- First pass drilling commenced by Sultan Resources Ltd
("Sultan") within 300 metres of the license boundary of Kincora's
Cundumbul project testing the Big Hill porphyry target
- The Big Hill target has been described by Sultan as "the
standout, undrilled porphyry gold copper target in the central
Lachlan Fold Belt" 1
- The Big Hill magnetic complex is approximately 5km long by
2.5km wide situated within both the Sultan and Kincora licenses
with ongoing drilling to test coincident induced polarization,
magnetic and geochemical anomalies 1, 2
- Kincora operated drilling programs are ongoing at the Trundle
and Nyngan copper gold projects with preparations to commence
drilling at the Fairholme gold project
MELBOURNE, Australia,
May 19, 2021 /CNW/ - Kincora Copper
Ltd. (the "Company", "Kincora") (TSXV: KCC) (ASX: KCC) notes that
Sultan Resources Ltd ("Sultan") (ASX: SLZ) has commenced drilling
of its Big Hill gold copper porphyry target that sits on the
license boundary of Kincora's Cundumbul project 2.
Permits for up to 4500 metres of diamond drilling are in place with
a first pass 3-hole program for 1200 metres commenced, and expected
to take only 4 weeks, with drill collars within 300 metres of the
Cundumbul license boundary 1, 2 – see Figures 2 and
3.
Sultan states that the Big Hill target displays coincident and
complimentary magnetic and Induced Polarisation ("IP") responses,
high grade copper and gold rock chips, distinct gold and copper
plus pathfinder element geochemical soil anomalism and
porphyry-style alteration within host-rock geology and a structural
setting consistent with the upper or outer parts of an alkalic
porphyry gold copper system such as Cadia and Boda 1, 2.
The Big Hill target is located approximately 50km in equal distance
to both Cadia and Boda in the Molong Belt of the Macquarie Arc of
the Lachlan Fold Belt.
The Big Hill magnetic complex is approximately 5km long by 2.5km
wide situated within both the Sultan and Kincora licenses. A recent
IP survey by Sultan has identified a large-scale IP chargeability
anomaly approximately 1km long by 650m wide extending to 500m1 on their portion of the Big Hill
magnetic complex straddling the license boundary.
Sam Spring, President & CEO,
commented: "Since Sultan secured its portfolio in the
Lachlan Fold Belt in March 2020 it
has been actively advancing the Big Hill target as a priority with
boots on the ground exploration. This has resulted in the recently
commenced first pass 3-hole program, with all holes collared within
300 metres of our license boundary and one proposed to be drilled
up to the Cundumbul boundary.
Sultan's exploration approach and common large-scale magnetic
complex target, of which up to 40% potentially sits on our ground,
provides a template for Kincora to adopt should their drilling
prove successful. We are watching with keen interest wishing Sultan
all the best. The last exploration undertaken at the Cundumbul
project was funded by Mitsubishi in 2015 and included only
844m of prior shallow drilling at
other targets within the license.
With our drilling ongoing at Trundle and Nyngan copper gold
porphyry projects, and preparations to commence drilling our
Fairholme gold project in July, Kincora is set to enjoy significant
news flow across four strategically placed projects in the
Macquarie Arc."
