VANCOUVER, BC, May 24, 2023
/CNW/ - Copper Mountain Mining Corporation (TSX: CMMC) (ASX:
C6C) (the "Company" or "Copper Mountain") is pleased to
announce positive results from the first four drill holes of its
2023 exploration program at the Copper Mountain Mine, located in
southern British Columbia. Two of
these holes were drilled at the Copper Mountain Mine main pit and
two at New Ingerbelle, which is located approximately one kilometre
to the west of the main pit.
Drill hole CM-DD-897 intersected the highest-grade and most
gold-rich, copper-gold mineralization yet discovered at New
Ingerbelle and extends the known mineralized zone by approximately
200 metres below the current Mineral Resource. This drill hole
shows that the mineralized zone at New Ingerbelle has a vertical
extent of at least 900 metres and the zone remains open both
laterally and at depth.
Drilling Highlights
- Drill hole CM-DD-897
-
- 191 metres of 0.66% CuEq (0.45% Cu, 0.32 g/t Au, 0.41
g/t Ag) from 722 metres
- Including 104 metres of 1.01% CuEq (0.65% Cu, 0.52 g/t
Au, 0.53 g/t Ag) from 809 metres
- Including 45 metres of 1.50% CuEq (0.94% Cu, 0.83 g/t
Au, 0.74 g/t Ag) from 867 metres
- Drill hole CM-DD-896
-
- 108 metres of 0.76% CuEq (0.59% Cu, 0.23 g/t Au, 2.13
g/t Ag) from 464 metres
- Including 56 metres of 1.00% CuEq (0.79% Cu, 0.27 g/t
Au, 3.59 g/t Ag) from 466 metres
- Drill hole CM-DD-895
-
- 42 metres of 0.74% CuEq (0.64% Cu, 0.13 g/t Au, 1.47 g/t
Ag) from 480 metres
"Our current drill program has discovered high-grade
copper-gold mineralization over 200 metres below the previous
deepest drill hole at New Ingerbelle and shows that the
mineralizing system becomes stronger and more gold-rich at depth,"
commented Patrick Redmond, Copper
Mountain's Senior Vice President, Exploration and Geoscience. "We
have been successful in achieving the objective of our 2023
exploration program, which is designed to look for higher-grade
zones below and adjacent to the current resource. What we have
found is similar to the high-grade zones at Red Chris and
Cadia-Ridgeway. These latest drilling results continue to
demonstrate the size potential of the Copper Mountain
Mine."
2023 Exploration Program
The 2023 exploration program is designed to test seven target
areas within the NW-trending Copper Mountain-New Ingerbelle
mineralized corridor (Figure 1), a 4 to 5 kilometre long,
NW-trending zone of porphyry copper-gold mineralization. Multiple
historical drill holes within this zone end in copper-gold
mineralization and geophysical data strongly suggest that the
mineralizing system extends well below the current known Mineral
Resource, which is open both laterally and at depth.
Figure 1 provides the location map showing the 2023 target areas
numbered 1 to 7, the historical Titan IP chargeability data (7
lines completed in 2007), the 2023 geophysical survey grid, and all
drill holes colour-coded by copper grade. The 2023 survey comprises
a 3D IP/DC resistivity survey at New Ingerbelle and to the
northwest of the active mining area, plus a series of 2D IP/DC
resistivity lines within and to the east of the active mining
area.
The 2023 drill program consists of two phases. Phase 1 is
expected to be completed mid-year and includes a large geophysical
program and approximately 8,000 metres of diamond drilling. Phase 2
consists of approximately 10,000 metres of additional drilling. At
New Ingerbelle, drilling is currently ongoing with three holes
completed and one hole in progress. At the Copper Mountain Mine,
two holes have been completed and one hole is in progress, which is
a 175-metre undercut of a 2010 drill hole that intersected a
72-metre zone grading 1.86% CuEq from 452 metres at depth (Target
area 5 on Figure 1).
The current drill program is focused on finding higher-grade
zones of mineralization below and adjacent to the current Mineral
Resource, and similar to the higher-grade zones that have been
discovered at other alkalic porphyry copper-gold deposits such as
Red Chris in British Columbia and
Cadia-Ridgeway in New South Wales,
Australia. The Copper Mountain deposit is the same
geological age as the Red Chris deposit and both contain the same
style of high-grade, A-quartz vein-hosted, copper-gold
mineralization hosted within potassically-altered porphyry
intrusions and adjacent country rock. Like Red Chris, copper and
gold at the Copper Mountain deposit exhibit a strong correlation
and Au/Cu ratios increase inward towards the core of the system.
