TSX-V:
GBR
VANCOUVER, BC, Oct. 4, 2021 /CNW/ - Great Bear Resources Ltd.
(the "Company" or "Great Bear", (TSXV: GBR) (OTCQX: GTBAF) today
reported results from its ongoing fully funded $45 million 2021 exploration program at its 100%
owned flagship Dixie Project in the Red
Lake district of Ontario.
Chris Taylor, President and CEO
of Great Bear said, "Our systematic deep drilling of the LP
Fault along 1.4 kilometres of strike length has successfully
intersected the target geology with gold mineralization in all
areas. These results establish significant continuity of
both high-grade and bulk tonnage style gold over a broad area at
depth, which remains open to extension in all directions.
The LP Fault has no geological analogs in the Red Lake district, with the closest being the
Hemlo gold deposit located near
Marathon, Ontario."
Deep LP Fault Drilling
Seven new drill holes are representative of deeper LP Fault
mineralization across a broad area of 1.4 kilometres of
strike length between approximately 450 and 750 metres
downhole depth. Deeper drilling will continue along an
additional 2.6 kilometres of strike length during the ongoing Phase
2 program.
The same pattern of high-grade domains surrounded by lower
grade envelopes are observed as had previously been
drilled at shallower depths. Results are provided in Table
1.
Highlights include:
- These new drill holes are not infill drilling, and
significantly extend gold mineralization to depth on their
respective drill sections. Figure 1, Figure 2,
Figure 3 and Figure 4.
- New drill hole BR-385 intersected multiple high-grade gold
domains, including 157.00 g/t gold over 1.20 metres from
696.45 to 697.65 metres downhole, within a broader interval of
41.76 g/t gold over 5.15 metres from 696.45 to 701.60
metres.
-
- The total mineralized interval using the same
calculation criteria applied to the shallow LP Fault zone since its
discovery (i.e. composite intervals cannot include more than 3
metres assaying less than 0.10 g/t gold) is 6.90 g/t gold over
36.95 metres from 673.25 to 710.20 metres downhole.
- However, given the greater depths explored by these drill
holes, a more relevant interval that excludes peripheral bulk
tonnage style gold mineralization and may be more representative of
any future potential underground development scenarios is 11.01
g/t gold over 22.85 metres from 678.75 to 701.60 metres
downhole.
- New drill hole BR-386 intersected 16.92 g/t gold over 4.90
metres from 525.00 to 529.90 metres downhole, within a broader
interval of 2.21 g/t gold over 49.55 metres from 522.45 to
572.00 metres downhole.
- New drill hole BR-411 intersected 13.84 g/t gold over 3.15
metres from 459.15 to 462.30 metres downhole.
-
- BR-411 is significant as it intersects high-grade gold below
the "Gap" area of the LP Fault, and is over 500 metres above the
deepest LP Fault intercept to-date in previously reported drill
hole BR-260 (March 29, 2021) which
assayed 15.57 g/t gold over 3.05 metres from 942.20 to 945.25
metres downhole. More drilling is required to determine if both
intercepts occur along a controlling plunge within the same
high-grade gold domain.
- New drill hole BR-384 intersected multiple mineralized
intervals including 50.50 g/t gold over 1.00 metre from
587.50 to 588.50 metres downhole, and 6.71 g/t gold over 6.30
metres from 687.50 to 693.80 metres downhole. The total
mineralized interval was 3.97 g/t gold over 17.50 metres
from 687.50 to 705.00 metres downhole.
Shallow Drill Results
Seventeen additional drill holes intersected the shallow LP
Fault along 3.6 kilometres of strike length. Most of
these targeted the bulk tonnage style envelope adjacent to
higher-grade domains for resource delineation purposes.
Maiden mineral resource estimate disclosure is planned for Q1 of
2022.
Highlights include:
- Eastern LP Fault (Viggo area) drill hole BR-379 intersected
1.84 g/t gold over 28.05 metres from 101.35 to 129.40 metres
downhole. This included high-grade intervals of 15.90 g/t gold
over 1.00 metre from 101.35 to 102.35 metres downhole and
28.70 g/t gold over 0.50 metres from 123.50 to 124.00 metres
downhole.