1 Refer to Sultan
Resources press release April 29th, 2021 "Big Hill IP
results define 'classic' East Lachlan porphyry Au-Cu priority drill
target"
|
2 Refer to Sultan
Resources press release May 18th, 2021 "Maiden drill
programme at priority Big Hill porphyry Au-Cu target
commences"
|
Figure 1: Key Lachlan Fold Belt players
and junior explorers - Kincora projects with near term drilling
news flow highlighted in red
Central West, New South Wales, Australia
(View PDF)
Figure 2: Sultan has identified three
targets on the license boundary with Kincora's Cundumbul license,
including Big Hill 1, 2
Air
magnetics of the larger Big Hill magnetic complex across
neighbouring licenses and geochemical footprint identified by
Sultan
Kincora: Cundumbul (EL6661 - outlined in black); &, Sultan:
Star Plateau (EL8735 - outlined in white)
(View PDF)
Figure 3: Plan view of Big Hill target,
including the 3 initial first phase drill holes (3 x 400m deep holes for 1200m) with coincident induced polarization,
magnetic and geochemical anomalies 1, 2
(View PDF)
Figure 4: Kincora project drilling
timelines and upcoming catalysts
One rig remains
operational at the Trundle project with another recently mobilised
to the Nyngan project ahead of the commencement of a drilling
program at the Fairholme project
The first phase 3-hole program recently commenced by Sultan is
testing a common magnetic complex to Kincora's Cundumbul project
and is expected to take approximately 4 weeks (permits in place for
up to 10 holes x 450 m depth) 1,
2
(View PDF)
This announcement has been authorised for release by the Board
of Kincora Copper Limited (ARBN 45 457 763)
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain information regarding Kincora contained herein may
constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of
applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements may include
estimates, plans, expectations, opinions, forecasts, projections,
guidance or other statements that are not statements of fact.
Although Kincora believes that the expectations reflected in such
forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurance
that such expectations will prove to have been correct. Kincora
cautions that actual performance will be affected by a number of
factors, most of which are beyond its control, and that future
events and results may vary substantially from what Kincora
currently foresees. Factors that could cause actual results to
differ materially from those in forward-looking statements include
market prices, exploitation and exploration results, continued
availability of capital and financing and general economic, market
or business conditions. The forward-looking statements are
expressly qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement.
The information contained herein is stated as of the current date
and is subject to change after that date. Kincora does not assume
the obligation to revise or update these forward-looking
statements, except as may be required under applicable securities
laws.
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its
Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the
policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) or the Australian Securities
Exchange accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of
this release.
Qualified Person
The scientific and technical
information in this news release was prepared in accordance with
the standards of the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and
Petroleum and National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure
for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") and was reviewed, verified and
compiled by Kincora's geological staff under the supervision of
Paul Cromie (BSc Hons. M.Sc.
Economic Geology, PhD, member of the Australian Institute of Mining
and Metallurgy and Society of Economic Geologists), Exploration
Manager Australia, who is the Qualified Persons for the purpose of
NI 43-101.
JORC Competent Person Statement
Information in this report that relates to Exploration Results,
Mineral Resources or Ore Reserves has been reviewed and approved by
Paul Cromie, a Qualified Person
under the definition established by JORC and have sufficient
experience which is relevant to the style of mineralization and
type of deposit under consideration and to the activity being
undertaking to qualify as a Competent Person as defined in the 2012
Edition of the 'Australasian Code for Reporting of Exploration
Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves'.
Paul Cromie (BSc Hons. M.Sc.
Economic Geology, PhD, member of the Australian Institute of Mining
and Metallurgy and Society of Economic Geologists), is Exploration
Manager Australia for the Company. Paul
Cromie consents to the inclusion in this report of the
matters based on his information in the form and context in which
it appears.
The review and verification process for the information
disclosed herein for the Cundumbul project has included the receipt
of all material exploration data, results and sampling procedures
of previous operators and review of such information by Kincora's
geological staff using standard verification procedures.
JORC TABLE 1
Section 1 Sampling Techniques and Data
(Criteria in this section apply to all succeeding sections).
Criteria
|
JORC Code
explanation
|
Commentary
|
Sampling
techniques
|
- Nature and
quality of sampling (e.g. cut channels, random chips, or specific
specialised industry standard measurement tools appropriate to the
minerals under investigation, such as down hole gamma sondes, or
handheld XRF instruments, etc.). These examples should not be taken
as limiting the broad meaning of sampling.
- Include
reference to measures taken to ensure sample representivity and the
appropriate calibration of any measurement tools or systems
used.
- Aspects of the
determination of mineralisation that are Material to the Public
Report.
