TSX: DIAM
SASKATOON, SK, May 27, 2024
/CNW/ - Star Diamond Corporation ("Star Diamond") is pleased to
provide a review of the work completed by Rio Tinto Exploration
Canada Inc. ("RTEC") on the Fort à la Corne Project ("FalC
Project"). From June 2017 until
June 2022, RTEC pursued extensive
exploration and evaluation analysis on two fronts at the FalC
Project:
- The successful completion and calibration of a trench cutter
bulk sampling and macrodiamond recovery program on Star
Kimberlite, with a view to expand this program to the Orion South
Kimberlite; and
- A separate team of RTEC geologists conducted the Orbit
exploration program, with the aim of prioritizing the diamond
prospectivity of all the other kimberlites that make up the FalC
Project.
RTEC also conducted detailed mining studies for the future
development of diamond mines on the Star, Orion South and Orion North Kimberlites. Many of
the conclusions of these mining studies confirm work previously
completed by Star Diamond.
Highlights of RTEC's studies suggest:
- The continuous and sequential mining of diamonds from
Orion South, Star and Orion North over a period of seventy
years;
- The ability to maintain stable pit slopes in the Fort à la
Corne Kimberlites through the use of wall buttressing and
dewatering;
- Analysis produced by RTEC estimates that, based on the
currently available size frequency distribution ("SFD") for the EJF
kimberlite within the Star Kimberlite, a 222,000 tonne sample of
the EJF is likely to yield 101 Specials (+10.8 carats) and one
Exceptional diamond (+100 carats); and
- RTEC confirmed that the TC EJF diamond parcel contained a
significant proportion of Type IIa diamonds (29% Type IIa +9
DTC).
Star Trench Cutter Bulk Sampling and Diamond Recovery
RTEC contracted Bauer Maschinen GmbH ("Bauer") to adapt a Bauer
BC 50 Cutter to sample kimberlite at depths of up to 250 meters
below surface. The trench cutter ("TC") has a rectangular profile
of 3.250 metres by 1.575 metres (3.200 by 1.525 metres drill tool
plus 25 millimetres all round overbreak). The trenches were
excavated using the custom Bauer BC 50 Cutter mounted on a Bauer MC
128 Duty-cycle Crane. Kimberlite excavated by the cutter bit was
pumped to the surface in a slurry, and kimberlite fragments between
+1.0 and 80.0mm were recovered from the slurry by the Kimberlite
Separation Unit. These kimberlite fragments were collected in cubic
metre bulk bags and kept in an on-site storage area by RTEC until
such time that they could be processed through the newly
constructed Consulmet Bulk Sampling Plant ("BSP"). The BSP
included a modern diamond recovery flowsheet with a TOMRA XRT
sorter to recover diamonds between 6.0 and 25.0mm and a narrow
range Dense Media Separator ("DMS") to recover the small diamonds
between 1.0 and 6.0mm. The BSP also included High Pressure Grinding
Rolls ("HPGR") to ensure liberation of +1.0mm diamonds from the
+6.0-25.0mm waste from the XRT sorter.
RTEC successfully drilled ten TC holes in the Star Kimberlite
and produced the total Early Joli Fou ("EJF") diamond parcel listed
in the table below in comparison with EJF parcels produced from the
previous Star Kimberlite Underground and Large Diameter Drill
("LDD") programs:
Diamond Parcels for Star Kimberlite EJF: TC, LDD and
Underground
Star EJF
Kimberlite
|
Kimberlite
Tonnes
|
Carats
(+1
DTC)
|
Grade
(cpht)
|
Stones
(+1
DTC)
|
Stones per
tonne
(+1
DTC)
|
Trench
Cutter
|
8,964.71
|
1,428.89
|
15.94
|
24,900
|
2.78
|
LDD Inner
|
8,440.57
|
979.39
|
11.60
|
10,238
|
1.21
|
Underground
|
43,372.18
|
7,425.42
|
17.12
|
56,007
|
1.29
|
The TC EJF diamond parcel shows improved diamond grade over the LDD
program and the TC grade is close to that for the Underground. The
significant increase in stones per tonne for the TC diamond parcel
is a function of the improved small diamond recovery by the modern
flowsheet of the BSP. RTEC specifically designed this BSP for the
effective liberation of small stones by the HPGR and their
efficient recovery as a result of the narrow range (1.0-6.0mm) of
the DMS. The small diamonds (+1DTC, +3DTC & +5DTC) of
Star and Orion South are of a high
quality and colour and, consequently, have significant value:
US$30 to US$50 per carat and opposed to the usual
US$5 to US$10 per carat. This efficient recovery of these
small stones significantly improves the diamond SFD and will add to
the overall diamond grade for Star and
Orion South in the pending revised Mineral Resource
estimate.