-
- This drill hole is significant as it adds bulk tonnage style
gold mineralization at shallow depths to this area. A steeply
plunging area of stronger gold mineralization is currently being
defined here (see news release of August 25,
2021).
- Drill holes characterizing additional shallow bulk tonnage
style mineralization are summarized in Table 2 and
include:
-
- BR-425 which intersected 1.09 g/t gold over 80.55 metres
from 62.50 to 142.75 metres downhole,
- BR-441 which intersected 1.08 g/t gold over 30.25 metres
from 13.00 to 43.25 metres downhole, and
- BR-443 which intersected 0.55 g/t gold over 66.20 metres
from 38.50 to 104.70 metres downhole.
An additional 16 shallow drill holes were collared outside the
LP Fault zone and targeted areas up to 200 metres away from the
zone which may be incorporated into any future mineral resource
estimation or infrastructure development planning. All holes
intersected anomalous to low-grade gold mineralization. The
most significant intercepts were 0.52 g/t gold over 20.00 metres
from 56.50 to 76.50 metres downhole in drill hole BR-435, and 0.55
g/t gold over 26.25 metres from 10.85 to 37.10 metres downhole in
drill hole BR-444. Results from this drilling are
included in a separate table on the Company's web site at
www.greatbearresources.ca.
Ongoing Phase 2 LP Fault Expansion Drilling and Upcoming
Reports
- With the 42 new drill holes contained in this release, Great
Bear has reported 446 LP Fault drill holes. Including in-progress
drill holes, Great Bear has completed 300,000 metres of drilling at
the Dixie property to-date.
- Phase 1 drilling consisted of 440 LP Fault drill holes and was
completed in July 2021. The program
was designed to support mineral resource estimation along
approximately 4 kilometres of strike length to a depth of
approximately 450 metres.
- Phase 2 drilling is designed to expand LP Fault gold
mineralization between approximately 450 and 900 metres depth over
approximately 4 kilometres of strike length.
- Great Bear will continue Phase 2 expansion drilling with the
goal of significantly expanding the drill confirmed extent
of gold mineralization at the LP Fault by late 2022.
- Other Phase 2 drilling will include regional drilling of new
targets, and mineral resource definition and expansion drilling of
the Dixie Limb and Hinge zones. The Company is fully funded for
this work.
In addition to regular releases detailing Phase 2 drill results,
deliverables for 2022 are expected to include: 1) a maiden mineral
resource estimate in accordance with NI 43-101 of the LP Fault zone
Phase 1 drilling, 2) a Preliminary Economic Assessment ("PEA") of
the LP Fault zone, and 3) a mineral resource update which will
include deeper drill results from the LP Fault, plus maiden mineral
resource estimates for the Dixie Limb and Hinge zones. Further
details will be provided as results continue to be received and
processed.
Table 1: New deep LP Fault drill
results along 1.4 kilometres of strike length.