- In cases where
'industry standard' work has been done this would be relatively
simple (e.g. 'reverse circulation drilling was used to obtain 1 m
samples from which 3 kg was pulverised to produce a 30 g charge for
fire assay'). In other cases more explanation may be required, such
as where there is coarse gold that has inherent sampling problems.
Unusual commodities or mineralisation types (eg submarine nodules)
may warrant disclosure of detailed information
|
- Kincora Copper
Limited is the operator of the Cundumbul Project, with reviewing
historical exploration activities.
Rock sampling
program:
- All rock sample
site locations were traversed using a single point GPS
receiver.
- All rock chip
samples were taken in the field by previous explorer during the
field activities and mapping program.
- Rock samples were
collected from surface outcrop and float.
- Samples weighing up
to several kilograms were collected.
Soil sampling
program:
- All soil sample
site locations were traversed using a single point GPS
receiver.
- One 'B' horizon
sample was taken at each location.
- A hand auger was
used to obtain a 250 gram sample, which was sieved to achieve a
<3mm 'fine' fraction.
- The 250m x 250m
grid was completed in regional soil sampling program and XRF
analysis of all samples was carried out by previous explorer staff
using the Innov-X Delta Handheld XRF Analyser in a static test
bench/workstation setup.
- The infill soil
sampling program at the Mehruda Mine and Mehruda Big Hill prospect
areas on a 50m x 50m grid was also conducted with laboratory
analysis.
Drilling
program:
- Historic mechanical
auger drilling, RC and diamond core drilling was conducted in
Cundumbul project.
- One bulk sample
(1-2kg) was taken from the bottom of each auger drilling
hole.
- Two metre composite
samples were taken from the RC drilling.
- One
metre half-core samples were
taken from the diamond drilling.
|
Drilling
techniques
|
- Drill type (e.g. core, reverse circulation,
open-hole hammer, rotary air blast, auger, Bangka, sonic, etc) and
details (e.g. core diameter, triple or standard tube, depth of
diamond tails, face-sampling bit or other type, whether core is
oriented and if so, by what method, etc.).
|
- Historic drilling
on Kincora projects used a variety of methods including mechanical
auger drilling, reverse circulation, and diamond core.
- Mechanical auger
basement sampling program was completed at the Andrews, Bakers
Swamp, Gowan Green, Mehruda and Mehruda Mo Anomaly prospects. They
were drilled at 75m spacing along 200m spaced NE-SW orientated
lines, with an average refusal depth of 2.4m.
- 6 inch RC holes
were drilled at Andrews, Mehruda Mine and Mehruda Mo Anomaly
prospect areas with 300.1m maximum depth.
- Diamond drill holes
were conducted with size of HQ3 and NQ2 at Mehruda Mo Anomaly
prospect with 424.8m maximum depth.
|
Drill sample
recovery
|
- Method of
recording and assessing core and chip sample recoveries and results
assessed.
- Measures taken
to maximise sample recovery and ensure representative nature of the
samples.
- Whether a
relationship exists between sample recovery and grade and whether
sample bias may have occurred due to preferential loss/gain of
fine/coarse material.
|
- Drill Core recovery wasn't logged in diamond
drilling.
|
Logging
|
- Whether core and
chip samples have been geologically and geotechnically logged to a
level of detail to support appropriate Mineral Resource estimation,
mining studies and metallurgical studies.
- Whether logging
is qualitative or quantitative in nature. Core (or costean,
channel, etc.) photography.
- The total length
and percentage of the relevant intersections
logged.
|
Rock sampling
program:
- A short geological
description was taken at each sample point.
- The description is
qualitative and includes lithology, alteration and
mineralization.
- Drilling
program:
- All historical
diamond holes are geologically logged for their entire length
including lithology, alteration, mineralisation, veining and
structure.
- All core is
photographed.
|
Sub-sampling
techniques and sample preparation
|
- If core, whether
cut or sawn and whether quarter, half or all core
taken.
