The mining newspaper for Alaska and Canada's North

(82) stories found containing 'Great American Minerals Exploration'


Sorted by date  Results 76 - 82 of 82

Page Up

  • MINING NEWS update: Money not in short supply - people and equipment are

    Updated May 28, 2006

    The game is afoot! The last month has seen the start of a number of field programs in Alaska, marking the beginning of the traditional "field season" in the Great Land. With demand for metals remaining extraordinarily high, Alaska's mining industry is operating at capacity but well below demand. An acute shortage of drills and drillers, geologists and engineers and helicopters to move them all around is affecting exploration, development and production plans around the state. For the first time in my career, money is not in...

  • Yukon placer mining: Fewer, but better

    Sarah Hurst, For Mining News|Updated Mar 26, 2006

    The people, the technology and the regulations have changed dramatically in the past 100 years or so since the Klondike Gold Rush, but placer mining in Canada's Yukon is still thriving. Mike McDougall, president of the Klondike Placer Miners Association, and Bill Lebarge from Yukon Geological Survey provided some insights into the state of the industry during a joint presentation to the Arctic International Mining Symposium in Fairbanks March 14. A total of 70,322 crude ounces of gold (2.2 million grams) was produced by...

  • Mining news update from Curt Freeman: Alaska one of best places to find raw metals

    Updated May 22, 2005

    The good news from Teryl, Kinross, Geoinformatics, Midas, Geocom and others is tempered by the loss of Alaska's gentleman scientist Ernie Wolff, who passed away on May 3; Liberty Star Gold appoints Phil St. George as VP of exploration s I write this summary of recent activities in Alaska's mining industry I am attending a once-every-five-year symposium in Reno put on by the Geological Society of Nevada. Some 1,500 attendees, mostly exploration geologists, are eagerly lapping up hours of new and previously unheard ideas on...

  • World demand forges Alaska mining success

    Steve Sutherlin, Mining News Associate Editor|Updated Oct 31, 2004

    Robust metal prices are the most positive factor affecting Alaska's mining industry over the past year, according to Steve Borell, executive director of the Alaska Miners Association. "Metal prices are what drives the industry," Borell said. He said it is a significant fact that prices for base metals such as lead, zinc, copper, nickel and molybdenum are high at the same time as those for gold, silver and platinum. In world metal pricing it is not often the case that base metals and precious metals rise simultaneously....

  • Drills continue churning at Pebble

    Patricia Liles, Mining News Editor|Updated Sep 12, 2004

    This summer's exploration, engineering and environmental baseline data work at the Pebble prospect in southwest Alaska is progressing "exceptionally well," according to a spokesman for the deposit's developer, Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. Northern Dynasty, a Hunter Dickinson-managed mine-development company based in Vancouver, British Columbia, is on track to spend $25 million (C$33.5 million) this year on the Pebble project, a gold-copper-molybdenum deposit several miles north of Lake Iliamna, a little more than 200 miles...

  • Alaska sees significant mining developments in March, says Freeman

    Curt Freeman, For North of 60 Mining News|Updated Apr 18, 2004

    Although the traditional Alaska field season has not really arrived yet, three significant developments occurred in March: Teck Cominco and Sumitomo Metal Mining received final permits for the Pogo gold project from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency allowing construction to move ahead at flank speed, Anglo American acquired its first U.S. mineral property in years by signing a joint venture option on Nevada Star's MAN nickel-copper-platinum group element project and Nov...

  • AngloGold 'keen' on Alaska projects

    Patricia Liles, Mining News Editor|Updated Apr 18, 2004

    Describing Alaska as "a good place to do business," AngloGold (U.S.A.) Exploration's president of North America said the company's focus is shifting away from projects in Nevada and parts of Canada. The company increased its landholdings through a sizeable claim staking effort in recent months in the area surrounding the Pogo gold deposit, and is negotiating a land lease in the Livengood area. Total exploration spending in Alaska is planned for $2 million, which is more than two-thirds of the company's North America green-fie...