Drill results from the McAra Lake property in northeastern Ontario confirm the presence of narrow widths of suphide mineralization underneath a surface showing.
The property is in the Shining Tree area, mid-way between Sudbury and Timmins.
Partners Mustang Minerals (YMU-V) and JML Resources (JJJ-V) sunk 11 holes in the showing, which coincides with a near-surface induced-polarization anomaly. The holes were drilled roughly 150 metres below surface and spaced along a length of 250 metres.
Holes 4 and 5 cut upwards of 1.5 metres of sulphides grading as much as 1.07% copper, 0.31% zinc, 0.36% lead and 0.23% cobablt, plus 24 grams silver and 0.54 gram gold per tonne. The results are similar to those of the previous three holes — 0.77% zinc, 0.11% copper, 0.21% lead, 18 grams silver and 0.27 gram gold over as much as 1 metre of core.
Results from holes 6 to 11 are pending. All the holes were collared south of holes 1-5 and tested the geophysical anomaly down-plunge.
Another seven airborne geophysical anomalies remain untested. Lines are being cut over each in preparation for mapping, geophysical surveying and diamond drilling.
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