- If non-core,
whether riffled, tube sampled, rotary split, etc. and whether
sampled wet or dry.
- For all sample
types, the nature, quality and appropriateness of the sample
preparation technique.
- Quality control
procedures adopted for all sub-sampling stages to maximise
representivity of samples.
- Measures taken
to ensure that the sampling is representative of the in situ
material collected, including for instance results for field
duplicate/second-half sampling.
- Whether sample
sizes are appropriate to the grain size of the material being
sampled.
|
Rock and soil
sampling program:
- The sample
preparation for both rock and soil follows industry best practise
involving oven drying, crushing and pulverisation.
- Drilling
program:
- Two metre composite
samples were taken from the RC drilling.
- Where favourable
levels of sulphides were seen in RC chips, 1m re-splits were taken
of the selected interval.
- Once all geological
information was extracted from the drill core, the sample intervals
were cut with core saw, bagged and delivered to the
laboratory.
- One metre half-core
samples were taken from the diamond drilling.
- No duplicate
samples were taken.
|
Quality of assay data
and laboratory tests
|
- The nature,
quality and appropriateness of the assaying and laboratory
procedures used and whether the technique is considered partial or
total.
- For geophysical
tools, spectrometers, handheld XRF instruments, etc, the parameters
used in determining the analysis including instrument make and
model, reading times, calibrations factors applied and their
derivation, etc.
- Nature of
quality control procedures adopted (e.g. standards, blanks,
duplicates, external laboratory checks) and whether acceptable
levels of accuracy (ie lack of bias) and precision have been
established.
|
Rock sampling
program:
- The rock samples were submitted to ALS Orange for
analysis by fire assay (Au) and four-acid digest with
ICP-MS/ICP-AES finish for: Ag, Al, As, Ba, Be, Bi, Ca, Cd, Ce, Co,
Cr, Cs, Cu, Fe, Ga, Ge, Hf, In, K, La, Li, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Nb, Ni,
P, Pb, Rb, Re, S, Sb, Sc, Se, Sn, Sr, Ta, Te, Th, Ti, Tl, U, V,
W,Y, Zn and Zr.
Soil sampling
program:
- Certified reference
materials and blanks are introduced into the sample stream after
every 20 samples analysed, to ensure QAQC of the XRF
analysis.
- The soil samples
were submitted to ALS Orange and tested by Multi-Element Mass
Spectrometry (ME-MS43i) for Au, Ag, Al, As, Ba, Bi, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr,
Cu, Fe, Hg, Mg, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pb, S, Sb, Se, Sn, Te, Tl, W and Zn. A
certified reference material (standard) was also included for every
40 samples submitted.
Drilling
program:
- The auger drilling
samples were submitted to ALS Orange for analysis by the ME-MS43i
method (low-level precious and trace element analysis) for Au, Ag,
Al, As, Ba, Bi, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hg, Mg, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pb, S,
Sb, Se, Sn, Te, Tl, W and Zn. A certified reference material
(standard) was also included for every 40 samples submitted. The
auger chips were analysed with the ASD Terraspec short-wave
infrared (SWIR) spectrometer.
- RC and diamond
drilling samples submitted to ALS Orange for analysis. Samples were
analysed for Au, Ag, Al, As, Ba, Be, Bi, Ca, Cd, Ce, Co, Cr, Cs,
Cu, Fe, Ga, Ge, Hf, In, K, La, Li, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Nb, Ni, P, Pb,
Rb, Re, S, Sb, Sc, Se, Sn, Sr, Ta, Te, Th, Ti, Tl, U, V, W,Y, Zn
and Zr. Methods utilised were fire assay for Au, and four acid
digestion with ICP-MS or ICP-AES finish for all other
elements.
|
Verification of
sampling and assaying
|
- The verification
of significant intersections by either independent or alternative
company personnel.
- The use of
twinned holes.
