Agnico-Eagle on track with Meadowbank for 2010 (October 27, 2008)

Drilling the rugged landsape at Agnico-Eagle Mines' 100%-owned Meadowbank gold property, in Nunavut, 70 km north of Baker Lake, near the western shores of Hudson Bay. The company plans to begin production at the open-pit mine by the beginning of 2010.Drilling the rugged landsape at Agnico-Eagle Mines' 100%-owned Meadowbank gold property, in Nunavut, 70 km north of Baker Lake, near the western shores of Hudson Bay. The company plans to begin production at the open-pit mine by the beginning of 2010.

Gold-bearing Archean greenstone belts were first discovered in the Baker Lake area of what is now Nunavut in the 1980s. Fast-forward 28 years and Agnico-Eagle Mines (AEM-T, AEM-n) is in the midst of building an open-pit gold mine 70 km north of Baker Lake, near the western shores of Hudson Bay.

If all goes according to plan, production at a mine on its 100%- owned Meadowbank property will start in the first quarter of 2010 — about six months ahead of schedule.

The deposit in Nunavut has probable reserves of 3.5 million oz. gold, with 29.3 million tonnes grading 3.7 grams gold per tonne. It is open on strike and at depth.

Meadowbank is forecast to produce an average of 360,000 oz. gold per year over a nine-year mine life. Total cash costs are anticipated to be in the US$300-peroz. range over the life of the mine.

Agnico says four gold deposits have been discovered along the gold trend– a 25-km trend that incorporates 350 sq. km. The known gold resources lie within 225 metres of the surface.

The deposit’s Cannu zone, identified in 2005, is a zone of high-grade, near-surface gold mineralization. The Portage gold deposits have been pinpointed over a strike length of 1.85 km and cross lateral extents of between 100 and 230 metres. The Goose Island deposit is defined over a 750-km strike length and down to 500 metres at depth. Finally, the Vault deposit is shallow dipping with a strike length of about 1,100 metres.

Agnico describes the geology of the deposit as hosted within “polydeformed rocks of the Woodburn Lake Group, which are part of the series of Archean Supracrustal assemblages forming the Western Churchill supergroup in Northern Canada.”

A scoping study is under way to assess the potential of an underground operation at the southern end of the deposit.

“We think we’ve got an underground component at Meadowbank,” Agnico-Eagle’s president and chief executive, Sean Boyd, told investors and analysts at the Denver Gold Forum in September.

Exploration is continuing to extend zones and test new targets.

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