au (197.4 oz/t Au) of Gold Over 1 Metre
  • Target Potential for multiple multi-million ounce deposits
  • Positive Preliminary Metallurgical Testing – recovery ranged from 97% to more than 99%
  • Dominant land position in the most recent North American stalking rush

The Bellechasse Gold Belt

Location

  • Site of the first gold rush in North-America in 1828
  • Strategic land position comprising 80% of mineralized belt
  • 554 mining claims spanning 24,436 hectares
  • Excellent infrastructure nearby

Geology

Gold mineralization in the Bellechasse area occurs in quartz/carbonate veins in albite diorite and related intrusive rocks, and also in minor amount in the veins within the volcanoclastic rocks that host the diorite.

The area in which mineralization is known measures approximately 875 metres along 045° and approximately 650 metres across the regional strike. Gold-bearing zones consist in quartz-filled structures which locally exhibit stockwerk pattern and may be brecciated. They are known to develop in plug-like protrusions of diorite emplaced in the country rock (T1 Zone) and in larger diorite masses (T2 Zone).

Click to enlarge

Corporate Website / Golden Hope Hub

Golden Hope Repeats Long Intercept in Wedge Holes with 1.27 g/t Au Over 57 M

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:43 AM on Monday, March 5th, 2012

Golden Hope Mines recently announced further significant results from its 2011 drill campaign in southeastern, Quebec. The company received results from the wedge holes BD2011-167a and BD2011-167b.

The two wedges repeat the 53m long intersection of 0.63 g/t Au found in previously announced hole BD2011-167 with a 56m long interval of 0.75 g/t Au in BD2011-167a and a 57m long interval of 1.27 g/t Au in BD2011-167b. At its bottom extremity, the wedge also confirms the previously encountered mineralization found in BD2011-167 as BD2011-167a intersected 5m of 2.59 g/t Au including 1m of 12.40 g/t Au. The horizontal extent of this zone is still under investigation with more drilling planned in the immediate vicinity.

“The wedges confirm the presence of the mineralized zone of gold and in particular repeat the previous announced results from hole 167. We are pleased with the amount of important information that we continue to accumulate as we move closer to our initial goal of a resource estimate at Bellechasse-Timmins” states Frank Candido, President, Golden Hope Mines Limited.

About Golden Hope Mines Limited:

Golden Hope Mines Limited is a mineral exploration company that seeks to grow shareholder value through the acquisition, exploration and development of potentially large-scale gold and base metal projects suitable for underground and/or open-pit mining. The company’s focus is in southeastern Quebec, Canada. The company’s claim blocks lie within an area that extends approximately 100 kilometres along the Appalachians of southern Quebec from near Ste-Lucie-de-Beauregard to about 16 kilometres southwest of Beauceville.

Corporate Website / Golden Hope Hub

Meet PFN Capital Corp. Management Team at 2012 PDAC – Booth 2129

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:19 PM on Thursday, March 1st, 2012

     PACIFIC NORTH WEST CAPITAL CORP. – (PFN:TSX)

One of North America’s newest and largest primary platinum group metals deposits, located in the well established mining community of Sudbury, Ontario

  • M&I resource of 733,000 oz Pd, 245,100 oz Pt, and 43,600 oz Au
  • $5 million, 15,500 m Multi Phase drill program at River Valley ongoing, completion Winter 2012 —Exploration upside 9 km strike horizon open at depth, possible parallel structures

About Pacific North West Capital

  • Pacific North West Capital is a mineral exploration company focused on the exploration and development of platinum group metals (PGM’s), precious and base metals
  • The corporate philosophy is to be a project generator, explorer and operator with the objective to option or joint venture our mineral projects with major mining companies.
  • Focus for 2012 is to advance the company’s flagship project, the River Valley deposit and maintain our aggressive search for new assets and viable exploration programs

Well Positioned For Success

  • Ability to share resources, costs, and expertise as a member of the International Metals Group
  • Emerging market demand and rising prices for PGM
  • Extensive resource sector experience among management and Board of Directors
  • Significant shareholder of Fire River Gold (TSX.V: FAU) & Next Gen Metals (TSX.V:N)

 

Pacific North West Capital belongs to the International Metals Group. Here are our other great companies.