- Documentation of
primary data, data entry procedures, data verification, data
storage (physical and electronic) protocols.
- Discuss any
adjustment to assay data.
|
- All data are
verified during the exploration programs.
- No twinned holes
have been completed.
- The intercepts have
not been verified by independent personal.
- Logging data is
captured manually and stored in a digital database.
- Assay data is
received from the laboratory in electronic format and uploaded to
the master database.
- No adjustments to
assay data have been made
|
Location of data
points
|
- Accuracy and
quality of surveys used to locate drill holes (collar and down-hole
surveys), trenches, mine workings and other locations used in
Mineral Resource estimation.
- Specification of
the grid system used.
- Quality and
adequacy of topographic control.
|
- A handheld GPS was
used to locate each sample point. Accuracy of +/- 5m is considered
reasonable.
- Collar positions
are set up using a hand-held GPS.
- Drillholes are
surveyed downhole every 30m using an electronic multi-shot magnetic
instruments, such as Ranger Survey for Diamond holes and Camteq
Proshot for RC holes.
- Grid system used is
the Map Grid of Australia Zone 55, GDA 94 datum.
|
Data spacing and
distribution
|
- Data spacing for
reporting of Exploration Results.
- Whether the data
spacing and distribution is sufficient to establish the degree of
geological and grade continuity appropriate for the Mineral
Resource and Ore Reserve estimation procedure(s) and
classifications applied.
- Whether sample
compositing has been applied.
|
- Regional soil
sampling at entire project area was collected across a grid spaced
at 250 x 250m.
- The infill soil
sampling program at the Mehruda Mine and Mehruda Big Hill prospect
areas were collected across a grid spaced at 50m x 50m.
- Mechanical auger
sampling program was drilled at 75m spacing along 200m spaced NE-SW
orientated lines.
- Other historic
drilling on Cundumbul project was completed at various drill hole
spacings and no other projects have spacing sufficient to establish
a mineral resource.
|
Orientation of data
in relation to geological structure
|
- Whether the
orientation of sampling achieves unbiased sampling of possible
structures and the extent to which this is known, considering the
deposit type.
- If the
relationship between the drilling orientation and the orientation
of key mineralised structures is considered to have introduced a
sampling bias, this should be assessed and reported if
material.
|
- There is no orientation data was collected in
historical drilling program.
|
Sample
security
|
- The measures taken to ensure sample
security.
|
- All geochemical samples were selected by geologists
in the field delivered directly to the
laboratory.
|
Audits or
reviews
|
- The results of any audits or reviews of sampling
techniques and data.
|
Mining Associates has
completed an review of sampling techniques and procedures at
Trundle dated January 31st, 2021, as outlined in the
Independent Technical Report included in the ASX listing
prospectus, which is available at:
https://www.kincoracopper.com/investors/asx-prospectus
|
Section 2 Reporting of Exploration Results
(Criteria listed in the preceding section also apply to this
section.)
Criteria
|
JORC Code
explanation
|
Commentary
|
Mineral tenement and
land tenure status
|
- Type, reference
name/number, location and ownership including agreements or
material issues with third parties such as joint ventures,
partnerships, overriding royalties, native title interests,
historical sites, wilderness or national park and environmental
settings.
- The security of
the tenure held at the time of reporting along with any known
impediments to obtaining a licence to operate in the
area.
|
- Kincora holds two
exploration licences in NSW and rights to a further six exploration
licences through an agreement with RareX Limited
(RareX).
- EL8222, EL6552,
EL6915, EL8960, EL6661 and EL7748 are in a JV with RareX where
Kincora has a 65% interest in the respective 6 licenses and is the
operator /sole funder of all further exploration until a positive
scoping study or preliminary economic assessment ("PEA") on a
project by project basis. Upon completion of PEA, a joint venture
will be formed with standard funding/dilution and right of first
refusal on transfers.
- EL8502, EL8929 are
wholly owned by Kincora.