Drill
Hole
|
|
From
(m)
|
To
(m)
|
Width*
(m)
|
Gold
(g/t)
|
Section
|
BR-411
|
|
34.50
|
41.30
|
6.80
|
0.30
|
21325
|
|
and
|
152.50
|
155.50
|
3.00
|
1.98
|
|
|
and
|
184.00
|
221.60
|
37.60
|
0.34
|
|
|
and
|
238.75
|
263.35
|
24.60
|
0.59
|
|
|
and
|
454.60
|
466.50
|
11.90
|
3.98
|
|
|
and
including
|
459.15
|
462.30
|
3.15
|
13.84
|
|
BR-386
|
|
435.20
|
437.20
|
2.00
|
5.93
|
20875
|
|
and
|
502.75
|
516.00
|
13.25
|
1.46
|
|
|
and
|
522.45
|
572.00
|
49.55
|
2.21
|
|
|
including
|
525.00
|
529.90
|
4.90
|
16.92
|
|
|
and
|
648.30
|
651.15
|
2.85
|
3.13
|
|
BR-385
|
|
598.40
|
620.70
|
22.30
|
1.06
|
20800
|
|
and
including
|
605.80
|
606.70
|
0.90
|
9.79
|
|
|
and
|
673.25
|
710.20
|
36.95
|
6.90
|
|
|
including
|
678.75
|
701.60
|
22.85
|
11.01
|
|
|
and
including
|
696.45
|
701.60
|
5.15
|
41.76
|
|
|
and
including
|
696.45
|
697.65
|
1.20
|
157.00
|
|
|
and
including
|
700.60
|
701.60
|
1.00
|
25.00
|
|
BR-384
|
|
583.00
|
594.10
|
11.10
|
4.74
|
20750
|
|
including
|
587.50
|
588.50
|
1.00
|
50.50
|
|
|
and
|
602.00
|
637.00
|
35.00
|
0.33
|
|
|
and
|
653.35
|
716.00
|
62.65
|
1.42
|
|
|
including
|
687.50
|
705.00
|
17.50
|
3.97
|
|
|
and
including
|
687.50
|
693.80
|
6.30
|
6.71
|
|
|
and
including
|
702.55
|
705.00
|
2.45
|
6.42
|
|
BR-383
|
|
392.60
|
424.30
|
31.70
|
0.35
|
20750
|
|
including
|
418.80
|
420.10
|
1.30
|
4.26
|
|
|
and
|
509.45
|
526.00
|
16.55
|
1.47
|
|
|
including
|
509.45
|
510.35
|
0.90
|
14.30
|
|
|
and
including
|
525.00
|
526.00
|
1.00
|
9.34
|
|
BR-280
|
|
675.00
|
685.20
|
10.20
|
0.34
|
20125
|
|
and
|
741.20
|
755.40
|
14.20
|
0.22
|
|
|
|
849.85
|
851.15
|
1.30
|
1.98
|
|
BR-419
|
|
603.00
|
644.60
|
41.60
|
0.59
|
20075
|
|
including
|
634.55
|
635.20
|
0.65
|
8.99
|
|
|
and
|
654.00
|
656.70
|
2.70
|
9.59
|
|
|
including
|
654.65
|
655.30
|
0.65
|
32.00
|
|
BR-430
|
|
538.85
|
557.75
|
18.90
|
1.49
|
19975
|
|
including
|
550.00
|
554.00
|
4.00
|
5.09
|
|
|
and
|
585.00
|
590.00
|
5.00
|
2.33
|
|
*
|
Represents core
length. True mineralization widths range between 65- 95% of
reported intervals as they are determined by both structural
analyses obtained from oriented drill core data and orientations of
individual high grade domains and bulk tonnage
domains. Mineralized
domains vary in strike between 340 to 270 degrees and dip between
85 to 65 degrees to the north. All drillholes intersect both
high grade and
bulk tonnage domains and often intersect multiple domains resulting
in a range of true widths within the same drillhole.
|
Table 2: Shallow drill results along
3.6 kilometres of strike length targeting the bulk tonnage
mineralized envelope that surrounds the high-grade gold
domains.
