TIDMCNR
RNS Number : 4918O
Condor Gold PLC
29 May 2015
Condor Gold plc
7(th) Floor
39 St. James's Street
London
SW1A 1JD
Telephone +44 020 74081067
Fax: +44 020 74938633
29(th) May 2015
Condor Gold plc
("Condor" or "the Company")
Drill Intercept of 7.55m at 10.2g/t gold on La India Project
Condor (AIM:CNR), is pleased to announce completion of 1,952m
drilling on the flagship La India Project. The initial drilling has
successfully indicated the extension of high-grade gold
mineralisation 50m along strike and 60m deeper to the south of the
current underground gold resource on La India Vein through a series
of drill results, one of which has an intercept of 7.55m (6.2m true
width) at 10.2g/t gold. Accordingly, the gold mineralisation would
appear to remain open at depth and along strike.
Highlights:
-- Condor completes 1,952m of up to 4,000m drilling programme.
-- Drill intercept of 7.55m (6.2m true width) at 10.2g/t gold.
-- Drilling to test southern strike extent of La India open pit
reserve and underground gold resource successfully extends
high-grade mineralisation 50m along strike and 60m down-dip.
-- Assay results for 1,324m drilling received, assay results for 638m drilling pending
-- 11km(2) soil survey area has been extended to a total of 60km(2) covering 6 target areas
Mark Child CEO comments:
"A drill intercept of 7.55m (6.22m true width) at 10.2g/t to the
south of the La India open pit reserve of 675,000 oz gold at 3.0g/t
has been successful in indicating an extension of high grade gold
mineralisation 100m outside the pit shell adjacent to La India
underground resource. This high-grade intercept demonstrates that
the underground mining potential at La India may currently be
significantly underestimated.
Separately, the soil sampling results from an area extending
from La India open pit to the south for 5km has produced 2 drill
targets that have been drilled, assay results are pending. Condor
has increased its soil survey area from 11km(2) to a total of
60km(2) covering 6 new target areas in order to demonstrate that La
India Project hosts a substantial gold district."
Drilling Programme Rationale
A portion of the drilling is to test the depth extent of gold
mineralisation beneath, and at depth along strike to the south, of
the La India Pre-Feasibility Study ("PFS") open pit reserve of
675,000 oz gold at 3.0g/t. The drilling is also designed to
establish if there is potential to expand the current underground
combined Indicated and Inferred Mineral Resource of 1.8Mt at 5.0g/t
for 294,000 oz gold deeper or further along strike. On the La India
structure, most of the mineral resource is concentrated in three
main high-grade zones defined along a 1.5km strike length. The two
principal high-grade shoots within the open pit reserve crop-out at
surface and have already been defined as high-grade resources down
to a maximum of 350m down-dip from surface using a combination of
historic mine records and drilling intercepts. A less well defined
high-grade shoot, along strike to the south of the PFS open pit
shell, hidden beneath surface and un-depleted by historic mining,
has an underground mineral resource defined by drilling intercepts
of up to 21.08m (16.1m true width) at 10.2g/t gold from 193.80m
drill depth (see press release dated 29(th) August 2012).
Drilling Results
Drilling completed since February 2015 has tested the depth
extent of the central high-grade shoot and the depth and strike
extent of the southern high-grade shoot, drilling up to 400m below
surface. A drill hole completed in the central high-grade shoot
supports the current mineral resource model in which high-grade
material, at grades and widths considered amenable to open pit and,
below the pit, to underground mining, extend from surface to a
maximum down-dip extent of 350m. Whilst there remains some scope
for further resource definition at depth with some closer spaced
step-down drilling, one of the exploratory drill holes completed in
the current programme returned, as expected, a narrow low-grade
intercept which limits the down-dip extent of high-grade
mineralisation to less than 400m from surface.
