Two gold- and silver-bearing structures are being evaluated on Keylock Resources’ (ASE) concession in Slovakia.
The concession is in the centre of a large Tertiary-aged cauldera which has a history of gold and silver production.
At the Bahrenleuten vein, a 1993 soil survey delineated a 40-metre-wide gold-silver anomaly over a strike length of 400 metres. The anomaly contains values of up to 9.5 grams gold and 446 grams silver per tonne. Plans call for the extension of the existing grid, followed by trenching, sampling and drilling.
At the Kopanice structure, rock samples returned values of up to 12 grams gold and 244 grams silver over 1.6 metres. Preliminary soil sampling has yielded values of up to 940 parts per billion and 38.5 parts per million. A drill program is scheduled to begin in June.
In other news, exploration is to begin next month on Keylock’s Gordon Lake gold property, 100 km northeast of Yellowknife, N.W.T.
Be the first to comment on "LAST BUT NOT LEAST — Keylock exploring Slovakian gold bet"