Winter drill program continues to enhance
project
TSX VENTURE SYMBOL: FUU
KELOWNA, BC, Feb. 14, 2019 /CNW/ - FISSION 3.0
CORP. ("Fission 3" or "the Company") is
pleased to announce results from the winter drill program at its
PLN project in the Athabasca Basin
region of Saskatchewan, Canada. A
total of 2,051m were drilled in six
completed holes and two holes that were abandoned due to poor
ground conditions. Drilling focused on the north-south
trending A1 basement hosted electromagnetic "EM" conductor, where
previous drilling in 2014, including hole PLN14-019 (6.0m @ 0.012% U3O8), indicated the conductive
corridor to be prospective for mineralization. All six holes
encountered strong hydrothermal alteration over variable widths and
a number of narrow radiometric anomalies, including a downhole
radiometric peak of 1,382cps (PLN19-026), often a key signature of
mineralized systems. The A1 conductive corridor remains
prospective to the south and PLN hosts multiple drill targets that
remain untested on the property, and will be the subject of future
exploration.
New Drill Program Imminent. The company is prepping
for a nine-hole work program at two of its Key Lake South projects
– Karpinka Lake and Hobo Lake – which is expected to commence
imminently. The Key Lake South projects are located
approximately 40km south of the historic Key Lake mine and
mill. In a setting analogous to Fission Uranium's PLS
project, the target is shallow depth, basement hosted uranium
mineralization outside of the present day Athabasca Basin margin. The Key Lake Shear
Zone (KLSZ) is a north-south trending, moderately meandering
litho-structural corridor that is present north of the Key Lake
deposit and continues to the south, through the Karpinka and Hobo
Lake properties. The KLSZ is a primary feature
associated with the occurrence of the historic Key Lake
deposit and its presence on the Key Lake South properties
represents an important exploration target.
News Highlights
- PLN Highlights:
-
- Winter Program Complete - 2,051m were drilled in
six completed holes.
- Drilling intercepted multiple radiometric anomalies and
strong alteration - Alteration and local radiometric
anomalies were encountered in several holes, particularly in hole
PLN19-026, which encountered a downhole radiometric peak of
1,382cps.
- Project hosts a number of prospective targets to be drill
tested in future programs, including further testing of the A1 EM
Conductor.
- Key Lake South Highlights:
-
- Drilling to commence imminently - Key Lake
South exploration program to include 9 holes for a total of
1,300m, on the Karpinka and Hobo
properties.
- The Key Lake South projects are located on the south-east side
of the Athabasca Basin area,
approximately 40 km south of the basin margin in a setting which
is analogous to Fission Uranium's Triple R deposit at PLS.
- The 23-day program is scheduled to commence by
mid-February.
Ross McElroy, COO, and Chief
Geologist for Fission, commented,
"Drilling this winter on the A1 conductive trend encountered
encouraging alteration and radioactive anomalies. The six completed
holes followed up a section of the trend where previous drilling
indicated encouraging signs of potential mineralization. PLN is an
exciting and highly prospective property in an emerging uranium
camp in the Patterson Lake area, where recent nearby discoveries of
world-class high-grade uranium deposits have been made. Future
drill programs will continue to test the vast potential of the PLN
project. We are also looking forward to our Key Lake South drill
program, which will commence later this month."
About PLN: The PLN package consists of a total of
36,537 ha in 37 mineral claims of which Fission 3 has a 90%
interest in 27,408 ha (10 mineral claims) and a 100% interest in an
additional recently staked 9,129 ha (27 mineral claims).
Azincourt Energy Corp. holds a 10% interest in 27,408 ha of the PLN
property.
The property, just inside the Athabasca Basin, is prospective for high-grade
uranium at shallow depth. The property is adjacent to, and
part of the same structural corridor as Fission Uranium's PLS
project, host to the Athabasca's
most significant major, shallow-depth, high-grade uranium
deposit. Previous drill results show large scale
potential. Drilling in 2014 identified a mineralized corridor
associated with the A1 ~700m in strike length, where results
returned significant mineralization and pathfinder elements
(uranium, boron, copper, nickel and zinc) and included hole
PLN14-019 which intercepted 0.5m at
0.047% U3O8 within 6.0m @ 0.012% U3O8.
