(TSX-V: TORC)
VANCOUVER, BC, July 7, 2022
/CNW/ - TinOne Resources Inc. (TSXV: TORC) ("TinOne"
or the "Company") is pleased to announce that its initial
results from exploration work at the Aberfoyle Project
("Aberfoyle" or the
"Project") in Tasmania,
Australia has delineated multiple extensive areas of tin
anomalism in surface rock sampling and the Company is progressing
toward integrated drill target definition.
Highlights
- Initial field mapping and rock sampling has been completed at
the Aberfoyle project with
collection of one hundred and seventy-three surface rock
samples.
- Forty-four of the samples returned tin values greater than 0.1%
and twenty-one samples over 0.25% with a peak value of 4.9% tin.
These anomalous samples are distributed across a large area of the
Project.
- Field mapping and interpretation of detailed public-domain
LIDAR elevation data has defined extensive areas of historical tin
mining activity over areas larger than previously known.
- Field mapping has defined alteration, brecciation and veining
in granite and sedimentary host rocks over extensive areas with
little to no modern exploration.
- Structural field mapping and historical data compilation have
provided insights into the controls on the historic Aberfoyle, Storeys Creek and Lutwyche mines
that will greatly assist in future drill targeting.
"We are extremely encouraged by the progress of our drill
targeting programs at Aberfoyle. We have unearthed widespread
areas of potential marked by tin anomalism, historical workings,
extensive alteration, veining and brecciation in areas that have
had little to no exploration work," commented Chris Donaldson, Executive Chairman. "Our
ongoing programs will deliver a level of data and understanding
that has never been seen before in the Project area that we
anticipate will lead to quality targets for future
drilling."
Drill Target Definition
Program
TinOne has been active at the Aberfoyle project since listing, undertaking
surface exploration work and compilation of historic mining and
exploration data in order to define drill targets for future drill
programs.
The Company has:
- Undertaken field mapping, prospecting and rock sampling, guided
by interpretation of areas of historical mining activity.
These historic areas have been shown to be more extensive than
previous data indicated and the use of detailed LIDAR elevation
data to guide field mapping has been invaluable;
- Completed 8km2 of gradient array IP-resistivity
surveys;
- Used expert-driven integrated structural and stratigraphic
analysis to develop a detailed understanding of the controls on
thickness and grade in historically mined areas;
- Reprocessed public domain aeromagnetic and radiometric data;
and,
- Initiated a major program to compile detailed 3D mine and
exploration data from the 20th Century mining and
exploration activity at the Aberfoyle, Storeys Creek, Lutwyche and
Kookaburra deposits. The majority of this data has not been
previously compiled in a full 3D environment and will greatly
assist drill targeting.
Results
The Company collected 173 surface rock samples across a large
extent of the northern block of EL 27/2004 (Figure 2). Forty-four
of the samples returned tin values greater than 0.1% and twenty-one
samples greater than 0.25% with a peak value of 4.9% tin.
Twelve samples returned tungsten values greater than 0.1%
WO3 with a peak value of 0.62% WO3.
Elevated tin was reported from across the full geographical
extent of the area sampled and from a wide range of geological
associations including quartz veins, greisen-altered granite,
quartz-cemented breccia, and altered Mathinna Supergroup
sediments.
The majority of these areas have had extremely limited
exploration and large areas of historical workings, alteration and
elevated tin (and lesser tungsten) have been returned from the
Company's programs in areas that have seen no modern
exploration. Drilling has been largely confined to the area
in the vicinity of the Aberfoyle-Storeys Creek-Lutwyche area
(Figure 2).
Future Programs
The Company is planning follow up mapping, continuation of the
3D data compilation, finalization of the structural interpretation
and extensive soil sampling programs to follow up the encouraging
results reported here.
It is anticipated that these programs will lead to definition of
integrated drill targets that, dependent on actual results and
priorities, may be drilled during Q4 2022.
About the Aberfoyle Tin
Project
Geology
The Aberfoyle project area
straddles the boundary between the Silurian to Devonian Mathinna
Supergroup sedimentary rocks and the Devonian Ben Lomond Granite.
The historic Aberfoyle (tin) and
Storeys Creek (tin-tungsten) mines as well as other vein systems
are hosted in the sedimentary rocks and occur as strike extensive
systems of sheeted and stockwork veining.
The Lutwyche prospect occurs approximately 1 kilometre northeast
of Aberfoyle and is comprised of
two sets of mineralised veins which can be traced along strike for
approximately 750 metres.
