Baselode Energy Corp. (TSXV: FIND | OTCQB: BSENF) has provided the 2024 exploration plans for the company’s Bear, Catharsis, and Hook uranium projects in northern Saskatchewan’s Athabasca Basin area.
Baselode controls 100% of approximately 264,172ha for exploration in the Athabasca Basin area of Saskatchewan, Canada. The land package is free of any option agreements or underlying royalties.
“We are fully financed for the company’s largest exploration programmes on our Bear, Catharsis, and Hook projects. Our strategy entails a substantial allocation of resources toward discovering new deposits within our 264Kha package,” commented James Sykes, CEO, president, and director of Baselode.
“Our team has spent months of preparation to hone in on promising exploration targets with significant potential for discovery. Additionally, we will be expanding the ACKIO discovery near-surface zones.”
The plans include drilling in multiple target areas, expansion of the ACKIO discovery, and the utilization of cutting-edge technology for deeper exploration. Baselode aims to commence drilling in the coming weeks and is excited about the aggressive exploration programme.
Specifically, the Catharsis drill programme will consist of eight to 10 drill holes for 2,000m across five untested target areas, starting in mid-February. The Bear drill programme will involve six to eight drill holes for 1,500m in one to two untested target areas, starting in May. The ACKIO (Hook) drill programme aims to complete 35 to 50 drill holes for 12,000m to delineate and explore the ACKIO mineralized structure, starting in early June.
Finally, the Hook drill programme will include 16 to 20 drill holes for 4,000m in five untested target areas outside a 1km radius from ACKIO, with drilling scheduled to start in mid-June.
The company’s recent discovery, ACKIO, has shown promising results with multiple uranium pods and remains open for further exploration. Baselode’s exploration thesis focuses on finding near-surface, high-grade uranium orebodies outside the Athabasca Basin, using innovative geophysical methods to identify shallow targets for drilling.
For further information, please visit: www.baselode.com
To read more articles like this, please visit: www.theassay.com