Extractive Industries

Golden Metal identifies Carlin-type gold systems at Golconda

Golden Metal Resources plc has identified Carlin-type* gold systems from rock sampling at the Golconda Summit project in the prolific Walker Lane mineral belt, northern Nevada, USA.

Possibility: a Carlin-type gold system may exist within the Golconda Summit project at depth (Pixabay)

FEEDER ZONE

The company aims to be the first to drill test fully the multiple prospective lower plate rocks below the project, including the Antler Peak limestone, Edna Mountain and Preble formations which host such gold deposits.

Golden Metal collected 52 rock samples of which 11 returned >250ppm (or g/t) arsenic, with six returning >500ppm As.

“Significant arsenic anomalism” is the main alteration element associated with Carlin-type gold systems, added Golden Metal.

Both samples collected near the Trench Zone returned >500ppm As.

The company said that the results further suggested the presence of a “feeder zone” and the possibility that a Carlin-type gold system may exist within the project at depth.

DRILL TARGETS

Chief executive officer Oliver Friesen added that Carlin-type gold systems represented globally important mineral deposits found almost exclusively within northern Nevada.

“The results presented today give further support that a significant Carlin-type gold system may be present within the project.

“With this important data now in hand we continue to work with our in-country geologist to develop and refine drill targets at Golconda.”

*Sediment-hosted disseminated gold deposits characterised by ‘invisible gold’ (typically microscopic and/or dissolved) in arsenic-rich pyrite and arsenopyrite and found only through chemical analysis. The Carlin mine was the first large deposit of this type discovered in the Carlin Trend, Nevada.

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