An additional sediment-hosted vein system, the Kookaburra, is
located 200 metres southwest of the main Lutwyche vein system and
is known to be approximately 40 metres wide with an along strike
extent of at least several hundred metres.
Mineralisation at Storeys Creek is hosted within a 30 to 50
metre wide, north-northwest striking sheeted vein array which dips
to the southwest. The system can be traced along strike for
300 metres and extends 400 metres down dip. The Ben Lomond Granite
crops out approximately 1km west of the mine and has been
identified at depth at 180 metres below the surface. Additional
poorly known sediment-hosted vein systems occur at Brocks, Eastern
Hill and elsewhere in the tenement.
Granite-hosted occurrences are developed throughout the exposed
areas of granitoid outcrop and consist of vein, disseminated and
breccia style occurrences with associated greisen style
alteration. These have given rise to historic small scale
hard rock and more extensive alluvial production in the Gipps
Creek, Rex Hill, Ben Lomond, Royal George and other
areas.
The Company interprets that both sediment- and granite-hosted
systems have developed in structural corridors of multi-kilometre
extent and that historic exploration has not systematically
explored these corridors. The Company further believes
systematic exploration of these prospective corridors will result
in the definition of high-quality drill targets.
Historic Production and
Exploration
Tin mineralisation was discovered at Storeys Creek in 1872 and
Aberfoyle in 1916, with the
deposits seeing sporadic exploration and mining activities until
closure in the early 1980s. Additional small-scale production
occurred at the Royal George deposit in the southern block of
EL27/2004. Exploration work was conducted during the mining phases
and sporadic exploration has been conducted since that time with an
emphasis on the immediate extensions of the Aberfoyle, Lutwyche and Storeys Creek
areas. Historic exploration (early 1980s and earlier)
consisted of drilling, geological mapping, rock sampling, minor
soil sampling and very limited electrical geophysics using the
technology available at the time. More recent exploration (1990s
until present) has consisted of minor soil sampling and limited
drilling at the Aberfoyle, Storeys
Creek and Rifle Range (northern part of Lutwyche) prospects.
Drilling has been concentrated in the immediate vicinity of
historic mines with minimal drilling conducted away from the
historic mine infrastructure. TinOne considers that extensive areas
of known systems have had little or no systematic exploration.
|
Recorded
Production - Tin
(Sn) tonnes
|
Recorded
Production
- Tungsten (W)
tonnes
|
Source
|
Historical
Production Estimates (4)
|
Aberfoyle
Sn/W
|
19,110
|
4,660
|
1
|
2.1Mt @ 0.90% Sn and
0.30% WO3
|
Storeys Creek
W/Sn
|
1,980
|
9,500
|
1
|
1.1Mt @ 1.09%
WO3 and 0.18% Sn
|
Rex Hill
|
651
|
|
2
|
826 tonnes of
cassiterite; 1,600 oz Ag
|
Royal George
|
1,105
|
|
3
|
0.170Mt @0.65%
Sn
|
|
|
|
|
|
Data Sources and
Notes
|
1) Seymour, D.B.,
Green, G.R. and Calver, C.R. 2006. The geology and mineral deposits
of Tasmania: a summary. Geological Survey Bulletin 72. Mineral
Resources Tasmania
|
2) Blissett, A.H. 1959.
The Geology of the Rossarden-Storeys Creek District. Geological
Survey Bulletin 46. Tasmanian Department of Mines.
|
3) Purvis, J.G. 1979.
Initial exploration at the old Royal George Tin Mine. CRA
Exploration.
|
4) Estimates of
historical production are not estimates mineral resource or reserve
estimates and no guarantee exists that historical records are
accurate or that historical size and grade are a reliable indicator
of future results. A qualified person has not done sufficient work
to verify these historical production estimates.
|
About TinOne
TinOne is a TSX Venture Exchange listed Canadian public company
with a high-quality portfolio of tin projects in the Tier 1 mining
jurisdictions of Tasmania and
New South Wales, Australia. The
Company is focused on advancing its highly prospective portfolio
while also evaluating additional tin opportunities.
TinOne is supported by Inventa Capital Corp.
Sample Methodology
Rock samples reported here were collected by experienced
geologists from outcrop, float and historical mining spoil
dumps. Samples were typically 1.5 to 2.5 kg and were placed
in pre-numbered, calico bags and then into large rice sacks which
were sealed for shipping. Due to the nature of the available
sample media, the samples are not continuous channel samples and
consist of multiple individual small rock pieces collected from an
area considered representative of the material being sampled.