The TC EJF diamond parcel included 12 high value stones ranging
from 4.08 carats valued at US$5,100.00 to 16.96 carats valued at
US$110,240.00. RTEC confirmed that
the TC EJF diamond parcel contained a significant proportion of
Type IIa diamonds (29% Type IIa +9 DTC) and nine of the twelve most
valuable stones are Type IIa. The details of the high value TC
diamonds and their Type IIa statistics were reported in News
Release May 31, 2022
RTEC have documented that only Karowe Diamond Mine in
Botswana and Letseng Diamond Mine
in Lesotho have similar coarse
diamond SFD's and proportions of Type IIa diamonds as that of the
Star and Orion South Kimberlites. The majority of +100 carat
Exceptional diamonds mined globally are Type IIa and only two
mines, namely Karowe and Letseng, produce +100 carat Exceptional
diamonds on a monthly basis. Two other diamond mines, Cullinan in
South Africa and Mothae in
Lesotho, produce +100 carats
Exceptional diamonds on an annual basis. This poorly understood
sub-population of Type IIa diamonds represents only 2 percent of
global production, yet dominates the largest, highest value
diamonds in the world. These diamonds have a unique niche in the
luxury goods market, which is usually not impacted by global
uncertainty and certainly not by synthetics. Specials, greater than
10.8 carats, and Exceptionals, with values in excess of
US$10 million fill this attractive
niche, and the Star and Orion South Kimberlites, like Karowe and
Letseng, can provide these unique stones. Careful analysis produced
by RTEC estimates that, based on the currently available SFD for
the EJF kimberlite within the Star Kimberlite, a 222,000 tonne
sample of the EJF is likely to yield 101 Specials (+10.8 carats)
and one Exceptional diamond (+100 carats). Remembering that the PEA
anticipates an ore processing rate of 45,000 tonnes of kimberlite
per day and, consequently, Specials should be recovered on a daily
basis and Exceptional diamonds on a weekly basis.
Orbit Exploration Program FalC Project
The results of the Orbit exploration program highlighted the
kimberlites of Orion North (K120, K147, K148) as having significant
potential to add to the future Mineral Resources of the FalC
Project. See recent Orion North diamond valuation and Type IIa
proportion News Release May 16, 2024.
Orion Centre (K145), Taurus (K150, K118, K122) and K119 stand out
in the field as having a number of the attributes sought but
require further work to completely evaluate. The methodology and
conclusions of this work have already been published as News
Release April 13, 2022.
Mining Studies Completed by RTEC
RTEC developed a conceptual 74 year schedule for the sequential
mining of Orion South, Star and Orion North, assuming that the
run-of-mine ore capacity was limited to 14 million tonnes per
annum, and they anticipated 70 continuous years of kimberlite ore
processing and diamond production. Star
Diamond believes this work is not necessarily compliant with
NI 43-101.
Mining studies provided to Star
Diamond by RTEC demonstrated the ability to maintain stable
pit slopes in the Fort à la Corne Kimberlites. In addition, it was
determined that the use of a mixed mining fleet improves efficiency
and brings forward time to first ore, specifically: the use of
Bucket Wheel Excavators ("BWE") in the overburden along with in-pit
crush and convey systems ("IPCC") for delivery of ore to the
processing plant, combined with conventional truck and shovel in
the ore zones. The use of BWE's and IPCC has the potential to lower
the operating costs, along with a small mixed trucking fleet for
buttressing which also allows for operational flexibility. Correct
scheduling allows longwall mining benches to be exploited within
the confines of a circular pit. BWE or IPCC (or combination) for
overburden stripping and mining methods are electrically powered
and coupled with the accessible provincial grid power, present a
greener mining opportunity. Ultra-class battery electric haul
trucks are in development and can be integrated with BWE and
IPCC.
