Northwestern miners and prospectors meet and greet:
new headframes on the horizon in region.
by Ross, Ian
A Sudbury junior took home top honours for its discovery of a
nickel-copper discovery in northwestern Ontario.
Canadian Arrow Mines was selected Developer of the Year at the
Northwestern Ontario Mines and Mineral Symposium in Thunder Bay, April
10.
Enthusiasm for the upcoming exploration season was high as 420
participants attended the event at the Valhalla Inn.
Canadian Arrow is close to bringing its Kenbridge deposit, east of
Sioux Narrows, into open pit production by 2009, having just published a
preliminary economic assessment.
"We're going forward with all guns blazing," says
president Kim Tyler. A feasibility study should be done by year's
end. With a 10-year mine life, a combined open pit-underground mine
could yield 9.7 million tonnes at 0.46 per cent nickel and 0.25 per cent
copper diluted. The company picked up the property just two years ago
from Falconbridge, which explored extensively there since the 1950s,
even sinking a 2,000-foot exploration shaft.
Canadian Arrow CEO Dean MacEachern, was well familiar with the
ground having been a Falconbridge senior vice-president of exploration.
The junior is dewatering the shaft, has bought hoist equipment, and
is embarking on advanced exploration at depth this year.
"It was never in production," says Tyler, "it was
truly an exploration play. They (Falconbridge) sank a shaft and spent
six years drilling all over the place and only took out a small bulk
sample.
"Nobody has really done anything with it in all those
years."
This year will be spent raising financing for the $108 million
mine-mill complex and following up nickel-copper occurrences in a
regional exploration program.
The company was also lauded for its early consultation with the
Anishinawbe Nation communities in Treaty 3 to explore on its traditional
lands. They seek authorization through the Treaty 3 resource law.
Tyler says the project could provide active Native involvement in
employment, business opportunities and education.
Two other juniors were recognized for their highly prospective
exploration plays.
Gold Eagle Mines and Kodiak Exploration shared the Bernie
Schnieders Discovery of the Year Award.
Gold Eagle is in the midst of a $65 million gold exploration
program on at its Bruce Channel project in the heart of the Red Lake
camp. J.S. Redpath is helping sink a 1,460-metre shaft to pursue
significant gold grades at depth.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Kodiak's multiple high grade gold finds at its Hercules
project has prompted a flurry of activity from other juniors to
accelerate their exploration efforts in a largely-forgotten gold camp.
The company is the dominant junior in the area with more than
1,400-square-kilometres. The Northwest Prospectors also handed out
Lifetime Achievement Awards to prospectors John Ternowesky Bill Miron
and the brothers Ray and Louis Cousineau, the latter two having staked
more than 1,200 mining claims in the Kenora mining district over 60
years.
Also honoured was Carter Nelson of Nelson Granite, a family-owned
stone quarry west of the hamlet of Vermillion Bay.
The event was shrouded with some controversy The jailing of six
community leaders of Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwig First Nation (Big
Trout Lake) sparked a small Native protest outside the hotel.
The leaders of the remote community 600 km north of Thunder Bay
were cited for contempt of court in March for blocking exploration
efforts by junior miner Platinex on claims near the community.
www.nwopa.net
By IAN ROSS
Northern Ontario Business
COPYRIGHT 2008 Laurentian Business Publishing,
Inc. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.