Strike Identifies New 2 km Long Conductor at Deep Bay East Graphite Project

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:38 AM on Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

Strike Identifies New 2 km Long Conductor at Deep Bay East Graphite Project

The company completed the previously announced helicopter-borne VTEM – Electromagnetic Survey of its Deep Bay East Graphite property located within north eastern Saskatchewan.

Preliminary data from the VTEM survey has highlighted a strong conductive horizon associated with the known graphite mineralization at Deep Bay East, and extending well beyond the known limits of the historic mineralization. Based upon the preliminary survey data, the historic conductor was confirmed at approximately 2.5 km strike length. A second conductor, approximately 2 km in length, was identified. Based on its orientation and regional mapping, the new conductor likely represents a structural repetition (folding) of the mineralized Deep Bay East horizon, and thus represents a high-priority exploration target.

Historic exploration of the Deep Bay East Property, confirmed potential for near surface, large flake, high-purity graphite deposit(s) as a result of surface trenching, mapping, and EM Ground Survey(s) and four diamond drill holes over a 1,600 metre east – northeast tending conductor. This highly conductive zone, first identified in the 1970’s, was confirmed by the recent VTEM survey. Some of the historic results include:

DB-1: 22.9 metres averaging 4.02% C beginning at a depth of only 10.7 metres;
DB-2: 35.1 metre interval of 8.58% C
DB-3: 13.1 metres averaging 8.97% C at depth of 7.32 metres and 9.06% C from 60.96 metres to 71.63 metres (10.67 m).

Approximately 15 kilometres to the west of the Deep Bay East property, the Deep Bay Graphite Mine is currently being advanced toward production. The geology and grades of the Deep Bay East Project appear similar to the Deep Bay mine’s deposit.

Hub on AGORACOM / Corporate Website

Strike Graphite is an AGORACOM Sponsor

 

Dr. Bill Stone Discusses Completion of First Component of Environmental Baseline Study

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 4:58 PM on Friday, February 24th, 2012

                               PACIFIC NORTH WEST CAPITAL CORP.

                                                           (PFN:TSX)

One of North America’s newest and largest primary platinum group metals deposits, located in the well established mining community of Sudbury, Ontario

  • M&I resource of 733,000 oz Pd, 245,100 oz Pt, and 43,600 oz Au
  • $5 million, 15,500 m Multi Phase drill program at River Valley ongoing, completion Winter 2012 —Exploration upside 9 km strike horizon open at depth, possible parallel structures

About Pacific North West Capital

  • Pacific North West Capital is a mineral exploration company focused on the exploration and development of platinum group metals (PGM’s), precious and base metals
  • The corporate philosophy is to be a project generator, explorer and operator with the objective to option or joint venture our mineral projects with major mining companies.
  • Focus for 2012 is to advance the company’s flagship project, the River Valley deposit and maintain our aggressive search for new assets and viable exploration programs

Click on image below to listen to Interview

IR Hub / Corporate Profile / Discussion Forum

SKYPE INTERVIEW: Paul Gill Discusses Pending 43-101 On New Graphite Project

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:52 PM on Thursday, February 16th, 2012

As you know, AGORACOM conducts Beyond the Press Release Interviews for the purpose of speaking with small cap executives about recent news and events. Yesterday Lomiko Metals announced their intention to complete a 43-101 Report on Previous Drilling at the Quatre Milles Graphite Property.

LOCATION: The Quatre Milles Property is road accessible and is located approximately 175 km northwest of Montreal and 17 km due north of the village of Sainte-Veronique, Quebec. The property consists of 28 contiguous claims totaling approximately 1,600 hectares.

HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS:

-Graphicor completed reconnaissance mapping and prospecting as well as ground geophysics and a 26 hole diamond drill program totaling 1,625 metres.

-The work identified several conductive trends in the central portion of the property and at least three, relatively flat lying graphitic beds.

-Three surface samples were collected and analyzed returning results of 14.16% Cgf, 18.06% Cgf and 20.35% Cgf.

-23 of the initial 26 drill holes intersected graphite concentrations with graphite concentration in range of 4.69% in hole Q90-1 to a highlight of 8.07% Cgf over 28.60 metres in hole Q90-7.

