A new copper-mineralized zone has been identified in drilling at the Rambler project in west-central Newfoundland.
The latest results reported by Rambler Metals and Mining (RMM-L) show intersections in two wedge holes drilled from “mother” hole RM06-04, northeast of, and stratigraphically below, the previously mined Ming massive sulphide deposit.
Hole RM06-04F intersected a 6-metre interval grading 14.38% copper and 1.8 grams gold per tonne, and RM06-04G intersected two zones, one grading 4.71% copper and 0.4 gram gold over 14.4 metres and another grading 1.66% coppre and 0.1 gram gold over 6 metres.
The new mineralization is stratigraphically above the Ming Footwall Zone horizon, where Rambler has been defining a zone of stringer mineralization below the massive sulphides. Pods of mineralization on displaced horizons are not unusual in the massive-sulphide deposits of the island’s Central Mineral Belt.
Rambler, in which Altius Minerals (ALS-V, ATUSF-O) owns a 30% interest, plans further testing of the new zone along strike and down-dip.
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