The discovery in hole CM-DD-897 of high-grade copper-gold
mineralization, with Au/Cu ratios of >1 in the highest-grade
interval, shows that the mineralizing system at New Ingerbelle
becomes stronger and more gold-rich at depth. The mineralized zone
has a minimum vertical extent of 900 metres and remains open at
depth. For comparison, zones of high-grade mineralization at Red
Chris and Cadia-Ridgeway exhibit vertical extents of over 1,000
metres. Figure 2 shows New Ingerbelle and the East Ridge zone at
Red Chris at the same scale.
The Red Chris cross section is taken from "Newcrest Mining
Limited - Exploration Update 10 March
2021" and shows the location of the East Ridge discovery
hole, RC678. The newly discovered higher-grade copper-gold zone at
New Ingerbelle has similar grades to Red Chris, and the Company
believes the overall mineralizing system is comparable in size.
A large geophysical program is also ongoing and is designed to
infill and extend previous induced polarization ("IP")/DC
resistivity coverage. A 3D survey has been completed at New
Ingerbelle and both 3D and 2D surveys have been completed at the
Copper Mountain Mine. A magnetotellurics ("MT") survey is currently
ongoing at New Ingerbelle and will extend the depth of
investigation below the limits of the IP/DC resistivity survey.
Large numbers of physical property measurements on drill core,
including density, magnetic susceptibility, resistivity and
chargeability have also been carried out on recent and historical
drill core and will be used to constrain the geophysical modelling.
These new geophysical and petrophysical data will be integrated
with historical geophysical data and will be used to better define
existing targets and to generate new target areas.
Drilling Results
A list of the drill holes including significant intercepts and
other details are included in Appendix A. Location maps and cross
sections of the four holes are shown in Appendix B. Drilling to
date has tested three of the target areas shown in Figure 1 with
drilling currently ongoing on a fourth target area. The strategy
for Phase 1 of the program is to drill into multiple target areas
and then, based on the results, prioritize target areas for
follow-up drilling in Phase 2.
Drill Holes CM-DD-894 and CM-DD-895
Drill holes CM-DD-894 and CM-DD-895 (Target area 4 on Figure 1)
were drilled 160 metres apart to test a strong IP chargeability
feature (on the most westerly line from the 2007 IP/DC resistivity
survey) located immediately north of the Copper Mountain Stock
("CMS") and on trend to the northwest from the current mining area
in the Copper Mountain main pit shown in Figure 1. Appendix B,
Figure 3 shows a location map and Figure 4 shows a cross section
with drill holes CM-DD-894 and CM-DD-895. The highest-grade
intervals occur within zones of porphyry-related hydrothermal
breccia, including a 42-metre zone grading 0.74% CuEq
from 480 metres depth in hole CM-DD-895.
Most of the previous drilling in this area has consisted of
relatively short holes. A drill hole from 2008 (08P1-22), located
approximately 200 metres to the west of the current drilling,
intersected a 46-metre zone grading 0.65% CuEq from 374 metres at
depth. Reconnaissance mapping of the area in 2022 identified a
large, approximately 300 x 300 metre, zone with porphyry-style
veins and related potassic alteration and anomalous copper values.
Mapping also located two historical adits in the area. Grab samples
from waste piles outside these adits returned values greater than
1% Cu in rocks with A-quartz veins, chalcopyrite veinlets and
Kspar-biotite-magnetite alteration.
Both holes intersected copper-gold mineralization below the
current Mineral Resource, and further drilling in the area is
warranted. This area of the deposit is the location of the future
haul road to New Ingerbelle and a deeper reserve pit would have a
positive impact on road construction costs and haul distances.
Drill Hole CM-DD-896
Drill hole CM-DD-896 (Target area 1 on Figure 1) was a 200-metre
undercut of high-grade porphyry-hosted copper-gold mineralization
in a number of 2021 drill holes, including drill hole 21IG-11
located in the southwest area of New Ingerbelle (See Appendix B,
Figure 5 and 6). Drill hole CM-DD-896 intersected a wide zone of
chalcopyrite-pyrite mineralization hosted in Nicola Group rocks,
Lost Horse porphyry dykes and related hydrothermal breccias. The
highest-grade interval of 56 metres at 1.00% CuEq is
mainly hosted in a biotite-sulfide cemented hydrothermal breccia.
