Banro reports strong intercepts at Twangiza in the DRC

Assay results from an additional 30 core holes drilled at Banro‘s (BAA-T, BAA-X) Twangiza project on the Twangiza-Namoya gold belt in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, continue to come up golden.

The holes were drilled as part of the Toronto-based company’s bankable feasibility study, but were not included in the mineral resource estimate for the pre-feasibility study released on July 7.

The bankability study on Twangiza, the most advanced of Banro’s four projects, is supposed to be completed in December.

Highlights of the infill drilling include intercepts such as 192 metres grading 2.02 grams gold per tonne; 149 metres grading 1.71 grams gold per tonne; 68 metres grading 3.77 grams gold per tonne; 77.8 metres grading 2.17 grams gold per tonne and 60 metres grading 3.50 grams gold per tonne.

The results should contribute to an increase in measured and indicated resources at Twangiza, as well as to an increase in the proven and probable reserves, that will be incorporated into the upcoming bankable feasibility study.

Twangiza has an estimated measured resource of 1.3 million oz. gold (16.7 tonnes grading 2.59 grams gold per tonne) and an indicated resource of 2.35 million oz. (42.5 million tonnes grading 1.72 grams gold per tonne). The inferred resource is pegged at 600,000 oz. gold (10 million tonnes grading 1.80 grams gold per tonne).

The property is 45 km south-southwest of Bukavu in South Kivu province and is made up of six exploitation permits covering 1,164 sq km.

Core holes were inclined at between minus 50 and 83 degrees and averaged 248 metres in depth with a maximum down-hole depth of 542.76 metres.

Within the mineralized zones, core recovery averaged 92.7% and spacing was arranged on 40-metre sections.

Underlying Twangiza are sediments of Proterozoic age that have been intruded by porphyry sills, folded into a series of broad anticlines and synclines and subjected to very low-grade metamorphism.

Gold mineralization at the main Twangiza deposit is hosted within mudstones, siltstones, greywackes and porphyries along the crest of a major anticlinal structure. The mineralization is of hydrothermal origin and is associated with sulfides, which occur in quartz-carbonate veins, and disseminations throughout the host rocks.

The Canadian gold explorer is focused on four major, wholly-owned gold projects, each with mining licenses, along the 210 km-long Twangiza-Namoya gold belt in the South Kivu and Maniema provinces of the DRC.

The deposit was first discovered in the 1950s by Miniere des Grande Lac, which followed the occurrence of alluvial gold deposits upstream from the Mwana River to the present-day Twangiza deposit.

Banro acquired the property in 1996 and in the following year alone, spent US$9 million on an exploration program. That program involved 10,490 line-kms of airborne geophysics, 1,613 samples from 16 adits, and 8,577 drill core samples from 9,122 metres of core drilling along 800 metres of strike. The work represented less than 20% of the identified mineralized trend.

In Toronto Banro is trading at about $3.95 per share. The company has a 52-week trading range of $3.70-$13 per share and has 40.4 million shares outstanding.

Print

Be the first to comment on "Banro reports strong intercepts at Twangiza in the DRC"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. To learn more, click more information

Dear user, please be aware that we use cookies to help users navigate our website content and to help us understand how we can improve the user experience. If you have ideas for how we can improve our services, we’d love to hear from you. Click here to email us. By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. Please see our Privacy & Cookie Usage Policy to learn more.

Close