Drilling Completed And PEA Studies Underway
GT Gold Corp. (TSXV: GTT) has completed its exploration drilling programme at the Quash Pass target area within the Tatogga property located in the Golden Triangle region of northern British Columbia.
The company is also making strong progress with the finalisation of its PEA study at Tatogga.
“It is an exciting time at Tatogga, as we advance a Preliminary Economic Assessment (“PEA”) at Saddle North, progress toward geological modelling at Saddle South and continue to explore new targets on our highly prospective property,” said Paul Harbidge, President and Chief Executive Officer.
“We anticipate delivering shareholder value as we achieve our milestones heading into 2021.”
The Quash Pass target area is located approximately seven kilometres south of the known Saddle area mineralisation.
In total, GT Gold has drilled nine diamond boreholes comprising 4841m since the season began in early August. Drilling was completed at selected greenfield targets in the Quash Pass area, where two large-scale anomalous soil geochemical trends, spanning a strike length of at least six kilometres each have been identified and remain open.
Induced Polarisation (IP) geophysical surveys across the target area have returned coincident chargeability anomalies, and structural interpretations revealed district scale west-northwest trending faults.
The company is currently awaiting laboratory assay results for the majority of the drilled core and will be disclosing the results following their receipt, compilation, and interpretation.
Meanwhile,GT Gold has selected Ausenco Canada Engineering Inc. as the lead consultant for the Saddle North PEA. Ausenco has extensive recent experience and knowledge with mining projects in the Northwest/Skeena region of British Columbia. The PEA work is well underway toward a targeted release in the first quarter of 2021.
The company will be incorporating all additional metallurgical testwork results, which are now received in full from ALS Metallurgy, and which continue to favourably support the potential for a simple, conventional flowsheet for the processing facility and for a saleable concentrate with low levels of deleterious elements.
Five samples were taken from within the potential open pit limits (three from the broader envelope of mineralization as well as two from high-grade mineralisation) and four samples were selected from areas with underground mining potential, within the deeper high-grade core of mineralization. The metal recoveries varied between 85% to 92% for the copper and 57% to 69% for the gold.
The mining options under consideration in the PEA continue to be a combination of:
- a starter pit that accesses the mineral resources potentially extractable by surface mining methods to a vertical depth below surface of ±150 metres, which is situated within a hanging valley with favourable topography; and,
an underground bulk mining operation, accessing the higher-grade copper-gold mineralised core through a decline, which will have lower cost mining methods.