Vangold Resources Ltd. (TSX-V: VAN) ("Vangold") recognizes the
global financial crisis is affecting countries and companies. These
are extraordinary and troubling times for all of us including our
shareholders. We are determined to survive. We have cash on hand of
$7.5 M (Cdn) and we have no debt. Thus, preservation of capital is
our key goal! All projects in our portfolio were evaluated on the
basis of cash outlay, projected cash flow, and time lines. We
conclude our immediate area of concentration will be our gas
projects in Alberta. The first program is due to spud in January
2009. We believe these projects will give us the earliest cash
flow.
Head Office
Stock Option Plan
An amendment to the Stock Option Plan is planned to decrease the
allowed numbers of options of common shares from 20% to 15% of the
issued and outstanding common shares. We presently have granted
stock options equal to about 8% of our issued and outstanding
shares. The proposed amendment to the plan is subject to the
approval of the TSX Venture Exchange and our shareholders.
Warrants Outstanding December 2007
An application is being made to the TSX Venture Exchange to
extend the December 2007 warrants for a further year and to reprice
them from $0.60 to $0.465. This proposed amendment requires the
approval of our shareholders.
Resignation
Mr. Tim Mills tendered his resignation to the Vangold Board of
Directors, effective October 31, 2008, to pursue other interests.
We thank Mr. Mills for his contribution.
Pacific Kanon Gold Corp. Initial Public Offering ("IPO")
The amended prospectus for the IPO is in the final stages and we
expect to be filed shortly. We expect to take it into market Q1 of
2009 provided the market is responsive to an IPO at that time.
Alberta, Natural Gas and Petroleum Resource Update
Vangold is pleased to announce that it has recently opened an
office in Calgary, Alberta to facilitate management of its Canadian
and International oil and gas assets. The office is manned by Mr.
Jonathan Schroeder, P.Geoph., who was recently appointed Director
of Oil and Gas Operations by Vangold. The office is located at
Suite 2600, 144-4th Avenue SW, Calgary Alberta, Canada T2P 3N4. The
telephone number is: 403-571-0853.
Mr. Schroeder is pleased to report that Vangold's long awaited
Strachan Leduc gas prospect (aka Deep Basin) will commence drilling
operations during the first week of January 2009. The well is
anticipated to encounter significant remaining attic gas reserves
in an existing natural gas pool that has produced in excess of 80
BCF of natural gas to date. Vangold holds a 35% working interest in
the well before payout and 21% working interest after payout.
International Oil Concessions
Kenya, Blocks 3A & 3B Update
Chevron previously shot seismic data (1975) which was forwarded
from their Iron Mountain storage site (Houston) to seismic
processing company Sensor Geophysical, Calgary ("Sensor").
Reprocessing of the data, estimated to be completed on or about
November 30, 2008, will result in better definition and structural
control of the regional Cretaceous play. At Block 3, 11
prospects/leads were identified through interpretation of Chevron
(1975) seismic data along with integration and interpretation
reviews of Amoco (1986), Total (1990), Beicip (1980, 1984), Western
International Atlas/CORELAB (1994), and AIconsult (1998).
The probabilistic productive areas covered by Vangold's
prospects range from 4713 to 37,498 acres with an average of 21,000
acres and aggregating to 202,025 acres. Evidence of a working
petroleum system in Block 3A, which forms part of the Anza Graben
Basin, are oil shows in Sirus-1 well (drilled by Amoco in Block 10
A), Lundin Petroleum AB ("Lundin"). Block 10A lies to the northeast
of Block 3A. China National Oil Company, (CNOOCs) Block 9 lies in
between Block 10A and Block 3A. All are situated in the Anza Graben
Basin. Please refer to the map on Vangold's website located at
http://www.vangold.ca (See Asset Tab, Kenya Block 3A and 3B).
The gross unrisked prospective resources estimate in Block 3 are
being evaluated in house by our Geotechnical Team with parameters
being derived/estimated from the look-alike Melut Basin in Southern
Sudan (the largest oil field in the Melut Basin is the Great
Palogue Field with estimated reserves of 900 million barrels).
Lundin reported they completed an aerogravity survey over Block
10 A, and have targeted one exploratory well to be drilled at the
Bogal Prospect, Block 9, in the first quarter 2009. The Bogal
prospect in Block 9 is 120 km from Vangold's Block 3.
Preliminary reprocessing of two seismic lines over Blocks 3A and
3B show stacked, amplitude anomalies on one structural prospect.
AVO analysis on one seismic line by Sensor further appears to show
three P Wave Impedance and Fluid Factor anomalies that may further
lower the perceived exploration risk.
Vangold's Geotechnical team has planned an infill seismic
survey, likely to be undertaken early next year, to incorporate
longer spread lengths to optimize seismic attribute analysis and
display. Vangold's technical team acquired gravity and magnetic
data from Edcon-PRJ Gravity & Magnetics, and recently completed
in-house digitization of the same. This data will be integrated
with the Leicester gravity data, and Paterson, Grant & Watson's
("PGW") magnetic data purchased by Vangold. Integration of all data
will be performed after Sensor Geophysical reprocesses Chevrons
data at the end of November 2008. The reprocessed data will be
re-interpreted by consultants shortly thereafter.