RTEC mining studies confirmed that pit walls in the Lower
Colorado Shale need to be minimized by leaving some kimberlite in
the pit wall, as this has a positive effect on stabilizing the pit
slope. Buttressing is considered to be a viable method of pit slope
stabilization particularly within weak units in the pit walls, such
as the Lower Colorado Shale and paleo-channel units contained
within some overburden areas. Dewatering of the Mannville Group
sediments is critical and has been proven as feasible and resolves
stability in the base of the pits. Depressurization of the Colorado
Shale is key to achieving an acceptable Factor of Safety ("FoS").
Based on the conceptual studies a FoS can be demonstrated at 1.3
for a pit with a pore pressure decrease of 50% above and beyond
unloading release. Once excavation begins and wall stability can be
assessed at a bench scale, performance-based design or
observational mining has potential to further increase slope design
angles. Observational mining and performance-based design have been
proven to successfully increase slope angles against design in the
Canadian oil sands.
George Read, Senior Vice
President Corporate Development of Star
Diamond said: "RTEC's successful development and
execution of the TC sampling program and diamond recovery in the
modern Consulmet BSP, generated a diamond parcel that can be
integrated with diamond parcels from previous underground bulk
sampling and LDD programs. The TC diamond parcel will improve the
overall diamond grade and SFD used by Star
Diamond to estimate the revised Mineral Resource. RTEC's
Orbit exploration program has successfully highlighted the Orion
North kimberlite as a huge volume kimberlite containing a unique
diamond population with a coarse SFD and uniquely high proportion
of Type IIa diamonds. RTEC's mining studies suggest the continuous
mining of diamonds from the sequential mining of Orion South, Star and
Orion North over a period of seventy years."
All technical information in this press release has been
prepared under the supervision of George
Read, Senior Vice President Corporate Development, a
registered Professional Geoscientist in the Provinces of
Saskatchewan and British Columbia and Mark Shimell, Vice President Exploration, a
registered Professional Geoscientist in the Provinces of
Saskatchewan and Alberta, who are Star
Diamond's "Qualified Persons" under the definition of NI
43-101.
About Star Diamond Corporation
Star Diamond is a Canadian-based
corporation engaged in the acquisition, exploration and development
of mineral properties. Shares of Star
Diamond trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the
trading symbol "DIAM". Star
Diamond's most significant asset is its 100% interest in the
Fort à la Corne Project in central Saskatchewan. These kimberlites are
located in close proximity to established infrastructure, including
paved highways and the electrical power grid, which provide
significant advantages for future mine development.
Website www.stardiamondcorp.com
Stay Connected with Us:
X (Twitter) - https://twitter.com/StarDiamondCorp
LinkedIn
- https://www.linkedin.com/company/star-diamond-corp/
Facebook - https://web.facebook.com/stardiamondcorp
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/stardiamondcorp
YouTube - https://youtube.com/@StarDiamondCorp
Caution Regarding Forward-looking Statements
This press release contains "forward-looking statements" and/or
"forward-looking information" (collectively, "forward-looking
statements") within the meaning of applicable securities
legislation. All statements, other than statements of historical
fact, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements in
this press release include, but are not limited to, Star Diamond's assessment of its cost and
management structure going forward.
These forward-looking statements are based on Star Diamond's current beliefs as well as
assumptions made by and information currently available to
Star Diamond and involve inherent
risks and uncertainties, both general and specific. Risks exist
that forward-looking statements will not be achieved due to a
number of factors including, but not limited to, developments in
world diamond markets, changes in diamond prices, risks relating to
fluctuations in the Canadian dollar and other currencies relative
to the US dollar, changes in exploration, development or mining
plans due to exploration results and changing budget priorities of
Star Diamond, the impact of changes
in the laws and regulations regulating mining exploration,
development, closure, judicial or regulatory judgments and legal
proceedings, operational and infrastructure risks and the
additional risks described in Star
Diamond's most recently filed Annual Information Form,
annual and interim MDA.
SOURCE Star Diamond Corporation