Hunting for gold in the Gem State

Premium Exploration's president Del Steiner (left) with vice-president of exploration Michael Ostenson at the Friday zone at the Idaho gold project. Photo by Matthew AllanPremium Exploration's president Del Steiner (left) with vice-president of exploration Michael Ostenson at the Friday zone at the Idaho gold project. Photo by Matthew Allan

Most know Idaho as the Potato State, but the area also has a lesser-known nickname, the Gem State, which dates back to its territorial days. 

As the story goes, in the early 1860s a peculiar politician proposed the name Idaho for the sparsely populated territory sandwiched between Oregon and Wyoming. He claimed it was derived from the local Indian word “Ee-da-how,” meaning “Gem of the Mountains,” though he later admitted to making up the name himself.

Nevertheless, the name Idaho stuck, and as it turns out, is more fitting than most would have ever guessed. 

The land is littered with precious and semi-precious stones alike, offering gem collectors an abundance of white plume agate, cherry-coloured fire opals, fine pink garnets and deep blue sapphires, among countless others.

A large placer gold rush there in the 1860s may have put Idaho on the map, but it was Noah Kellogg’s silver, lead and zinc discovery decades later that made the state what it is today. 

Vast, rich mine complexes in Idaho produce a wealth of silver and base metals under companies like Hecla Mining (HL-N), which has operated its Lucky Friday silver mine since 1942; U.S. Silver (USA-V), which owns the Galena silver-copper-lead mine, now the second-largest primary silver producer in the U.S.; and Thompson Creek Metals (TCM-T, TC-N), an operator since 1983 of the Thompson Creek open-pit mine, the fourth-largest primary molybdenum mine in the world. 

Although Coeur d’Alene Mines (CDM-T, CDE-N) no longer has any active mines in Idaho, it is based here and ranks as the largest U.S.-based primary silver producer.

While antimony, chromium, cobalt, tungsten and most recently phosphate have all been a boon for Idaho miners at one time or another, production of arguably the world’s most closely followed metal, gold, has been somewhat lacklustre over the ages in Idaho. 

Today, the better part of a dozen publicly traded exploration companies are out to change this.

As the price of gold continues to spiral ever upward, and the hunt for new deposits is pushed into riskier or lesser-known jurisdictions, Idaho’s prospective mineralogy has had success in luring mining companies back to the dredged creeks and past-producing mines well documented in the area.

Most of the explorers are relative newcomers. Midas Gold (MAX-T), for example, completed a $40-million initial public offering in mid-July after consolidating several historic gold projects in central Idaho. Collectively, the properties host over 5 million oz. gold in various resource categories. Otis Gold (OOO-V) acquired its main Kilgore epithermal gold project in eastern Idaho in 2008. It has since delineated an approximate 500,000-oz. gold resource and is now drilling with two rigs to expand the deposit. And in northeastern Idaho, Marathon Gold (MOZ-T) even completed a small amount of underground mining a few years ago at its historic Golden Chest gold project, where it is now drilling 10,000 metres to establish the parameters of a potential open pit. 

Only a few of the explorers have been involved in Idaho’s fledgling gold mining industry as long as Del Steiner, an Idaho lawyer and president of Premium Exploration (PEM-V).

Steiner has been trying to develop gold claims in and around north-central Idaho’s Orogrande shear zone since the mid-1980s. He got close in 1992 when he helped permit the historic Buffalo Gulch mine in north-central Idaho as an open-pit heap leach operation for Bema Gold, but that quickly fell by the wayside when the price of gold fell below US$400 an oz. He returned a few years later as president of Idaho Consolidated Minerals, optioning and exploring nearby lands before turning them over to a joint venture with Kinross Gold (K-T, KGC-N) in 1999. That plan would also fall through amid a second collapse of metal prices in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and that was when Steiner took things into his own hands.

As he explains to The Northern Miner, Steiner bought back Kinross’s claims privately with a view to consolidate the district and explore its full potential. 