About Key Lake South: The Key Lake area is an
important historic mining district. The Key Lake operations
is owned by Cameco Corp. (83%) and Orano Canada Inc. (17%) and
hosted the former Key Lake mine, which produced 208 million pounds
of uranium between 1975 to 1997 and is home to one of the largest
uranium mills in the world. The Key Lake mill processed ore
from the McArthur River uranium deposit, until Cameco announced in
2018 that McArthur River mining would be suspended indefinitely due
to low uranium prices. The area is considered highly
prospective to discover significant new uranium occurrences.
The 100% owned Key Lake South Projects consist of two projects
(Karpinka Lake and Hobo Lake) covering 19,377 ha in 42 mineral
claims. The properties are located approximately 40km south
of the historic Key Lake mine. The projects are
geologically situated within the extremely prolific
Wollaston-Mudjatic Transition Zone "WMTZ", notable for hosting the
majority of the major high-grade uranium deposits on the eastern
side of the Athabasca Basin. To the north, the Key Lake
Deposit is hosted within the northern portion of
northeast-southwest trending litho-structural feature known as the
Key Lake Shear Zone "KLSZ". The KLSZ continues southward
through the Karpinka Lake and Hobo Lake projects. Together
the properties cover approximately 50km of trend of the KLSZ, where
a number of geochemical uranium anomalies have been discovered and
where a network of EM conductors exhibit structural complexity
including off-sets, breaks, folding and other geophysical features
such as gravity and resistivity lows. These features are
often associated with uranium mineralization occurrences.
Table 1: Winter 2019 PLN Drill Hole Summary
Target
|
Hole
ID
|
Collar
|
* Down-hole
Radiometric Highlights
with Mount Sopris 2PGA-1000 Natural Gamma Probe
|
Overburden
Depth
(m)
|
Athabasca
Sandstone
Thickness (m)
|
Basement
Unconformity Depth
(m)
|
Total Depth
(m)
|
Azimuth
|
Dip
|
From
(m)
|
To
(m)
|
Width
(m)
|
CPS
Peak
|
A1
Conductor
|
PLN19-022
|
56
|
-62
|
184.8
|
185.6
|
0.8
|
547
|
115.6
|
19.5
|
135.1
|
290.0
|
PLN19-023
|
Abandoned
|
132.6
|
PLN19-023A
|
Abandoned
|
131.7
|
PLN19-023B
|
46
|
-77
|
148.5
|
149.4
|
0.9
|
731
|
114.8
|
13.1
|
127.9
|
389.0
|
PLN19-024
|
58
|
-72
|
203.6
|
204.9
|
1.3
|
912
|
111.5
|
8.0
|
119.5
|
266.0
|
|
|
|
214.3
|
216.1
|
1.8
|
891
|
|
|
|
|
PLN19-025
|
62
|
-72
|
196.4
|
196.7
|
0.3
|
548
|
118.8
|
0.2
|
119.0
|
299.0
|
|
|
|
199.3
|
199.6
|
0.3
|
644
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
212.8
|
213.6
|
0.8
|
834
|
|
|
|
|
PLN19-026
|
61
|
-79
|
154.0
|
154.3
|
0.3
|
712
|
108.5
|
16.8
|
125.3
|
353.0
|
|
|
|
162.8
|
163.2
|
0.4
|
1382
|
|
|
|
|
PLN19-027
|
47
|
-59
|
185.5
|
185.6
|
0.1
|
476
|
111.5
|
1.9
|
113.4
|
190.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
2051.3
|
Hole by Hole Summary
The current drill program
tested down-dip and along strike to the north and south of
PLN14-019.
PLN19-022
PLN19-022 was an angled hole designed
to test the up-dip extension of anomalous shear hosted
radioactivity intersected in PLN14-019 (6.0m averaging 0.012 % U3O8). The drill hole
intersected moderately bleached and fractured Athabasca sandstone from a depth of
115.6m to 135.0m, underlain by a thick sequence of variably
hematite, clay and chlorite altered granite, granitic gneiss, mafic
intrusive and pegmatite. A thin brittle-ductile shear zone was
intersected from 177.7m to
185.5m with elevated radioactivity
occurring between 180.0m to
180.5m up to 300 counts per second
(cps) on a RS-121 handheld scintillometer. Fresh basement rocks
were intersected at a depth of approximately 240m to a final depth of 290.0m.
PLN19-023B
PLN19-023B was an angled drill hole collared
30m grid north of PLN14-019,
targeting PLN14-019 anomalous shear hosted radioactivity along
strike. The first and second attempts to test this target, drill
holes PLN19-023 and PLN19-023A, respectively, were both lost
shortly after reaching bedrock due to poor ground conditions.
