CHILE – Over the last 15 years, Newcrest Mining has discovered gold deposits in Australia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia and continues to explore and evaluate prospects in those countries as well as in many others including Fiji, North America, Mexico, Cote d’Ivoire, Chile, Argentina, and Ecuador.
This week it signed an option agreement in Chile to earn up to a 75% interest in Cornerstone Capital Resources’ Miocene properties. Miocene is in the Atacama and Antofagasta regions of Chile, where Cornerstone is targeting epithermal gold-silver and porphyry gold-copper deposits.
Cornerstone says significant epithermal mineralization has been discovered on neighboring properties along strike to the west of its Miocene claims. The company has undertaken geochemistry work (rock and soil samples), ground geophysics, prospecting and geological mapping to prepare Miocene for its first drill program. Cornerstone says altered and geochemically anomalous areas up to 9 km by 3 km on the property have never been trenched or drilled.
Cornerstone has a portfolio of projects in Chile and Ecuador, including the Cascabel gold-enriched copper porphyry project in northwestern Ecuador, where it has a 23% direct and indirect stake with joint-venture partner SolGold.
Newcrest already has taken a strategic stake in an Ecuador focused company. In February it invested $250 million at $5.50 per share for a 27.1% interest in Lundin Gold, which is developing the Fruta del Norte mine.
“Newcrest is also actively exploring in Ecuador, where Cornerstone has a first mover advantage as a prospect generator” since 2005 and has “several drill ready properties available for option,” Newcrest CEO Brooke Macdonald said in a news release.
In the meantime, Newcrest can earn ownership in Cornerstone’s Miocene project in Chile over four stages. In the initial 18-month option period, Newcrest is required to make an upfront payment of $100,000 and spend a minimum of $1.1 million.
Over a four-year period in the first stage, Newcrest must pay $500,000 and spend a further $8 million with a minimum of $500,000 in each year to keep the option and earn a 51% stake in the project.
In stage two, over two years, Newcrest is required to pay Cornerstone $650,000 and complete a preliminary economic assessment on any target area on the property. To boost its stake to 65%, Newcrest can extend the second stage of the agreement to a third year by paying an additional $250,000.
In the final third stage, over a two-year period, Newcrest needs to spent $100 million or complete a bankable feasibility study, whichever happens first, to raise its stake to 75%. Newcrest will also be permitted to extend stage three by up to an extra two years by paying $500,000 for each one-year extension.
If Newcrest does earn a 75% stake, Cornerstone has the option for a period of 90 days to convert 5% of its 25% equity in the project into a 1% net smelter returns royalty. Newcrest will then have the right to buy down the royalty to 0.5% net smelter royalty at fair market value after completing the bankable feasibility study.
This story first appeared on The Northern Miner