Rwanda Oil Concession Update
The aerial survey for the measurement of the earth's gravity and
magnetic fields over Lake Kivu and South West of Rwanda has been
concluded. A total of 2,088 line km has been flown against 3,100 km
planned, linearly achieving 70% coverage of the East Kivu Graben.
The apparent lack of completion of the planned survey is primarily
due to political unrest in the Democratic Republic of Congo region,
despite the best efforts from the Rwandan side and Vangold.
Despite this difficulty, the contractor, South African based New
Resolution Geophysics ("NRG"), was able to complete 100% of the
southern survey covering Block 2 and 100% of Block 4 over Lake
Kivu. Additionally NRG was able to achieve important coverage of
the east-west flight lines over Block 1, and the southern and
northern regions of the East Kivu Graben. The flight line coverage
in Block 1 traverses across the dip geometry of the East Kivu
Graben in the Northern area and Southern areas that mitigates
border areas not covered.
The data quality is good, having met all survey and contractual
specifications. The geological and geophysical objectives of
covering the whole of Rwanda concession area have been partially
met in Block 1, and 100% accomplished in the Block 2 survey areas.
Further, gravity and magnetic data 5 km from the border with DRC in
the northern lake area has not been collected as it was within the
turning area of the airplane. This is however, mitigated by two
east-west dip flight lines that cross the northern area and a
further three lines in the southern part of the Lake.
The sedimentary basin development cannot be directly adduced
from raw field data. The data needs topographical corrections in
the rugged mountains/hills in the south and the bathymetry
corrections of the water depth in the lake. Therefore, computer
data room processing of the raw field data in Johannesburg has just
been completed by NRG. In Toronto, Vangold's consultant, PGW, have
embarked on interpretation and modeling of the data. In-house
processing and interpretation by Vangold's geotechnical team is
also currently in progress. Both work programs will be merged and
integrated with the 1981 aeromagnetic survey data, and previously
conducted ground gravity surveys. The expected result will be a
depth and area model of the sedimentary basin in East Kivu Graben.
This will be integrated with geology, ASAR study and geochemical
data recently gathered from Rubona gas geochemical gas study for
the evaluation of the hydrocarbon prospectively of Lake Kivu.
Uganda Mineral Properties
Vangold currently holds more than 2,200 square kilometers in
exploration licenses in Uganda that are grouped into 6 projects:
Kafunjo (Ni, Cu, Pt), West Nile (Au), Kilembe (Cu, Co), Kamwenge
(Cu, Au), Fort Portal (Cu, Au) and Bugiri (Au). Vangold's website
lists the current status, work completed to date, and proposed work
programs for each of these exciting areas.
Current exploration work on the Ugandan mineral properties
involves continued geological mapping and prospecting of
concessions, including newly acquired licenses in West Nile, and
soil geochemistry across highly prospective zones at West Nile
(Kilo-Moto style host rocks), Bugiri (Banded Iron-Formations or
BIFs) in Lake Victoria Greenstone Gold Belt and Kafunjo
(Kabanga-style nickel sulphide potential) to delineate high
potential mineral targets. The Ugandan team consists of national
geologists and local laborers. Work is overseen by Danae A.
Voormeij, M.Sc., P. Geo. QP under NI 43-101 and VP of Exploration
for Vangold.
Kafunjo Drill Program
Phase 1 Drill Program Completed
* Vangold Resources Ltd. holds three adjacent licences which are
located in southwest Uganda near the triple junction of Tanzania,
Rwanda, and Uganda. At Kafunjo strong coincident low magnetic and
high gravity anomalies occur on a magnetic trend which arcs from
the ultramafic-hosted nickel-PGM deposits at Kabanga and Kagera in
Tanzania. Similarities to the local geology and low magnetic
anomalies at the Kabanga deposit strongly suggest that the
anomalies at Kafunjo may be caused by an ultramafic body.
* A diamond drilling program, planned to test the central sector
of a 4 km by 1 km anomalous zone at Kafunjo to depths of
approximately 700 to 1000 metres (m) has been completed. A total of
2,317 m was cored in three holes. The three drill holes did not
locate potentially economic mineralization. Ultramafic rocks were
not intersected in Phase 1.
* The drill is now being demobilized and the site
recontoured.
* Each of three holes crossed metasedimentary mica schist and
silty mudstone. Sedimentary facies appear to change rapidly:
crossbedding, scour channels, and soft-sediment slumps mark
stratigraphic disruptions. Concordant metasedimentary
graphite-pyrrhotite iron formation occurs in true widths of 30-40
m, with maximum pyrrhotite concentration of 10% in intervals of
several metres. Occasional specks of chalcopyrite occur on the
margins of pyrrhotite bands. Occasional kink folds indicate
positions on fold limbs. Fracturing on bedding/foliation creates
blocky zones of difficult drilling. Transcurrent faults are
interpreted as both steeply and flat dipping. A potential host for
nickel sulphide mineralization was not encountered.