Drill
Hole
|
|
From
(m)
|
To
(m)
|
Width*
(m)
|
Gold
(g/t)
|
Section
|
BR-424
|
|
278.15
|
286.00
|
7.85
|
0.58
|
22675
|
|
including
|
279.80
|
280.20
|
0.40
|
6.80
|
|
BR-442
|
|
31.00
|
32.00
|
1.00
|
6.89
|
22350
|
|
and
|
51.70
|
85.65
|
33.95
|
0.40
|
|
BR-443
|
|
38.50
|
104.70
|
66.20
|
0.55
|
22300
|
|
including
|
69.90
|
85.85
|
15.95
|
1.18
|
|
BR-421
|
|
385.50
|
456.85
|
71.35
|
0.68
|
22275
|
|
including
|
420.00
|
431.50
|
11.50
|
1.82
|
|
|
and
including
|
422.30
|
425.55
|
3.25
|
3.36
|
|
BR-440
|
|
71.00
|
95.80
|
24.80
|
0.72
|
22225
|
|
including
|
82.30
|
91.30
|
9.00
|
1.50
|
|
|
and
including
|
88.30
|
91.30
|
3.00
|
3.06
|
|
BR-422
|
|
60.00
|
61.10
|
1.10
|
7.12
|
22225
|
|
and
|
310.40
|
323.60
|
13.20
|
0.60
|
|
BR-423
|
|
199.90
|
222.30
|
22.40
|
0.54
|
22225
|
BR-441
|
|
12.25
|
55.40
|
43.15
|
0.86
|
22175
|
|
including
|
13.00
|
43.25
|
30.25
|
1.08
|
|
|
and
including
|
22.00
|
33.00
|
11.00
|
2.22
|
|
|
and
including
|
29.00
|
33.00
|
4.00
|
4.19
|
|
BR-412
|
|
119.20
|
121.10
|
1.90
|
3.65
|
21375
|
|
including
|
120.10
|
121.10
|
1.00
|
6.07
|
|
BR-417
|
|
49.00
|
82.95
|
33.95
|
0.31
|
21225
|
BR-433
|
|
53.60
|
88.00
|
34.40
|
0.34
|
21125
|
|
including
|
75.50
|
87.00
|
11.50
|
0.55
|
|
|
and
|
168.90
|
206.30
|
37.40
|
0.42
|
|
|
including
|
175.95
|
185.35
|
9.40
|
1.01
|
|
BR-432
|
|
51.10
|
76.00
|
24.90
|
0.34
|
21125
|
|
and
|
108.40
|
116.90
|
8.50
|
1.13
|
|
BR-431
|
|
25.05
|
75.00
|
49.95
|
0.33
|
21125
|
|
including
|
54.20
|
70.85
|
16.65
|
0.52
|
|
BR-425
|
|
62.20
|
142.75
|
80.55
|
1.09
|
20525
|
|
including
|
70.15
|
78.70
|
8.55
|
5.86
|
|
BR-323
|
|
154.80
|
163.00
|
8.20
|
0.31
|
20225
|
|
|
176.80
|
197.40
|
20.60
|
0.33
|
|
|
including
|
176.80
|
178.60
|
1.80
|
1.84
|
|
BR-378
|
|
172.50
|
182.00
|
9.50
|
0.46
|
18875
|
|
including
|
191.00
|
192.00
|
1.00
|
2.02
|
|
BR-379
|
|
83.20
|
86.20
|
3.00
|
0.73
|
18725
|
|
and
|
101.35
|
129.40
|
28.05
|
1.84
|
|
|
including
|
101.35
|
124.00
|
22.65
|
2.22
|
|
|
and
including
|
101.35
|
111.30
|
9.95
|
2.92
|
|
|
including
|
101.35
|
102.35
|
1.00
|
15.90
|
|
|
and
|
123.50
|
124.00
|
0.50
|
28.70
|
|
*
|
Represents core
length. True mineralization widths range between 65- 95% of
reported intervals as they are determined by both structural
analyses obtained from oriented drill core data and orientations of
individual high grade domains and bulk tonnage
domains. Mineralized
domains vary in strike between 340 to 270 degrees and dip between
85 to 65 degrees to the north. All drillholes intersect both
high grade and
bulk tonnage domains and often intersect multiple domains resulting
in a range of true widths within the same drillhole.
|
Figure 1: LP Fault long section showing only
high-grade gold domain intercepts. Gold intercepts from
the surrounding bulk tonnage style domains have been removed for
clarity. New drill results inside of the high-grade domains
are highlighted.
All LP Fault drill hole highlighted assays, plus drill collar
locations and orientations can be downloaded at the Company's web
site.