It is recognised that gold mineralisation in the Central Zone
reaches surface and therefore has been subject to some loss of the
upper levels through natural erosion. The less well defined
southern high-grade shoot along strike to the south of the PFS open
pit shell is un-depleted by historic mining and hidden beneath
surface, completely preserved below the modern day level of
erosion. Three drill holes have been completed to test the depth
and strike extent of this high-grade shoot. The drilling has
successfully extended the high-grade a further 50m along strike to
the south and 60m deeper with an intercept of 7.55m (6.2m true
width) at 10.2g/t gold at a vertical depth of 260m below surface
(Figure 1 below). Low-grade intercepts in the other two drill
holes, one testing the upper levels of the high-grade shoot and the
other testing the lower levels at the northern end of the shoot,
support a general plunge of mineralisation to the south; the top of
the high-grade material is approximately 130m below surface at the
southern end.
The southern shoot remains open to depth and along strike at
depth, confirming it as a highly prospective underground target.
Previous shallow drilling up to 100m further along strike to the
south returned wide low-grade and narrow higher grade gold
intercepts. The lower grade intercepts in the upper 130m are
interpreted as gold mineralisation above the main high-grade
boiling events.
Table 1. Drill intercepts for the first 4 drill holes for 1,324m
of the current drill programme on the India vein.
Section Drill From To Drill True Au Ag Vein
hole (m) (m) Width Width (ppm) (ppm) (vein assignments
ID (m) (m) subject to
revision)
--------- --------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
Central
10775 LIDC322 218.00 218.40 0.40 0.2 0.66 -2.0 HW2
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
270.60 271.60 1.00 0.6 0.60 -2.0 HW1
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
338.80 341.05 2.25 1.3 1.17 29 India
------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
South
10125 LIDC323 203.80 206.80 3.00 1.7 0.87 -2.0 HW1
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
319.50 321.00 1.50 0.9 0.61 -2.0 India
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
Alfonso Vega
380.15 381.00 0.85 0.5 1.30 9.0 (FW vein)
------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
South
10075 LIDC324 272.75 274.50 1.75 1.4 1.96 3.9 India HW Breccia
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
279.45 287.00 7.55 6.2 10.2 21 India
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
289.25 290.85 1.60 1.3 0.74 3.0 India FW1
------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
South
10075 LIDC325 182.60 184.60 2.00 1.9 0.83 0.0 HW2
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
197.30 198.05 0.75 0.7 0.61 3.0 HW1
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
210.65 211.95 1.30 1.3 0.93 2.8 India
------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------------------
True width is an interpretation based on the current
interpretation of the veins and may be revised in the future. HW =
Hangingwall; FW = Footwall.
La Mojarra Soil sampling results generate two drilling targets
that have been drilled.
Soil sampling has been completed over an 11km(2) area covering a
5km strike extension to the southeast of La India open pit
resource. This was the first area identified as prospective for
hidden deep-seated gold mineralisation. 1,383 B-horizon soil
samples have been collected on a 200m by 50m grid spacing, with
infill sampling at 100m by 50m in areas of interest, and analysed
for 53 elements to ultra-trace detection limits using a standard
ICP-MS package offered by Acme Labs in Vancouver.
Analysis of the multi-element data, within the framework of the
bedrock geology and geophysical parameters, has identified a number
of pathfinder elements indicative of hydrothermal alteration and
mineralisation, including gold, arsenic, antimony, mercury,
tellurium and molybdenum. Seven geochemical anomalies have been
identified with pathfinder geochemistry indicative of venting of
hydrothermal fluids and vapours at the top of an epithermal gold
mineralisation system, see Figure 1 below. Of these, two targets,
which are up to 1.7km to the south of La India open pit, have been
drilled. El Carrizal (Locality 3 on Figure 2 below) and Cerro El
Pilon (Locality 5 on Figure 2 below). Assay results are
pending.
The original 11km(2) soil survey area has been extended to a
total of 60km(2) covering 6 new target areas identified in the
district-scale gold mineralisation model developed by Condor
geologists as having the potential for the discovery of hidden
deep-seated gold mineralised structures with underground mining
potential. This is part of a longer term exploration initiative
that will expand to the entire district over the coming years.
The next phase of drilling is planned on the Real de La Cruz
Concession to test beneath an area that displays both wide
low-grade gold mineralised stockwork quartz zones of up to 63.6m at
1.01g/t gold in trench sampling, and also high-grade mineralisation
in a cross-cutting 4m true width quartz breccia grading at up to
16.4g/t gold exposed in an artisanal pit wall (see RNS dated 19(th)
August 2014). This drilling has been temporarily delayed whilst
drilling permitting processes are completed.