* A ground magnetic survey was completed in early 2007 by
personnel from the Geophysical Department of the Uganda Geological
Survey in order to verify the results of previous surveys. The
position and intensity of the magnetic low corresponds to the
earlier information. Modelling of the magnetic low by various
geophysicists has suggested the upper portion of the anomaly to be
between 200 and 600 m below surface. The quantities of pyrrhotite
which are present do not account for the intensity of the magnetic
anomaly.
* In June 2008, a gravity survey was completed by a field crew
from Kenya General Electricity ("KenGen"). A depth model of the
gravity anomaly prepared by a geophysicist of KenGen shows a
flat-lying dense body, with an upper surface 700 to 1,200 m below
surface, extending 950 m in width northeast-southwest, 750-1250 m
in vertical thickness, and with a flat to moderate northeasterly
dip on both upper and lower surfaces. The specific gravity ("SG")
of the dense body is estimated by the geophysicist to be 3.4
grams/cubic centimeter (g/cc), in comparison to a SG of 2.55-2.70
g/cc of the enclosing metasedimentary rocks.
* A SG test of 1.0 m of core from 655.75 to 656.75 m in hole
K-03-08 of pyrrhotite iron formation was performed by a technician
in the laboratory of the Geological Survey of Uganda. The core is
representative of the highest average quantity of pyrrhotite in the
hole and generally in all of the drilling, visually estimated at
10%. The SG is determined by the difference in weight in air and
weight while immersed in water to be 2.90 g/cc. This compares with
a first approximation calculation which substituted 10% of mica
schist (SG 2.70 g/cc) by 10% of pyrrhotite (SG 3.65 g/cc), to
arrive at a SG of 2.89 g/cc. The quantities of pyrrhotite that have
been intersected do not explain the gravity high.
* The geophysical anomalies indicate the presence of a large,
dense, and intensely magnetic body.
* The first hole, K-01-08, was drilled to 943 m prior to the
collection and interpretation of gravity data. It was sited over
the magnetic low, and as later determined is above the central
portion of the gravity anomaly. At this location the top of the
dense body is shown to be approximately 1,000 m below surface, and
thus the hole may have been short of the target.
* K-02-08 was positioned to cross the centre of the gravity
anomaly at approximately 700 m below surface and to continue to
cross the magnetic low at approximately 1,000 m. The hole was ended
at a length of 635 m because of caving of wall rocks.
* K-03-08 was drilled above the south central part of the
gravity anomaly, oriented to enter the upper surface of the gravity
profile at approximately 700 m below surface, and to continue to
cross the magnetic anomaly at approximately 1,050 m. The vicinity
of the gravity target was entered at approximately 680 m below
surface. Walls of the hole began to cave and drilling had to be
terminated at 739 m in the hole. Silty iron formation from 610-700
m in the hole contains the mineral chiastolite (andalusite) and
small sheared fragments of garnetite, both of which indicate a
slightly higher grade of metamorphism and are known to be present
in the metasediments at Kabanga.
* Samples taken at regularly spaced intervals of the drill core
will be analyzed geochemically for multiple elements. A
3-dimensional plot of values may indicate new or refined target
locations.
* All core from the Kafunjo project, including the 1995 core
from the first phase of drilling, will be stored at the Geological
Survey in Entebbe. A storage container on cement pillars will house
core for convenient future reference.
* Airborne geophysical surveys were funded by international
monetary banking sources coordinated through the Geological Survey
of Uganda. During 2007 and 2008, airborne surveys flown covered a
majority of Uganda including areas where Vangold holds licences.
The program consists of 700,000 line kilometers of magnetic and
radiometric data collection, with selected high potential areas
flown by helicopter and fixed wing aircraft for advanced
electromagnetics. Flights over the Kafunjo licences during August
and September 2008 included all three geophysical sensors. When the
data is made available Vangold will acquire the CDs and commission
services for interpretation.
* Future programs may include reinterpretation of the gravity
model with incorporation of drill hole data, inspection of the new
airborne surveys, and compilation of lithology and geochemistry
into a 3-D model. Reverse circulation drilling, which is more able
to complete holes in broken rock formations, may be considered for
a subsequent program; equipment which can drill to +700 m is
available in Tanzania.
* Dal Brynelsen, President and CEO of Vangold states, "Kafunjo
continues to be an exciting project with good potential for a
world-class nickel-sulfide deposit. Our team remains on the ground
in Uganda and our exploration efforts carry on. Once the core is
interpreted and assays are received, Vangold's geological team will
determine the next appropriate step(s)."
To find out more about Vangold Resources Ltd. please visit our
website at www.vangold.ca or contact Dal Brynelsen at 604-684-1974
or by email brynelsen@vangold.ca.
On Behalf of the Board of
VANGOLD RESOURCES LTD.
"Dal Brynelsen"
Dal Brynelsen, President and CEO
The TSX Venture Exchange has not reviewed and does not accept
responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of the content of this
news release.
Distributed by Filing Services Canada and retransmitted by
Marketwire
Contact: Dal Brynelsen 604-684-1974 email Email Contact
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