Drill collar location, azimuth and dip for drill holes targeting
the LP Fault zone included in this release are provided in the
table below (UTM zone 15N, NAD 83):
Drill Hole
|
Easting
|
Northing
|
Elevation
|
Length
|
Dip
|
Azimuth
|
BR-280
|
457638
|
5634448
|
373
|
1053
|
-60
|
213
|
BR-323
|
457356
|
5634144
|
355
|
309
|
-44
|
203
|
BR-378
|
458589
|
5633576
|
360
|
350
|
-55
|
213
|
BR-379
|
458686
|
5633455
|
365
|
270
|
-55
|
212
|
BR-383
|
456650
|
5633873
|
358
|
594
|
-44
|
25
|
BR-384
|
456650
|
5633873
|
358
|
822
|
-55
|
27
|
BR-385
|
456564
|
5633897
|
359
|
756
|
-53
|
26
|
BR-386
|
456529
|
5633987
|
363
|
765
|
-57
|
28
|
BR-411
|
456221
|
5634368
|
365
|
501
|
-46
|
37
|
BR-412
|
456231
|
5634453
|
362
|
450
|
-47
|
37
|
BR-417
|
456423
|
5634421
|
359
|
234
|
-54
|
210
|
BR-419
|
457689
|
5634363
|
369
|
790
|
-59
|
207
|
BR-421
|
455733
|
5635325
|
377
|
570
|
-58
|
226
|
BR-422
|
455481
|
5635448
|
386
|
429
|
-58
|
225
|
BR-423
|
455430
|
5635385
|
386
|
381
|
-58
|
224
|
BR-424
|
455349
|
5635498
|
389
|
364
|
-56
|
224
|
BR-425
|
456908
|
5633934
|
357
|
300
|
-54
|
210
|
BR-430
|
457779
|
5634318
|
364
|
810
|
-60
|
207
|
BR-431
|
456467
|
5634343
|
359
|
207
|
-55
|
211
|
BR-432
|
456492
|
5634391
|
358
|
231
|
-56
|
214
|
BR-433
|
456517
|
5634430
|
358
|
282
|
-55
|
214
|
BR-440
|
455561
|
5635012
|
376
|
201
|
-61
|
227
|
BR-441
|
455635
|
5635011
|
376
|
273
|
-60
|
228
|
BR-442
|
455507
|
5635173
|
379
|
222
|
-56
|
228
|
BR-443
|
455549
|
5635146
|
378
|
261
|
-61
|
228
|
About the Dixie Project
The 100% owned flagship Dixie project boasts one of the largest
recent gold discoveries in a Canadian mining
jurisdiction. Proximal to major infrastructure near the town
of Red Lake, Ontario, the Dixie
property comprises over 91.4 square kilometres of contiguous claims
that extend over 22 kilometres with a paved highway and provincial
power and natural gas lines. The property also hosts a network
of well-maintained logging roads which facilitate access.
The 23 high-grade domains discussed in this release are
structurally and geologically distinctive from the surrounding
lower grade, bulk tonnage style gold mineralization. Together, they
span a strike length of 4.2 kilometres and occur within larger
stratigraphically controlled lower grade domains. They are
characterized by high degrees of strain and/or transposed quartz
vein zones following two distinct structural fabrics and
transition from upper greenschist to lower amphibolite facies
metamorphism. Gold in the high-grade domains is generally
observed as free gold, is often transposed into, and overgrows the
dominant structural fabrics, and is higher-grade on average than
the surrounding bulk tonnage gold zones.
To date, Great Bear has completed a total of 672 drill holes,
identifying three high-grade gold discoveries. The most significant
discovery is the large-scale "LP Fault" zone, which comprises
high-grade disseminated gold mineralization within broad
moderate-to-lower-grade envelopes in felsic volcanic and sediment
units. LP Fault drilling has identified gold mineralization along
11 kilometres of strike length to date, and a detailed drill grid
is being completed along approximately 4 kilometres of strike
length. The nearby "Hinge" and "Limb" gold zones are more
characteristic of the renowned Red
Lake mined deposits, comprising gold-bearing quartz veins
and silica-sulphide replacement zones hosted by mafic volcanic
units. Over 80% of the Company's drill holes into the LP Fault,
Dixie Limb and Hinge zones contain visible gold mineralization.
Gold occurs mainly as free gold, neither bound to nor within
sulphide minerals.
Great Bear adheres to industry-leading quality assurance /
quality control (QA/QC) practices in data collection, analysis and
disclosure, and detailed assays including all historical LP Fault
drill hole data are available on the Company's website at
https://greatbearresources.ca/projects/overview/dixie-project-data/.