Figure 1. Vertical long-section of the La India Vein southern
high-grade shoot. New drill intercept of 7.55m (6.2m true width) at
10.2g/t gold extends the high-grade shoot a further 50m along
strike and 60m to depth. Gold mineralisation remains open along
strike and to depth.
Figure 2. Soil geochemistry anomalies identified on the 11km(2)
La India South - Mojarra soil survey. Six exploration targets
identified in addition to the La India Vein soil anomaly. Drilling
locations on two of the targets shown; El Carrizal and Cerro El
Pilon.
Competent Person's Declaration
The information in this announcement that relates to the mineral
potential, geology, Exploration Results and database is based on
information compiled by and reviewed by Dr Luc English, the Country
Exploration Manager, who is a Chartered Geologist and Fellow of the
Geological Society of London, and a geologist with twenty years of
experience in the exploration and definition of precious and base
metal mineral resources. Luc English is a full-time employee of
Condor Gold plc and has sufficient experience which is relevant to
the style of mineralization and type of deposit under
consideration, and to the type of activity which he is undertaking
to qualify as a Competent Person as defined in the June 2009
Edition of the AIM Note for Mining and Oil & Gas Companies. Luc
English consents to the inclusion in the announcement of the
matters based on the information in the form and context in which
it appears and confirms that this information is accurate and not
false or misleading.
- Ends -
For further information please visit www.condorgold.com or
contact:
Condor Gold plc Mark Child, Executive Luc English, Country
Chairman and CEO Manager Nicaragua
+44 (0) 20 7408 1067 +505 8854 0753
Beaumont Cornish Roland Cornish and
Limited James Biddle
+44 (0) 20 7628 3396
Numis Securities
Limited John Prior and James
Black
+44 (0) 20 72601000
Farm Street Media Simon Robinson
+44 (0) 7593 340107
About Condor Gold plc:
Condor Gold plc was admitted to AIM on 31(st) May 2006. The
Company is a gold exploration and development company with a focus
on Central America.
Condor completed a Pre-Feasibility Study (PFS) and two
Preliminary Economic Assessments (PEA) on La India Project in
Nicaragua in December 2014. The PFS details an open pit gold
mineral reserve of 6.9M tonnes at 3.0g/t gold for 675,000 oz gold
producing 80,000 oz gold p.a. for 7 years. The PEA for the open pit
only scenario details 100,000 oz gold production p.a. for 8 years
whereas the PEA for a combination of open pit and underground
details 140,000 oz gold production p.a. for 8 years. La India
Project contains a total attributable mineral resource of 18.4Mt at
3.9g/t for 2.33M oz gold and 2.68M oz silver at 6.2g/t to the CIM
Code.
In El Salvador, Condor has an attributable 1,004,000 oz gold
equivalent at 2.6g/t JORC compliant resource. The resource
calculations are compiled by independent geologists SRK Consulting
(UK) Limited for Nicaragua and Ravensgate and Geosure for El
Salvador.
Disclaimer
Neither the contents of the Company's website nor the contents
of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Company's website
(or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this
announcement.
Technical Glossary
Alteration The chemical process of chemically transforming
rock minerals to other rock minerals
through contact with hot fluids.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Assay The laboratory test conducted to determine
the proportion of a mineral within a
rock or other material. Usually reported
as parts per million which is equivalent
to grams of the mineral (i.e. gold)
per tonne of rock
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
B-horizon The organic-poor soil horizon consisting
soil of typically brown coloured completely
weathered rock material with no primary
textures. This horizon often occurs
beneath the organic-rich A-horizon and
contains some organic material such
as roots are usually present.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Calcite A common rock mineral composed of the
elements calcium, carbon and oxygen.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
CIM Code The reporting standard adopted for the
reporting of the Mineral resources is
that defined by the terms and definitions
given in the terminology, definitions
and guidelines given in the Canadian
Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and
Petroleum (CIM) Standards on Mineral
resources and Mineral Reserves (December
2005) as required by NI 43-101. The
CIM Code is an internationally recognised
reporting code as defined by the Combined
Reserves International Reporting Standards
Committee
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Chalcedonic A type of quartz texture in which the
silica crystals making up the mineral
are very small such that they give a
waxy luster to the mineral. This is
characteristic of crystallization under
low-temperature conditions.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Dip A line directed down the steepest axis
of a planar structure including a planar
ore body or zone of mineralisation.