“I’ve always had the faith that the resource was there, because of the intense amount of prospecting and work we had done on it,” Steiner says, recalling that the only downside he’d ever thought of was that the grade was going to be fairly low and it was going to take US$600- to US$700-per-oz. gold to make it work.

“At the time I bought those claims back, I think gold was below US$300. And after gold started breaking through those prices in 2005 and 2006, I’ve never had a moment’s doubt.”

He took Premium public in 2006 and later vended an impressive 172-sq.-km land package spanning 30 km of the Orogrande shear zone, a significant regional structure with numerous cross-cutting structures. The right combination of shear zone and cross-cuts has created several zones of structurally controlled gold mineralization, including six found to date, which together comprise Premium’s Idaho gold project.

Steiner admits the state of Idaho has seen “hit or miss exploration” for some time now, but it “hasn’t been because there isn’t gold here, it’s been because of the economics and the things that basically plagued the mining industry from the mid-1990s on. 

“Considering where we are now [with the price of gold], I think there’s going to be a huge resurgence in Idaho,” Steiner says. “I suspect there’s another six or eight juniors in Idaho as we speak either staking claims or buying projects for exploration, and there must be eight or nine operating now.”

But Premium is as much an exploration story as it is about the resurgence of gold mining in Idaho.

1.2M oz. and counting

Airborne geophysical surveys have identified a 30-km-long regional structure trending north to south within Premium’s Idaho project, coinciding with more than 16 km of gold-in-soil anomalies and 20 km of historic placer mining along strike. There are also at least 20 historic mine workings within the property boundaries as well as three established gold deposits, all of which remain open in all directions and account for over 1.2 million oz. contained gold over various resource categories.

Now, Premium is out to test the size potential of the three deposits. It began a four-phase exploration program at the Idaho project in March, comprising 25,000 metres of drilling using three rigs – one drill to focus on infill drilling and step-outs to add ounces to the resource estimate, and two to explore new targets along the 30-km-long belt. 

The program got off to a rocky start, however, when the U.S. Bureau of Land Management temporarily suspended drilling in May because of heavy rain and snow in the area, reasoning the rigs and drilling equipment were tearing up access roads.

Premium resumed drilling around June, and as of late August the company had completed 9,000 metres of drilling, of which 3,500 metres have been reported to date.

So far those results have shown the company has extended the strike length of the main zone at Friday-Petsite to 1,220 metres from 800 metres by drilling step-out holes that closely follow the main Friday fault line.

According to Michael Ostenson, Premium’s vice-president of exploration, nine of the 10 step-out holes drilled to date encountered near-surface, bulk-tonnage gold mineralization, “demonstrating the multimillion-ounce potential of the Friday-Petsite deposit.” 

The most recently reported step-out hole, 2011-10, intercepted 117 metres grading 1.0 gram gold per tonne starting from a depth of 64 metres. It extended the main zone along strike another 155 metres to the north, following up 85 metres to the south on hole 2011-08, which returned a near-identical intersection of 118 metres gra
ding 1 gram gold. Based on the results, Premium says mineralization between the North and Main zones is now interpreted to be continuous.

“Our plan is to continue stepping out to determine how large the zone really is,” Ostenson says.

After that, the company could come back and infill drill to potentially upgrade the resource.

Depending on exploration success, this may take some time. Geophysics have defined a 5-km-long structural target running through Friday-Petsite, and almost every time the company has tested the structure, assays have come back positive for gold.

“At the end of the day, we will have doubled the primary 800-metre footprint,” Steiner says of this year’s drilling program at the Friday zone. Though assays have yet to come back from the lab, he reckons, based on looking at the core from the step-out holes, that   Premium could add 400 metres along strike on each end of the deposit, north and south.

“Our intent is to double the footprint and double the gold ounces, at least on the back of an envelope,” Steiner says. “We won’t get all the infill drilling done to make it National Instrument 43-101-compliant, but that’s where we want to be after this next set of holes.”

Meanwhile, two drills are turning at the Deadwood zone, situated 10 km to the north, and are focused on making new
discoveries. 

