BTU continues to hit VMS-style mineralization at Dixie Halo

Red Lake District, northwestern Ontario, Canada. Photo by P199, Wikimedia Commons

Drilling at BTU Metals’ 197-sq.-km Dixie Halo project in Ontario returned continuous volcanogenic massive sulphide-style mineralization over 300 metres, starting at surface, with metal grades increasing with depth.

Hole BTU-19-25 reported in the most recent release includes a 173-metre interval grading 0.35% copper-equivalent, starting at 182 metres down-hole. Within this interval are higher-grade sections, such as 7.8 metres of 2.27% copper-equivalent and 2 metres of 2.75% copper-equivalent.

Hole BTU-19-25 reported in the most recent release includes a 173-metre interval grading 0.35% copper-equivalent

“This initial drill program on the newly outlined TNT target has rapidly increased our understanding of the strong alteration and associated mineralization,” Bruce Durham, the company’s VP of exploration, said in a release.

“The fact that we have intersected several significantly mineralized intervals in our initial testing is very encouraging.”

BTU discovered the TNT target in November, interpreted as a gold-enriched volcanogenic massive sulphide system.

The discovery hole returned 44.3 metres of 1.14% copper-equivalent starting at 300 metres. BTU drilled a total of 17 holes at TNT; additional assays are pending.

To date, drilling has traced the TNT target mineralization over 2.2 km of strike and geophysical surveys suggest widths in the range of 200 metres to 500 metres.

This target remains open on strike. Past drilling also suggests that grades of the mineralization increase with depth.

Additional downhole geophysical surveys are ongoing at TNT with a second phase of drilling planned for the coming weeks.

Additional drilling is ongoing at the Dixie Creek target area, which is structurally complex and may host gold-bearing structures related to the LP fault outlined by Great Bear Resources.

The Dixie Halo property is contiguous with Great Bear’s Dixie project in the Red Lake district in Ontario.

(This article first appeared in the Canadian Mining Journal)