The mineralization intersected in this drill hole is below the
current Mineral Resource, and the mineralized zone remains open to
the southwest towards the CMS contact.
Drill Hole CM-DD-897
Drill hole CM-DD-897 (Target area 2 on Figure 1) was a 200-metre
undercut of the previous deepest drill hole at New Ingerbelle,
20IG01, which intersected a number of intervals of high-grade
copper-gold mineralization (See Appendix B, Figure 7).
Mineralization in CM-DD-897 is hosted within igneous breccias and
Nicola Group country rocks and consists of a chalcopyrite-pyrite
sulphide assemblage associated with potassic alteration
(hydrothermal quartz-magnetite, biotite and potassium feldspar),
with local pyrrhotite associated with specific lithological units
within the Nicola Group. The interval is also cut by narrow Lost
Horse porphyry dykes, with quartz-chalcopyrite veins,
chalcopyrite-pyrite veinlets, and locally intense potassic
alteration. The highest-grade interval, 8.85 metres at 5.37%
CuEq, consists of a quartz-magnetite-chalcopyrite-pyrite
assemblage, hosted in what appears to be intensely altered Nicola
Group rocks.
QA/QC and Core Sampling
Protocols
Drill core was cut and sampled at the Copper Mountain Mine core
processing facility. Half core samples were collected in plastic
bags together with sample tags and grouped in "apple crates" for
dispatch to the assay laboratory. Sample size is approximately 2
metres for HQ and 3 metres for NQ core diameters but may vary to
honour geological contacts. Sample weights typically varied from 5
to 10 kilograms. Sample sizes are considered appropriate for the
style of mineralization. Drill core samples were transported by
road to the laboratory. Sample preparation and assay analysis was
conducted at the independent ISO 9001 certified and ISO 17025
accredited MSALABS in Langley,
British Colombia. All samples were dried, crushed to 70% passing 2
mm, with a 250-gram split pulverized to 85% passing 75µm. All
samples were assayed for 48 elements using a 4-acid digestion
followed by ICP-AES/MS determination (method IMS-230). Overlimit
(>10,000 ppm) copper was determined using ICP-AES (method
ICF-6Cu). Gold analyses were determined by 30-gram fire assay with
an AAS finish (method FAS-111). Sampling and assaying quality
control procedures consisted of inclusion of certified reference
material ("CRMs"), blank material and duplicates with each batch
(at least 1:20). Assays of quality control samples were compared
with reference samples in Excel and verified as acceptable prior to
use of data from analyzed batches. Laboratory quality control data,
including laboratory standards, blanks, duplicates, repeats and
grind size results are captured in an Excel database and assessed
for accuracy and precision for recent data. Analysis of the
available quality control sample assay results indicates that an
acceptable level of accuracy and precision has been achieved.
Sampling, sample preparation and quality control protocols are
considered appropriate for the material being sampled. There are no
known issues that would materially affect the accuracy or
reliability of the analytical data from the drill program presented
herein.
Competent Persons
Statement
The information in this report that relates to exploration
targets, exploration results, Mineral Resources or ore reserves is
based on information compiled by Patrick
Redmond, Ph.D., P. Geo. Patrick
Redmond is a full-time employee of the Company and has
sufficient experience which is relevant to the style of
mineralization and type of deposit under consideration and to the
activity being undertaken to qualify as a Competent Person as
defined in the 2012 Edition of the 'Australasian Code for Reporting
of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves'.
Patrick Redmond consents to the
inclusion in this news release of the matters based on the
information in the form and context in which it appears.
Qualified Person
Patrick Redmond is a qualified
person as defined by National Instrument 43-101 - Standards of
Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") and has reviewed and
approved the technical content of this release.
About Copper Mountain Mining
Corporation
Copper Mountain owns 75% of the Copper Mountain Mine, which is
located in southern British
Columbia near the town of Princeton. The Copper Mountain Mine produces
approximately 100 million pounds of copper equivalent on average
per year. Copper Mountain trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange
under the symbol "CMMC" and Australian Stock Exchange under the
symbol "C6C".
Additional information is available on the Company's web page at
www.CuMtn.com.
On behalf of the Board of
COPPER MOUNTAIN MINING CORPORATION
"Gil Clausen"
Gil Clausen
President and Chief Executive Officer
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking
Statements
This news release may contain "forward looking
information" within the meaning of Canadian securities legislation
and "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the United
States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995
(collectively, "forward-looking statements"). These forward-looking
statements are made as of the date of this news release and Copper
Mountain does not intend, and does not assume any obligation, to
update these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new
information, future events or otherwise, except as required under
applicable securities legislation.
