Alexco drills high silver grades below Bermingham deposit at Keno Hill

The mill at Alexco Resource's Keno Hill. Credit: Alexco Resource

As Alexco Resource (TSX: AXU.TO; NYSE-AM: AXU) is starting up its Keno Hill silver mine in the Yukon, the company has reported drill results from its surface exploration program focused on the Bermingham Northeast Deep zone, approximately 150 metres below the existing resource.

The drill highlights (with true widths) from the Footwall vein included 8.8 metres of 3,583 grams silver per tonne from 507.2 metres and 5.3 metres of 2,070 grams silver per tonne from 496.2 metres. Notable (true width) intercepts from the Main vein included 3.5 metres of 707 grams silver from 473.9 metres and 1.3 metres of 4,889 grams silver from 486.7 metres.

The surface exploration work focused on a 550-metre long zone below the existing Bermingham resource and the drilling was completed on 100-metre sections to trace out this deeper zone along strike. Holes ranged between 550 and 700 metres of depth.

“The discovery of a significant zone of high-grade silver mineralization beneath the Bermingham deposit confirms that this is one of the more significant silver deposits in the entire Keno Hill silver district, Clynt Nauman, chairman and CEO of Alexco, said in a news release. “If the Northeast Deep zone discovery is further substantiated by the extensive drilling program we have planned for 2021, it is my view that the result will have important strategic implications for the future development of Keno Hill.”

According to Nauman, the 8.8-metre intercept from the western-most drillhole in the Northeast Deep zone is just 250 metres to the east and 75 metres below the planned bottom for the primary Bermingham decline, which makes this zone easily accessible from the planned infrastructure.

Looking to the southwest of the currently defined Northeast Deep zone, the veins and mineralized corridor can be traced for an additional 400 metres of strike. On a larger scale, the Bermingham vein system appears to be part of a shear zone with an estimated strike of 5 km, which includes several untested kilometre-scale targets.

The Bermingham deposit includes an indicated resource of 1.1 million tonnes at 930 grams silver and an inferred resource of 509,360 tonnes grading 717 grams silver. The indicated resource includes a probable mineral reserve of 362,343 tonnes at 972 grams silver for a total of 11.3 million silver ounces. There is a total of 1.6 million oz. of indicated silver resources and 1.2 million inferred silver resources in the Northeast zone, 150 metres above the Northeast Deep zone.

In mid-March, Alexco expects to kick off a four-rig surface exploration program, to drill a minimum of 25,000 metres. The program will focus on infill and expansion drilling of the Northeast Deep zone. An update to the Bermingham resource, which will incorporate the Northeast Deep zone, is expected in the fourth quarter of 2021.

At Keno Hill, mining ramp up is underway. Underground work is focused on the Bellekeno mine, with longhole drilling and residual ore blasting feeding ore to the mill. Concentrate shipments to the port of Skagway have also started. The mill continues with its ramp up and is on a modified schedule to match the ore deliveries and optimize the metallurgical performance. Initial ore from the Bermingham deposit is expected in the second quarter.

Alexco expects to release a more detailed update and ramp-up schedule in February.

A 2020 pre-feasibility study for Keno Hill defined an eight-year mine producing an average of 4 million oz. of silver a year in concentrates. There are five existing deposits within Keno Hill: Bermingham, Flame and Moth, Bellekeno and Lucky Queen.

 

Print

Be the first to comment on "Alexco drills high silver grades below Bermingham deposit at Keno Hill"

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