PLN19-023B cored Athabasca
sandstone from 114.8m to 127.9m underlain by a sequence of variably
altered granite, granitic gneiss and mafic intrusives. Millimeter
scale black radioactive blebs were identified in strongly hematized
basement rock around 139m down hole,
returning up to 210 cps on a RS-121 scintillometer. A thin
brittle-ductile shear zone was intersected from 188.2m to 193.7m
but was not radioactive. Fresh basement rocks were intersected at a
depth of approximately 244m to a
final depth of 354.8m.
PLN19-024
PLN19-024 was an angled drill hole
collared 30m grid south of PLN14-019
targeting the anomalous shear hosted radioactivity along
strike. Strongly fractured, locally bleached and hematized
Athabasca sandstone was
intersected from 111.5m to
119.0m. The Athabasca sandstone was underlain by variably
altered granite, orthogneiss and mafic intrusives with a strongly
clay altered graphitic mylonite occurring between 201.2m to 224.3m.
No anomalous radioactivity was intersected and the hole was
terminated in fresh basement at a depth of 266.0m.
PLN19-025
PLN19-025 was an angled drill hole
collared 30m grid south of
PLN19-024. The hole was designed to further test the strongly
altered graphitic mylonite along strike. A thin lens of
Athabasca sandstone was
intersected from 118.8m to
119.0m which was underlain by
variably clay, chlorite and hematite altered granite, orthogneiss,
mafic intrusives and pegmatite. A thick graphite and sulphide-rich
shear zone was intersected from 193.8m to 211.8m
with weak hydrothermal alteration present throughout. The hole was
terminated in fresh basement at a depth of 299.0m.
PLN19-026
PLN19-026 was an angled drill hole
collared 80m grid west of PLN19-024
and targeted the down dip projection of the strongly altered
graphitic shear zone, testing for basement hosted uranium
mineralization at depth. Athabasca
sandstone was intersected from a depth of 108.5m to 125.3m,
underlain by weakly hematite, chlorite and clay altered granitic
gneiss, mafic intrusives and granites. A weakly altered graphitic
mylonite was intersected from 259.2m
to 268.0m, with an associated
radiometric peak of 1328 cps (162.8m
to 163.2m). The hole was terminated
in fresh bedrock at a final depth of 353.0m.
PLN19-027
PLN19-027 was drilled approximately 1
km grid south of PLN14-019 and tested the up-dip projection of a
graphitic shear zone intersected in drill holes PLN14-011 and
PLN14-012 where a coincident north-south trending magnetic low is
present. Athabasca sandstone was
intersected from 111.5m to
113.4m, underlain by weak to
moderately altered granite and orthogneiss to a depth of
190.0m where the drill hole was lost
due to poor ground conditions. No anomalous radioactivity was
intersected.
Natural gamma radiation in drill core that is reported in this
news release was measured in counts per second (cps) using a Mount
Sopris PGA-1000 Natural Gamma Probe and a hand-held RS-121
Scintillometer manufactured by Radiation Solutions. The reader is
cautioned that scintillometer readings are not directly or
uniformly related to uranium grades of the rock sample measured and
should be used only as a preliminary indication of the presence of
radioactive materials.
Samples from the drill core are split in half sections on site.
Where possible, samples are standardized at 0.5m down-hole intervals. One-half of the split
sample will be sent to SRC Geoanalytical Laboratories (an SCC
ISO/IEC 17025: 2005 Accredited Facility) in Saskatoon, SK. Analysis will include a 63
element ICP-OES, and boron.
All depth measurements reported, including radioactivity and
mineralization interval widths are down-hole, core interval
measurements and true thickness are yet to be determined.
The technical information in this news release has been prepared
in accordance with the Canadian regulatory requirements set out in
National Instrument 43-101 and reviewed on behalf of the company by
Ross McElroy, P.Geol. Chief
Geologist and COO for Fission 3.0 Corp., a qualified person.
About Fission 3.0 Corp.
Fission 3.0 Corp. is a Canadian based resource company
specializing in the strategic acquisition, exploration and
development of uranium properties and is headquartered in
Kelowna, British Columbia. Common
Shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol
"FUU."
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
"Ross
McElroy"
Ross McElroy,
COO
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forward-looking statements included in this press release are made
as of the date of this press release and Fission 3 Corp. disclaim
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SOURCE Fission Uranium Corp.