Riverside Resources (RRI-V) is hoping its “shared-risk business model” will soon return dividends to shareholders in the form of a significant mineral discovery. The company currently has four drill programs running at the same time in two countries, all of which are fully funded by joint venture partners.
Launched in mid-2007 as a prospect generator by an experienced geological group with several big-name financial backers, Riverside has acquired or staked a total of nine gold and silver projects along the way, as well as form two strategic exploration alliances. The company is also a darling of the newsletter circuit, with Jay Taylor, Brent Cook, John Kaiser, Lawrence Roulston, Dave Forest, James West and Victor Goncalves all recommending the stock at one point or another. Their colleague Rick Rule owns over two million Riverside shares, while Kinross Gold (k-t, kgc-n), Cliffs Natural Resources (clf-n) and the renowned Lundin family are all large shareholders.
Riverside’s four projects now being tested by the drill bit will see a combined total of 10,200 metres of drilling during the remainder of 2011.
The newest property to see advanced exploration is Riverside’s early-stage Penoles gold-silver project in Durango, Mexico. Earlier this year, Riverside optioned a 51% interest in the project to Sierra Madre Developments (smg-v), in return for its commitment to spend $4.5 million on exploration, make cash payments of $2.85 million and issue 4.5 million shares to Riverside over two years.
In early September, the partners began an initial 2,000-metre diamond drill program at the 350-sq.-km property. Targets include step-out holes to test the grade and size potential of the main oxidized El Capitan epithermal gold system, as well as the nearby San Rafael silver vein system and the Jesus Maria lead-zinc-copper vein target.
Riverside’s Sugarloaf Peak gold project in Arizona will see the most drilling this year, however, under a joint venture with Choice Gold (chf-v). Choice is earning a 100% interest in the property under a February 2011 agreement whereby it must issue Riverside 13.6 million shares, make cash payments of $1.75 million and spend $5.5 million on exploration, all in stages over three years.
Choice started a 5,000-metre drill program at Sugarloaf in July to further test the property’s shallow, open-pit deposit hosting a 1.2-million-oz. non-National Instrument 43-101-compliant historical gold resource. Near-surface targets include auriferous alteration zones and major structures recognized during a recent surface sampling program, while deeper holes will also test a 2.5-km-long chargeability anomaly identified during a recent Titan 24 ground survey.
At Riverside’s Libertad gold-silver project in Mexico’s Sonora state, joint venture partner Geologix Explorations (gix-v) started a second-phase diamond drill program in July comprising five holes totalling 1,200 metres. Geologix is earning up to an 85% interest in the project by spending US$5 million on exploration and making cash payments totalling US$900,000 over six years.
The five holes will test an unexplored central portion of Libertad’s gold-silver mineralized structure. Geologix’s 2010 exploration program saw the partners complete 2,213 metres of drilling in 10 holes, with the best result returning 26 metres grading 1.02 grams gold per tonne and 65.1 grams silver per tonne.
Lastly, Guerrero Exploration (gex-v) is completing 2,000 metres of core drilling this year at Riverside’s Chapalota gold-copper project in Sinaloa, Mexico. The companies signed a definitive option agreement in June whereby Geurrero must spend $4 million on exploration, make cash payments of $200,000 and issue 1.25 million shares to Riverside over three years, in return for a 60% interest in the project.
Roughly 10 drill holes will test several geochemical and geophysical anomalies spanning a broad target area of 5 km by 3 km. Chapalota is located just east of Primero Mining‘s (p-t) San Dimas gold-silver mines, formerly owned by Goldcorp (g-t, gg-n).
As for Riverside’s two strategic exploration alliances, the company is constantly looking for additional early stage exploration projects under deals with Cliffs and major Chilean copper miner Antofagasta Minerals SA. Using money from the majors as well as geological information from its proprietary database -Riverside calls it a “vast treasury of field knowledge spanning decades of research” – the company is focused on generating iron-oxide-copper-gold (IOCG) prospects in Mexico for Cliffs and large-scale copper prospects for Antofagasta. Should either of the majors like the look of a project and wish to explore it further, they can fund the program while taking a 65-70% interest in the property.
Riverside’s lower-risk, prospector-generator model has meant the company has only seldom had to go to market hat in hand. It has come out of a volatile 2011 summer with approximately $10 million in its treasury and just 32 million shares outstanding, 43 million if fully diluted. On Sept. 7, the stock closed down 1¢ to 94¢ on 134,000 shares traded, well within its 52-week range of 78¢-$1.33.
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