- All licences are in
good standing and there are no known impediments to obtaining a
licence to operate.
|
Exploration done by
other parties
|
- Acknowledgment and appraisal of exploration by
other parties.
|
- All Kincora
projects have had previous exploration work undertaken.
The review and verification process for
the information disclosed herein and of other parties for the
Cundumbul project has included the receipt of all material
exploration data, results and sampling procedures of previous
operators and review of such information by Kincora's geological
staff using standard verification procedures. Further details of
exploration efforts and data of other parties are providing in the
March 1st, 2021, Independent Technical Report included
in the ASX listing prospectus, which is available
at: https://www.kincoracopper.com/investors/asx-prospectus
|
Geology
|
- Deposit type, geological setting and style of
mineralisation.
|
- The project lies
halfway between the Cadia and Boda Cu-Au porphyries within the
central Molong Belt of the Ord Macquarie Arc, East Lachlan, NSW. It
is located on the intersection of a major N-S striking arc parallel
and NW-SE striking cross arc structural corridors (Press Release,
29th April 2021, Sultan Resources Ltd).
The Lachlan Orogen is approximately 700
km wide and 1000 km long and has disputed complex evolutionary
history. The Macquarie Arc is part of the eastern sub-province of
the Lachlan Orogen and is the host to numerous porphyry Au-Cu
deposits. It consists mainly of subduction-related Ordovician
intermediate and mafic volcanic, volcaniclastic and associated
intrusive rocks and was accreted to Gondwana in the Early Silurian,
and underwent rifting and burial in the Middle to Late
Silurian. It consists of four
structural belts, namely, the western (Junee-Narromine), the
central (Molong), the eastern (Rockley-Gulgong) Belt, and southern
(Kiandra) volcanic belts. These belts have most likely been formed
by rifting and dismemberment of a single arc, which developed along
the boundary between the Australian and proto-Pacific plates during
the Ordovician and was subsequently dismembered during the
Silurian. An entirely
intra-oceanic setting is postulated for the Macquarie Arc (Crawford
et al., 2007), with four phases of arc-type magmatism, the earliest
in the Early Ordovician, and culminating in the Late Ordovician to
Early Silurian. The four phases of volcanism in the Macquarie Arc
relate to distinct groups of porphyritic intrusions that vary from
monzodiorite-diorite through monzonite-granodiorite compositions
and correspond with porphyry coppergold and epithermal gold-silver
mineralisation
Lithology The Big Hill target exhibits features consistent with
an Alkalic intrusive complex, with mineralogy and textures typical
of the Cadia Intrusive Complex, including outcropping monzogabbro,
diorite, monzodiorite & mafic monzonite porphyry dykes and
small plugs or 'apophyses'. Intrusives have intruded interpreted Cadia and Boda
equivalent stratigraphy being the Late Ordovician Oakdale
Volcanics, including an upper volcanic dominant and lower
volcano-sedimentary package equivalent to the Forest Reef Volcanics
& Weemalla Fm at Cadia and Kaiser Volcanics & Bodangora Fm
at Boda. An upper sequence
consisting of basalt, andesite, trachyte & latite lavas,
volcaniclastics and sub volcanic intrusions including
feldspar-pyroxene porphyry dykes has been recognised. The lower
sequence dominated by finely laminated, interbedded, volcaniclastic
siltstones and sandstones, with localised skarn
horizons.
- The geology of the
area comprises N-striking fault-bounded slices of Ordovician,
Silurian and Devonian rocks. The main bounding structures are major
E-dipping thrusts of regional extent. One of these, the Neurea
Fault, brings Silurian Mumbil Group sedimentary rocks and Devonian
Cuga Burga Volcanics and the youngest Ordovician units in the
hanging wall, into contact with Early Ordovician Mitchell Formation
and Hensleigh Siltstone in the footwall. The Narragal Fault is the
bounding E-dipping thrust on the eastern side of the Molong
Volcanic Belt (MVB).