“The geophysics and the geochemistry that we’ve had success with at Friday are intense through a lot of the Deadwood zone, and it has more than 14 km of strike at this point,” Steiner says, noting that the geophysical surveying of the shear zone shows there are a lot of cross-cutting structures that tend to indicate Friday-like structures. At least three of these have been drill tested, with assay results pending.

“We’re kind of shooting in the dark, but we’ve got a pretty good idea, though, because of the way the material looks, and we always can tell when we hit one of those bounding faults.”

Before any Deadwood assays are released, Steiner adds a dash of caution that these are mainly geotech kinds of holes Premium is drilling, because it’s stepped out from Friday as much as 10 km.

“The material looks good though, and the stuff coming out of the drill that’s now in the lab is going to have some joy in it, it’s just a matter of figuring out how much,” Steiner says. “There could be as many as two Fridays in that Deadwood zone, or even more. And then of course we’ll get around to Buffalo Gulch.”

The historic Buffalo Gulch deposit that Bema Gold once permitted for a small heap-leach operation is located 5 km north of Deadwood and 17 km north of Friday.

It hosts a historic, non-NI 43-101-compliant indicated resource of 111,000 oz. gold contained in 4.8 million tonnes grading 0.8 gram gold per tonne. Deadwood, meanwhile, contains roughly 60,000 oz. gold at similar grades according to historical, non-NI 43-101-compliant resource estimates.

As for the main Friday-Petsite deposit, it boasts a NI 43-101-compliant indicated resource totalling 343,000 oz. gold contained in 11.8 million tonnes grading 0.9 gram gold, as well as another 879,000 oz. gold inferred contained in 26.4 million tonnes grading 1.04 grams gold.  

Not Montana

As far as Idaho is concerned, mine permitting is top of mind for many prospective investors. Past decades of poor mining practices have left parts of Idaho with considerable environmental damage: poisoned streams, dredged creeks, major Superfund sites and tailings piles.

According to one report by the Idaho Conservation League, any combination of six federal agencies and three state agencies now share regulatory or oversight responsibility for permitting, monitoring and clean-up of mine sites, depending on the mine’s location in the state.

Steiner wants to make it clear, however, that Idaho is no Montana, its mining-unfriendly neighbour to the north, which banned the use of cyanide for new heap-leach mines back in the 1990s.

“The long and short of it is, having practiced law in Idaho as long as I did, I found permitting to be no more difficult in Idaho as it was in Nevada or anywhere else,” Steiner says.

He emphasizes that you must thoroughly know the bureaucratic processes relating to permitting, and “stay away from sensitive areas that you know from the kick-off you’re not going to get permitted,” such as the Sun Valley area and some of the Frank Church area on the Snake River.

“But these areas that have been past-producing mining areas like the central Idaho area we’re in . . . we just haven’t had any real trouble getting permitting so far,” Steiner says. “It’s not going to be easy. Because it’s the U.S., you’re going to have to go through the processes and jump through the hoops. But remember, Bema had Buffalo Gulch completely permitted and started construction in 1992.”

Roughly two-thirds of Premium’s Idaho project is located on U.S. Forest Service land, mostly in the Nez Perce National Forest, while one-third consists of privately held mining claims and land held under control of the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management. Much of the project is also on the traditional land of the Nez Perce Indian band.

Mining companies active in the state got some encouragement in 2009, when Formation Metals (FCO-T) received the necessary approvals from U.S. government agencies to build a cobalt mine in a different national forest of Idaho. The process proved long and cumbersome for Formation, however. It started applying for the permits in 2001.

Shares of Premium closed at 43¢ on Sept. 6 with 235,000 shares traded. The company has 130.2 million shares outstanding, 157.5 million if fully diluted, approximately $6 million in its treasury and a 52-week share price range of 35¢-83¢. Most of its large shareholders are major financial institutions, which collectively own half of the stock.

Other Idaho gold explorers include: Elissa Resources (ELI-V), Terraco Gold (TEN-V), Atlanta Gold (ATG-V) and Western Pacific Resources (WRP-V).

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