The dip has a measurable direction and
inclination from horizontal.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Down-dip Further down towards the deepest parts
of an ore body or zone of mineralisation
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Foot wall The rock adjacent to and below an ore
or mineralised body or geological fault.
Note that on steeply-dipping tabular
ore or mineralised bodies the foot wall
will be inclined nearer to the vertical
than horizontal.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Geochemistry The study of the elements and their
interaction as minerals to makeup rocks
and soils
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Grade The proportion of a mineral within a
rock or other material. For gold mineralisation
this is usually reported as grams of
gold per tonne of rock (g/t)
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Hanging wall The rock adjacent to and above an ore
or mineralised body or geological fault.
Note that on steeply-dipping tabular
ore or mineralised bodies the hanging
wall will be inclined nearer to the
vertical than horizontal.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Indicated that part of a Mineral Resource for
resource which tonnage, densities, shape, physical
characteristics, grade and mineral content
can be estimated with a reasonable level
of confidence. It is based on exploration,
sampling and testing information gathered
through appropriate techniques from
locations such as outcrops, trenches,
pits, workings and drill holes. The
locations are too widely or inappropriately
spaced to confirm geological and/or
grade continuity but are spaced closely
enough for continuity to be assumed
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Inferred Mineral That part of a Mineral Resource for
Resource which tonnage, grade and mineral content
can be estimated with a low level of
confidence. It is inferred from geological
evidence and assumed but not verified
geological and/or grade continuity.
It is based on information gathered
through appropriate techniques from
locations such as outcrops, trenches,
pits, workings and drill holes that
may be limited, or of uncertain quality
and reliability
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Mineral Reserve An 'Ore Reserve' is the economically
mineable part of a Measured and/or Indicated
Mineral Resource. It includes diluting
materials and allowances for losses,
which may occur when the material is
mined. Appropriate assessments and studies
have been carried out, and include consideration
of and modification by realistically
assumed mining, metallurgical, economic,
marketing, legal, environmental, social
and governmental factors. These assessments
demonstrate at the time of reporting
that extraction could reasonably be
justified. Ore Reserves are sub-divided
in order of increasing confidence into
Probable Ore Reserves and Proved Ore
Reserves.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Mineral Resource A concentration or occurrence of material
of economic interest in or on the Earth's
crust in such a form, quality, and quantity
that there are reasonable and realistic
prospects for eventual economic extraction.
The location, quantity, grade, continuity
and other geological characteristics
of a Mineral Resource are known, estimated
from specific geological knowledge,
or interpreted from a well constrained
and portrayed geological model
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Intercept Refers to a sample or sequence of samples
taken across the entire width or an
ore body or mineralized zone. The intercept
is described by the entire thickness
and the average grade of mineralisation
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Mt Million tonnes
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
oz Troy ounce, equivalent to 31.103477
grams
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Open pit mining A method of extracting minerals from
the earth by excavating downwards from
the surface such that the ore is extracted
in the open air (as opposed to underground
mining).
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Quartz A common rock mineral composed of the
elements silicon and oxygen.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Quartz veins Deposit of quartz rock that develop
in fractures and fissures in the surrounding
rock. They are deposited by saturated
geothermal liquids rising to the surface
through the cracks in the rock and then
cooling, taking on the shape of the
cracks that they fill.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
True width The shortest axis of a body, usually
perpendicular to the longest plane.
This often has to be calculated for
channel or drill samples where the sampling
was not exactly perpendicular to the
long axis. The true width will always
be less than the apparent width of an
obliquely intersect sample.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Up-dip Further up towards surface of an ore
body or zone of mineralisation
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Vein A sheet-like body of crystalised minerals
within a rock, generally forming in
a discontinuity or crack between two
rock masses. Economic concentrations
of gold are often contained within vein
minerals.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
Wallrock The rock adjacent to an ore or mineralised
body or geological fault.
----------------- --------------------------------------------------
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view the associated PDF document.
http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/4918O_-2015-5-28.pdf
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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