- Kincora is
exploring for porphyry-style copper and gold mineralisation,
copper-gold skarn plus related high sulphidation and epithermal
gold systems.
|
Drill hole
Information
|
- A summary of all
information material to the understanding of the exploration
results including a tabulation of the following information for all
Material drill holes:
- easting and
northing of the drill hole collar
- elevation or RL
(Reduced Level – elevation above sea level in metres) of the drill
hole collar
- dip and azimuth
of the hole
- down hole length
and interception depth
- hole
length.
- If the exclusion
of this information is justified on the basis that the information
is not Material and this exclusion does not detract from the
understanding of the report, the Competent Person should clearly
explain why this is the case.
|
- Kincora is yet to
undertake drilling at Cundumbul.
Further details of
exploration efforts and data of other
parties
are providing in the March 1st, 2021, Independent
Technical Report included in the ASX listing prospectus, which is
available at:
https://www.kincoracopper.com/investors/asx-
prospectus
|
Data aggregation
methods
|
- In reporting
Exploration Results, weighting averaging techniques, maximum and/or
minimum grade truncations (e.g. cutting of high grades) and cut-off
grades are usually Material and should be stated.
- Where aggregate
intercepts incorporate short lengths of high grade results and
longer lengths of low grade results, the procedure used for such
aggregation should be stated and some typical examples of such
aggregations should be shown in detail.
- The assumptions
used for any reporting of metal equivalent values
should be clearly stated.
|
|
Relationship between
mineralisation widths and intercept lengths
|
- These
relationships are particularly important in the reporting of
Exploration Results.
- If the geometry
of the mineralisation with respect to the drill hole angle is
known, its nature should be reported.
- If it is not
known and only the down hole lengths are reported, there should be
a clear statement to this effect (eg 'down hole length, true width
not known').
|
- Due to the
uncertainty of mineralisation orientation, the true width of
mineralisation is not known at Cundumbul.
- Intercepts from
historic drilling reported at other projects are also of unknown
true width.
|
Diagrams
|
- Appropriate maps and sections (with scales) and
tabulations of intercepts should be included for any significant
discovery being reported These should include, but not be limited
to a plan view of drill hole collar locations and appropriate
sectional views.
|
- Relevant diagrams are included in the body of the
report.
|
Balanced
reporting
|
- Where comprehensive reporting of all Exploration
Results is not practicable, representative reporting of both low
and high grades and/or widths should be practiced to avoid
misleading reporting of Exploration Results.
|
- Kincora is yet to undertake drilling at
Cundumbul.
Further details of
exploration efforts and data of other parties are providing in the
March 1st, 2021, Independent Technical Report included
in the ASX listing prospectus, which is available at:
- https://www.kincoracopper.com/investors/asx-prospectus
|
Other substantive
exploration data
|
- Other exploration data, if meaningful and
material, should be reported including (but not limited to):
geological observations; geophysical survey results; geochemical
survey results; bulk samples – size and method of treatment;
metallurgical test results; bulk density, groundwater, geotechnical
and rock characteristics; potential deleterious or contaminating
substances.
|
- No other
exploration data is considered material to the reporting of results
at Cundumbul. Other data of interest to further exploration
targeting is included in the body of the report.
- Historic
exploration data coverage and results are included in the body of
the report for Kincora's other projects.
|
Further
work
|
- The nature and
scale of planned further work (e.g. tests for lateral extensions or
depth extensions or large-scale step-out drilling).
- Diagrams clearly
highlighting the areas of possible extensions, including the main
geological interpretations and future drilling areas, provided this
information is not commercially sensitive
.
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- Further drilling is proposed to following recent
results at the Cundumbul target and the Company plans to drill
other project areas that have complementary but insufficiently
tested geochemistry and geophysical targets with the aim to find:
(a) and expand near surface copper-gold skarn mineralization
overlying or adjacent to (b) underlying copper-gold porphyry
systems.
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SOURCE Kincora Copper Limited