About Great Bear
Great Bear Resources Ltd. is a Vancouver-based gold exploration company
focused on advancing its 100% owned Dixie project in Northwestern Ontario, Canada. A
significant exploration drill program is currently underway to
define the mineralization within a large-scale, high-grade
disseminated gold discovery made in 2019, the LP
Fault. Additional exploration drilling is also in progress to
expand and infill nearby high-grade gold zones, as well as to test
new regional targets. The Company is currently in the process
of compiling all historical data together with incoming assay
results, with the goal of publishing an initial NI 43-101 compliant
multi-million ounce mineral resource estimate for the Dixie project
in early 2022.
Great Bear is a committed partner to all stakeholders, with a
long-term vision of sustainable exploration to advance the Dixie
project in a manner that demonstrates good stewardship of land,
operational excellence and accountability.
QA/QC and Core Sampling Protocols
Drill core is logged and sampled in a secure core storage
facility located in Red Lake Ontario. Core samples from the
program are cut in half, using a diamond cutting saw, and are sent
to Activation Laboratories in Ontario, an accredited mineral analysis
laboratory, for analysis. All samples are analysed for gold using
standard Fire Assay-AA techniques. Samples returning over 10.0 g/t
gold are analysed utilizing standard Fire Assay-Gravimetric
methods. Pulps from approximately 5% of the gold mineralized
samples are submitted for check analysis to a second
lab. Selected samples are also chosen for duplicate assay from
the coarse reject of the original sample. Selected samples
with visible gold are also analyzed with a standard 1 kg metallic
screen fire assay. Certified gold reference standards, blanks
and field duplicates are routinely inserted into the sample stream,
as part of Great Bear's quality control/quality assurance program
(QAQC). No QAQC issues were noted with the results reported
herein.
Qualified Person and NI 43-101 Disclosure
Mr. R. Bob Singh, P.Geo, VP
Exploration, and Ms. Andrea Diakow
P.Geo, VP Projects for Great Bear are the Qualified Persons
as defined by National Instrument 43-101 responsible for the
accuracy of technical information contained in this news
release.
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
"Chris
Taylor"
Chris Taylor, President and
CEO
www.greatbearresources.ca
Cautionary note regarding forward-looking
statements
This release contains certain "forward looking statements"
and certain "forward-looking information" as defined under
applicable Canadian and U.S. securities laws. Forward-looking
statements and information can generally be identified by the use
of forward-looking terminology such as "may", "will", "should",
"expect", "intend", "estimate", "anticipate", "believe",
"continue", "plans" or similar terminology. The forward-looking
information contained herein is provided for the purpose of
assisting readers in understanding management's current
expectations and plans relating to the future. Readers are
cautioned that such information may not be appropriate for other
purposes.
Forward-looking information are based on management of the
parties' reasonable assumptions, estimates, expectations, analyses
and opinions, which are based on such management's experience and
perception of trends, current conditions and expected developments,
and other factors that management believes are relevant and
reasonable in the circumstances, but which may prove to be
incorrect.
Such factors, among other things, include: impacts arising
from the global disruption caused by the Covid-19 coronavirus
outbreak, business integration risks; fluctuations in general
macroeconomic conditions; fluctuations in securities markets;
fluctuations in spot and forward prices of gold or certain other
commodities; change in national and local government, legislation,
taxation, controls, regulations and political or economic
developments; risks and hazards associated with the business of
mineral exploration, development and mining (including
environmental hazards, industrial accidents, unusual or unexpected
formations pressures, cave-ins and flooding); discrepancies between
actual and estimated metallurgical recoveries; inability to obtain
adequate insurance to cover risks and hazards; the presence of laws
and regulations that may impose restrictions on mining; employee
relations; relationships with and claims by local communities and
indigenous populations; availability of increasing costs associated
with mining inputs and labour; the speculative nature of mineral
exploration and development (including the risks of obtaining
necessary licenses, permits and approvals from government
authorities); and title to properties.
Great Bear undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking
information except as required by applicable law. Such
forward-looking information represents management's best judgment
based on information currently available. No forward-looking
statement can be guaranteed and actual future results may vary
materially. Accordingly, readers are advised not to place undue
reliance on forward-looking statements or information.
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SOURCE Great Bear Resources Ltd.