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By Shane Lasley
Mining News 

Trilogy explorers prolific Ambler District

Mining Explorers 2019 – Published Nov. 1, 2019

 

Last updated 8/14/2020 at 9:15am

Bonnie Broman; Trilogy Metals Inc.

A drill tests Sunshine, one of many metal-rich volcanogenic massive sulfide targets that have been identified across Trilogy Metals' Upper Kobuk Mineral Project in the Ambler District.

Trilogy Metals Inc. is closing in on the completion of a feasibility study for Arctic, the first of a series of mines the company envisions being developed across the Upper Kobuk Mineral Projects in Northwest Alaska's Ambler Mining District.

Arctic, the most advanced of the Upper Kobuk Mineral Projects, hosts 43.04 million metric tons of probable reserves averaging 2.32 percent copper, 3.24 percent zinc, 0.57 percent lead, 0.49 grams per metric ton gold and 36 g/t silver.

A 2018 prefeasibility study detailed plans for an open-pit mine to extract the volcanogenic massive sulfide mineralization at Arctic and a 10,000-metric-ton-per-day mill that is expected to produce more than 159 million pounds of copper, 199 million lb of zinc, 33 million lb of lead, 30,600 ounces of gold and 3.3 million oz of silver annually over a 12-year mine-life.

To provide the additional data needed to elevate Arctic to the feasibility level, Trilogy completed 24 holes during 2018 to gather geotechnical and hydrological information at the proposed tailings dam, waste rock facility and grinding mill locations.


For 2019, Trilogy Metals budgeted US$7 million to carry out the hydrological, geotechnical, water management, tailings facility design, and other work needed to put the finishing touches on the feasibility study for Arctic, expected to be finalized in the first half of 2020.

While Trilogy focuses on readying Arctic for permitting, Australia-based South32 Ltd. is investing in Bornite, a large copper-cobalt deposit about 16 miles southwest of Arctic that is second in the pipeline of Ambler District mine development projects.


Early in 2017, South32 agreed to invest up to US$30 million into exploration at UKMP as part of an option to acquire a 50 percent stake in UKMP by paying an additional US$150 million and other considerations.

Over the 2017 and 2018 exploration seasons, South32 invested US$20.8 million in exploration focused on expanding and upgrading Bornite.

Based on this and previous drilling, an updated resource for Bornite was calculated earlier this year.

At a cut-off grade of 0.5 percent, the open-pit portion of Bornite hosts 40.5 million metric tons of indicated resource averaging 1.02 percent (913 million pounds) copper; 84.1 million metric tons of inferred resource averaging 0.95 percent (1.77 billion lb) copper.


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With none of cobalt yet upgraded to the indicated category, the Bornite open-pit hosts 124.6 million metric tons of inferred resource averaging 0.017 percent (45 million lb) cobalt.

At a cut-off grade of 1.5 percent, the below-pit portion of Bornite hosts 57.8 million metric tons of inferred resource averaging 2.89 percent (3.68 billion lb) copper and 0.025 percent (32 million lb) cobalt.

To ready Bornite for a preliminary economic assessment, South32 invested the US$9.2 million balance of its option commitment on roughly 8,000 meters of infill and expansion drilling in 12 holes; additional metallurgical work to optimize copper recoveries and determine the next steps for the recovery of cobalt; and initial engineering studies.


In addition to advancing Bornite and Arctic, Trilogy carried out a US$2 million exploration program, funded equally by Trilogy and South32, that investigated earlier staged deposits and targets along a VMS belt that stretches roughly 60 miles (100 kilometers) across the Ambler District.

To refine targets for further sampling and drilling, this 2019 regional program began with a district-wide VTEM (versatile time domain electromagnetic) and ZTEM (z-axis tipper electromagnetic) geophysical surveys flown over both the Cosmos Hills, which host Bornite, and the Ambler Belt, which hosts Arctic.

After compiling the data, Trilogy and South32 decided to complete six holes at Sunshine, where historical drilling tapped substantial widths of massive sulfide mineralization similar to the nearby Arctic deposit.

In 1997, Kennecott Mines estimated that Sunshine hosts 20 million metric tons of resource averaging 1.4 percent copper, 2.5 percent zinc, 0.5 percent lead and 28.1 g/t silver. While not compliant to modern standards, this historical resource demonstrates the tenor and potential of the deposit.

The first hole drilled at Sunshine this year, SC19-019, encountered five zones of Arctic-like VMS mineralization, including a newly discovered high-grade zone:

• 9.1 meters of 3.02 percent copper, 1.42 percent zinc, 0.27 percent lead, 0.14 g/t gold and 24.65 g/t silver in New Zone;

• 3.3 meters of 1.68 percent copper, 1.77 percent zinc, 0.47 percent lead, 0.12 g/t gold and 27.57 g/t silver in Zone 1;

• 3.7 meters of 4.74 percent copper, 0.97 percent zinc, 0.13 percent lead, 0.15 g/t gold and 28.96 g/t silver in Zone 2;

• three meters of 0.75 percent copper, 1.4 percent zinc, 0.35 percent lead, 0.08 g/t gold and 21.02 g/t silver in Zone 3; and

• 7.88 meters of 2.23 percent copper, 5.62 percent zinc, 1.1 percent lead, 0.18 g/t gold and 46.95 g/t silver in Zone 4.

These Sunshine intercepts shed a light on the wider potential of Trilogy's large land package in the Ambler Mining District.

Author Bio

Shane Lasley, Publisher

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Over his more than 16 years of covering mining and mineral exploration, Shane has become renowned for his ability to report on the sector in a way that is technically sound enough to inform industry insiders while being easy to understand by a wider audience.

 

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