A 6-hole drill program mounted by Quebec government-owned
Soquem, which is earning a half-interest in the main Caber project from
Indications from the recent holes and from earlier drilling suggest that the Key Tuffite may be faulted off in parts of the property. Several targets remain to be tested.
At Caber North, two holes were drilled to intersect extensions of the property’s A and B zones. Hole SAF01-98 cut a 3.4-metre length in the A zone that graded 3.7% copper. This mineralization was at the base of a 52.4-metre intersection of alternating zones of magnetite and massive pyrite and pyrrhotite, which graded an average of 0.9% zinc and 0.5% copper over its entire length.
At depth, the same hole intersected a 3.6-metre length of massive sulphides with 1.3% zinc and 1.3% copper, plus 11.2 grams silver per tonne. The mineralization lies down-plunge from the B zone at a vertical depth of about 300 metres.
A second hole was drilled to meet a structural extension of the B zone but intersected a diabase dyke instead. Southern Africa Minerals’ in-house estimate of the mineralization at Caber North — a highly preliminary one based on only 14 drill holes — calculates the four Caber North massive sulphide lenses to have 1.4 million tonnes grading 3.8% zinc and 1.8% copper, plus 17.4 grams silver per tonne.
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