-The highest individual assay was reported in hole Q90-10 reporting 15.48% Cgf over 0.50 metres.

Graphite Facts

-Natural graphite comes in several forms: flake, amorphous and lump.

-Southwestern Quebec is host to some of the most favorable geological terrain for graphite exploration in Canada and is known to host graphite resources, including the nearby Lac Des Iles mine operated by Timcal.

-Graphite has many important new applications such as lithium-ion batteries, fuel cells, and nuclear and solar power that have the potential to create significant incremental demand growth.

-There is roughly 20-30 times more graphite by weight need to produce a lithium-ion battery than there is lithium.

-Of the 1.2 million tonnes of graphite produced annually, approximately 40 per cent is of the most desirable flake type.

-High-growth, high-value graphite applications require large-flake and high-purity graphite which is the prime exploration and development target at the Quatre Milles Property.

Paul Gill, Chief Executive Officer of Lomiko Metals joins us to discuss the company’s exploration initiatives.

Take Me To The Interview

Lomiko Metals is a sponsor of our recently launched GraphiteStocksBlog.com . As always, assume we are horribly conflicted when speaking with sponsors and do your own due diligence.

Lomiko Hub / Corporate Profile / Graphite blog

Welcome To Our Newest Sponsor: Golden Hope Mines

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:48 AM on Thursday, February 16th, 2012

GNH: TSX-V

We want to thank Golden Hope Mines for becoming an AGORACOM Ad Sponsor and welcome them to the family.  Golden Hope Mines supports clean and intelligent small-cap stock discussion and is led by Frank Candido, as passionate a CEO as I’ve seen in a decade.  When you have a moment, show your appreciation by visiting the company through their logo above after you’ve had a chance to review their profile below.

The company’s current focus  is in southeastern Quebec, Canada.  The Bellechasse-Timmins gold deposit lies 5 kilometres southeast of St-Magloire within the Bellechasse Belt an approximately 18 kilometre long mineralized area.

Investment Highlights

  • New discovery resulting in 20km mineralized gold belt
  • 10,000+meter drill program currently in progress
  • Recent Drilling Intersects 6140 g/t Au (197.4 oz/t Au) of Gold Over 1 Metre
  • Target Potential for multiple multi-million ounce deposits
  • Positive Preliminary Metallurgical Testing – recovery ranged from 97% to more than 99%
  • Dominant land position in the most recent North American stalking rush

The Bellechasse Gold Belt

Location

  • Site of the first gold rush in North-America in 1828
  • Strategic land position comprising 80% of mineralized belt
  • 554 mining claims spanning 24,436 hectares
  • Excellent infrastructure nearby

Geology

Gold mineralization in the Bellechasse area occurs in quartz/carbonate veins in albite diorite and related intrusive rocks, and also in minor amount in the veins within the volcanoclastic rocks that host the diorite.

The area in which mineralization is known measures approximately 875 metres along 045° and approximately 650 metres across the regional strike. Gold-bearing zones consist in quartz-filled structures which locally exhibit stockwerk pattern and may be brecciated. They are known to develop in plug-like protrusions of diorite emplaced in the country rock (T1 Zone) and in larger diorite masses (T2 Zone).

Click to enlarge

Significant intersections include:

Hole
From(m)
To(m)
Length (m)
Au g/t
BD2011-157
1.2
382
380
0.61
Including
333
382
49
2.53
BD2011-158
101
116
15
1.22
BD2011-158
349
373
24
1.14
BD2011-158
385
393
8
1.64
BD2011-159
3
10
7
0.42
BD2011-159
30
33
3
3.32
BD2011-159
281
290
9
3.13
BD2011-160
3
18
15
0.71
BD2011-160
108
158
50
0.70
BD2011-164
13
38
25
0.92
BD2011-164
114
147
33
0.61
BD2011-164
193
215
22
0.85
BD2011-164
377
383
6
1.47
BD2011-164
431
446
15
7.64

Proposed Work

  Bellechasse-Timmins
Proposed Drilling
Click to view
Bellechasse-Timmins
Plan View
Click to download