All statements, other than statements of historical facts, are
forward-looking statements. Generally, forward-looking statements
relate to future events or future performance and reflect Copper
Mountain's expectations or beliefs regarding future events.
In certain circumstances, forward-looking statements can be
identified by, but are not limited to, statements which use
terminology such as "plans", "expects", "estimates", "intends",
"anticipates", "believes", "forecasts", "guidance", scheduled",
"target" or variations of such words, or statements that certain
actions, events or results "may", "could", "would", "might",
"occur" or "be achieved" or the negative of these terms or
comparable terminology. In this news release, certain
forward-looking statements are identified, including information
with respect to the Company's strategy, plans and expectations in
connection with its continuing exploration program, anticipated
production at the Copper Mountain Mine, and expectations for other
economic, business and/or competitive factors. Forward-looking
statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other
factors that could cause actual results, performance, achievements
and opportunities to differ materially from those implied by such
forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results
to differ materially from these forward-looking statements include,
among others, the successful exploration of the Company's property
in Canada, market price, continued
availability of capital and financing and general economic, market
or business conditions, the Company's ability to comply with its
financial covenants under its bond terms and meet its future cash
commitments, extreme weather events, material and labour shortages,
the protection of the Company's IT systems or a component of such
systems impacting the Company's reputation and results of
operations, the reliability of the historical data referenced in
this document and risks set out in Copper Mountain's public
documents, including the management's discussion and analysis for
the quarter ended March 31, 2023 and
the annual information form dated March 27,
2023, each filed on SEDAR under the Company's issuer profile
at www.sedar.com. Although Copper Mountain has attempted to
identify important factors that could cause the Company's actual
results, performance, achievements and opportunities to differ
materially from those described in its forward-looking statements,
there may be other factors that cause the Company's results,
performance, achievements and opportunities not to be as
anticipated, estimated or intended. While the Company believes that
the information and assumptions used in preparing the
forward-looking statements are reasonable, undue reliance should
not be placed on these statements, which only apply as of the date
of this news release, and no assurance can be given that such
events will occur in the disclosed time frames or at all.
Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on the
Company's forward-looking statements.
APPENDIX A: Drill Hole Data
Table 1: Drill Hole Details
Hole
ID
|
Easting
(m)
|
Northing
(m)
|
Elevation
(m)
|
Azimuth
(°)
|
Dip
(°)
|
Total Depth
(m)
|
CM-DD-894
|
678804
|
5467470
|
1062
|
180
|
-55.00
|
605
|
CM-DD-895
|
678802
|
5467615
|
1062
|
170
|
-63.00
|
773
|
CM-DD-896
|
677307
|
5467632
|
1136
|
310
|
-65.00
|
1064
|
CM-DD-897
|
678070
|
5468110
|
875
|
255
|
-60.00
|
1090
|
Table 2: Significant Intercept Table(1,2,3)
Hole
ID
|
From
(m)
|
To
(m)
|
Length
(m)
|
CuEq%
|
Cu%
|
Au
g/t
|
Ag
g/t
|
CM-DD-894
|
59.08
|
95.08
|
36.00
|
0.61
|
0.46
|
0.21
|
0.93
|
including
|
68.83
|
87.34
|
18.51
|
1.04
|
0.79
|
0.35
|
1.62
|
|
107.18
|
126.00
|
18.82
|
0.22
|
0.17
|
0.07
|
0.32
|
|
297.39
|
314.14
|
16.75
|
1.91
|
1.65
|
0.35
|
3.02
|
CM-DD-895
|
137.10
|
153.45
|
16.35
|
0.60
|
0.50
|
0.13
|
1.19
|
|
479.54
|
521.13
|
41.59
|
0.74
|
0.64
|
0.13
|
1.47
|
CM-DD-896
|
464.20
|
572.47
|
108.27
|
0.76
|
0.59
|
