Appalaches trenches Turcotte

Trenching by Appalaches Resources (APP-V) on the Mont-de-l’Aigle property, in Quebec’s Gasp Peninsula, has exposed the recently discovered Turcotte showing for more than 100 metres while doubling the copper grades previously encountered.

The northeastern trench cut mineralization over 45 metres, with grab samples yielding copper grades of up to 4.8%. More typically, the grades run between 0.4% and 2.6%.

The northwestern trench, which was intersected 25 metres north of the showing, encountered mineralization grading between 0.4% and 4.6% copper over 30 metres.

The Turcotte showing was uncovered earlier this month at the southern limit of a geochemical copper anomaly measuring 250 by 750 metres. It represents the third copper zone on the property and is between the Duchesne showing, 1.1 km to the northwest, and the Pardiac showing, 900 metres to the southeast. Copper grades at Duchesne range between 1% and 6.4%; at Pardiac, between 1% and 11.2%.

The showings consist of altered brecciated mudstones containing quartz, chalcopyrite, pyrite and iron oxides. They are hosted by the rocks of the Shiphead and Florillion formations. The three showings appear to represent a continuous mineralized system.

The company plans to sink five holes to determine the size of the Turcotte discovery. Assay results from 12 holes collared on the Hupe, Pardiac and Duchesne showings, and other geophysical anomalies, are pending. The company notes that the holes returned visible copper mineralization.

The latest results sent shares in Appalaches 2.5 higher to 24 in early trading on Nov. 18. The shares trade in a 52-week range of 9-26 per share.

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