Quality Assurance / Quality
Control
Rock samples were shipped to ALS Limited in Brisbane, Australia for sample preparation and
for analysis. The ALS, Brisbane
facilities are ISO 9001 and ISO/IEC 17025 certified. Tin and
tungsten are analysed by ICP-MS following lithium borate fusion
(ALS method ME-MS85), overlimit results are reanalysed by XRF (ALS
method XRF15b). Forty-eight element multi-element analyses
are conducted by ICP-MS with a four-acid digestion (ALS method
ME-MS61).
Control samples comprising certified reference samples,
duplicates and blank samples were systematically inserted into the
sample stream and analyzed as part of the Company's quality
assurance / quality control protocol.
Qualified Person
The Company's disclosure of technical or scientific information
in this press release has been reviewed and approved by Dr.
Stuart Smith., Technical Adviser for
TinOne. Dr. Smith is a Qualified Person as defined under the terms
of National Instrument 43-101.
Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services
Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture
Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of
this release.
SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD
LOOKING STATEMENTS
This news release includes certain "Forward‐Looking
Statements" within the meaning of the United States Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and "forward‐looking
information" under applicable Canadian securities laws. When used
in this news release, the words "anticipate", "believe",
"estimate", "expect", "target", "plan", "forecast", "may", "would",
"could", "schedule" and similar words or expressions, identify
forward‐looking statements or information. These forward‐looking
statements or information relate to, among other things: the
development of the Company's projects, including drilling programs
and mobilization of drill rigs; future mineral exploration,
development and production; the release of drilling results; and
completion of a drilling program.
Forward‐looking statements and forward‐looking information
relating to any future mineral production, liquidity, enhanced
value and capital markets profile of TinOne, future growth
potential for TinOne and its business, and future exploration plans
are based on management's reasonable assumptions, estimates,
expectations, analyses and opinions, which are based on
management's experience and perception of trends, current
conditions and expected developments, and other factors that
management believes are relevant and reasonable in the
circumstances, but which may prove to be incorrect. Assumptions
have been made regarding, among other things, the price of gold and
other metals; no escalation in the severity of the COVID-19
pandemic; costs of exploration and development; the estimated costs
of development of exploration projects; TinOne's ability to operate
in a safe and effective manner and its ability to obtain financing
on reasonable terms.
These statements reflect TinOne's respective current views
with respect to future events and are necessarily based upon a
number of other assumptions and estimates that, while considered
reasonable by management, are inherently subject to significant
business, economic, competitive, political and social uncertainties
and contingencies. Many factors, both known and unknown, could
cause actual results, performance or achievements to be materially
different from the results, performance or achievements that are or
may be expressed or implied by such forward‐looking statements or
forward-looking information and TinOne has made assumptions and
estimates based on or related to many of these factors. Such
factors include, without limitation: the Company's dependence on
early stage mineral projects; metal price volatility; risks
associated with the conduct of the Company's mining activities in
Australia; regulatory, consent or
permitting delays; risks relating to reliance on the Company's
management team and outside contractors; risks regarding mineral
resources and reserves; the Company's inability to obtain insurance
to cover all risks, on a commercially reasonable basis or at all;
currency fluctuations; risks regarding the failure to generate
sufficient cash flow from operations; risks relating to project
financing and equity issuances; risks and unknowns inherent in all
mining projects, including the inaccuracy of reserves and
resources, metallurgical recoveries and capital and operating costs
of such projects; contests over title to properties, particularly
title to undeveloped properties; laws and regulations governing the
environment, health and safety; the ability of the communities in
which the Company operates to manage and cope with the implications
of COVID-19; the economic and financial implications of COVID-19 to
the Company; operating or technical difficulties in connection with
mining or development activities; employee relations, labour unrest
or unavailability; the Company's interactions with surrounding
communities and artisanal miners; the Company's ability to
successfully integrate acquired assets; the speculative nature of
exploration and development, including the risks of diminishing
quantities or grades of reserves; stock market volatility;
conflicts of interest among certain directors and officers; lack of
liquidity for shareholders of the Company; litigation risk; and the
factors identified under the caption "Risk Factors" in TinOne's
management discussion and analysis. Readers are cautioned against
attributing undue certainty to forward‐looking statements or
forward-looking information. Although TinOne has attempted to
identify important factors that could cause actual results to
differ materially, there may be other factors that cause results
not to be anticipated, estimated or intended. TinOne does not
intend, and does not assume any obligation, to update these
forward‐looking statements or forward-looking information to
reflect changes in assumptions or changes in circumstances or any
other events affecting such statements or information, other than
as required by applicable law.
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SOURCE TinOne Resources Corp.