0.23
|
2.13
|
including
|
465.56
|
521.50
|
55.94
|
1.00
|
0.79
|
0.27
|
3.59
|
|
597.00
|
619.85
|
22.85
|
0.28
|
0.21
|
0.10
|
0.32
|
|
690.75
|
713.00
|
22.25
|
0.45
|
0.35
|
0.14
|
0.51
|
CM-DD-897
|
24.00
|
88.70
|
64.70
|
0.47
|
0.31
|
0.23
|
0.79
|
|
Assays
Pending
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
208.62
|
242.00
|
33.38
|
0.25
|
0.17
|
0.11
|
0.34
|
|
255.20
|
329.78
|
74.58
|
0.29
|
0.21
|
0.12
|
0.37
|
including
|
257.10
|
278.57
|
21.47
|
0.62
|
0.42
|
0.28
|
0.71
|
|
352.30
|
419.20
|
66.90
|
0.28
|
0.19
|
0.13
|
0.28
|
|
455.00
|
503.00
|
48.00
|
0.25
|
0.17
|
0.11
|
0.26
|
|
616.70
|
648.08
|
31.38
|
0.42
|
0.33
|
0.13
|
0.38
|
|
607.73
|
648.08
|
40.35
|
0.36
|
0.28
|
0.12
|
0.32
|
|
674.00
|
698.18
|
24.18
|
0.23
|
0.16
|
0.10
|
0.28
|
|
722.00
|
912.75
|
190.75
|
0.66
|
0.45
|
0.32
|
0.41
|
including
|
808.90
|
912.75
|
103.85
|
1.01
|
0.65
|
0.52
|
0.53
|
including
|
867.50
|
912.75
|
45.25
|
1.50
|
0.94
|
0.83
|
0.74
|
including
|
903.90
|
912.75
|
8.85
|
5.37
|
3.12
|
3.33
|
2.20
|
Notes:
|
1.
|
Reporting Criteria:
Intercepts reported are downhole drill width (not true width). CuEq
>0.13%, minimum 15 metres downhole
length, maximum internal waste dilution of 15 metres, and a maximum
consecutive waste of 10 metres. Higher-grade included
intervals are reported at CuEq >0.3%, >0.5% and >1.0%,
with a minimum 5 metre downhole length for the >1.0%
composites
|
2.
|
Copper and gold grades
are reported to 2 significant figures. Copper equivalent values
(CuEq%) are calculated using metal prices
of US$3.60, US$1,650, US$21.35 and for Cu, Au, and Ag,
respectively, with no metal recovery factors applied.
|
3.
|
Samples are from core
drilling which is HQ or NQ in diameter. Core is photographed and
logged by the Company's geology team
before being cut. Half core HQ and NQ samples are prepared for
assay and the remaining material is retained at site for future
reference. Each assay batch is submitted with duplicates, standards
and blanks to monitor laboratory quality. Total depth (end of
hole) is rounded to the nearest metre for reporting
purposes.
|
APPENDIX B: LOCATION MAPS AND CROSS SECTIONS
Figure 3 shows a plan map with the location of holes CM-DD-894
and CM-DD-895. Previous drill holes are colour-coded by grade. Most
of the previous drilling in this area has consisted of relatively
short holes (see Figure 4). Note the location of two historical
adits. C-C' shows the locations of the cross section shown in
Figure 4.
Figure 4 shows a cross section with drill holes CM-DD-894 and
CM-DD-895 plotted on a 2D IP chargeability data. Reserve pit and
Whittle Resource Shell are based on Copper Mountain's NI 43-101
technical report titled "Life-of-Mine
Plan and 65 kt/d Expansion Study Update NI 43-101 Technical
Report, Princeton, British
Columbia" with an effective date of August 1, 2022 and dated September 30, 2022 (the "2022 Technical
Report").
Figure 5 shows the location of drill holes CM-DD-896 and
CM-DD-897 as well as previous drill holes at New Ingerbelle, with
the drill holes colour coded by grade. Lines A-A' and B-B' show
locations of cross sections shown in Figures 6 and 7, respectively.
The reserve pit is based on the 2022 Technical Report.
Figure 6 provides a cross section showing drill hole CM-DD-897
and the outline of high-grade copper-gold zone (>1.0% CuEq),
shown by the dashed red line and red shading. Drill hole CM-DD-897
intersected the highest-grade and most gold-rich, copper-gold
mineralization yet discovered at New Ingerbelle and shows that the
mineralizing system is getting stronger at depth. Drill holes
20IG-01 and 21IG-38 noted in the figure were drilled in 2021 and
previously reported by the Company. The location of the cross
section is shown in Figure 5.
Figure 7 provides a cross section showing hole CM-DD-897
looking Northeast. The location of the cross section is shown in
Figure 5.
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SOURCE Copper Mountain Mining Corporation