CanAlaska Uranium and Kodiak start drilling at McTavish uranium project
January 29 2010 - 5:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
VANCOUVER, Jan. 29 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- CanAlaska Uranium Ltd.
(TSX.V -- CVV) ("CanAlaska" or the "Company") is pleased to
announce that Kodiak Exploration Limited (KXL -- TSX.V) ("Kodiak")
has commenced their initial drill program on the McTavish uranium
project ("Project"), situated in the prolific Athabasca Basin of
northern Saskatchewan. Kodiak has been granted an option by the
Company to acquire an initial 50% interest in the Project for
$4,000,000 in exploration, $600,000 of which is to be completed
before June, 2010. Additional interests can be earned by Kodiak,
with further work programs or the definition of uranium resources
on the Project (please refer to the Company News Release of August
10, 2009). Figure 1
(http://www.canalaska.com/i/maps/012910CVV_McTavish_1.pdf)
CanAlaska's McTavish Project consists of three separate claim
groups totaling 16,385 hectares, (see Figure 1). One claim group is
wholly-enclosed by Kodiak's West Millennium project, and shows a
strong airborne geophysical anomaly related to conductive rock
units, or sandstone alteration. The other two parcels are
intimately intertwined with West Millennium. UTEM data show that
the conductors successfully drilled by Kodiak this past winter at
West Millennium extend onto the McTavish property and appear to
intensify. ZTEM survey data also define two other large-scale,
high-magnitude conductors on the McTavish project, both of which
are untested by drilling, (see Figure 2). The combined West
Millennium-McTavish property package comprises nearly 380 km(2) in
the heart of the Athabasca Basin, only three kilometres west of
Cameco's Millennium deposit (47M pounds U(3)O(8) with an average
grade of 4.5% U(3)O(8)). Kodiak's drill camp is currently
operational, and the first drilling equipment has now arrived on
the Project, for the commencement of a 6,000 metre drill program on
CanAlaska's and Kodiak's claims. The first drill target is located
on the D1 conductor on CanAlaska's claims #S111151 and S111152,
where previous airborne surveys have indicated a large,
structurally-controlled alteration zone, (see Figures 1 and Figure
3 and see Kodiak News Release of Dec 24, 2009) Prior Kodiak
Drilling: In winter 2009, Kodiak drilled three holes adjacent to
the CanAlaska claims. (See Kodiak News Release of May 9, 2009)
Figure 2 (http://www.canalaska.com/i/maps/012910CVV_McTavish_2.pdf)
WM09-04: This drill hole, located 400 metres from the CanAlaska
claim boundary, was designed to test a very strong EM conductor
(D-1) located 200m NW and up-dip from historic Cameco drill hole
CX-11. The hole intersected a 69 metre thick fractured graphitic
and pyritic pelite unit. The interval exhibits strong chlorite and
grey clay alteration with local mylonite and fault gouge. The
overlying sandstone is bleached and unusually hematitic. A
ten-metre thick lower sandstone section immediately above the
unconformity returned highly anomalous radioactivity from the
down-hole gamma probe with a maximum reading of 1,174 cps (about
25X background, see below). Individual drill samples contain up to
0.13% U(3)O(8) uranium and anomalous nickel values within the
highly altered basement rocks. The alteration and mineralization
defined along the D-1 conductor trend shows that a robust uranium
mineralizing event has affected the D-1 conductor structural
corridor. WM09-01: Drilled on the D-1 conductor 3.0 kilometres
northeast of WM09-04, encountered a five-metre thick zone of
strongly altered graphitic and pyritic pelite, just below the
unconformity, and a strong alteration halo extending further
down-hole for 28 metres with anomalous radioactivity at the
unconformity (5-6 times background). The 20 metre thick lower
sandstone section contains highly anomalous boron up to 722 ppm.
WM09-03: This drill hole is also on the D-1 conductor 500 metres
along trend from historic drill hole CX-11. Drill hole three cut a
86 metre wide, strongly fractured and altered graphitic-pyritic
pelite unit containing fracturing, grey clay and slickensides. The
lower sandstone section is fractured and desilicified for about 100
metres above the unconformity. Anomalous radioactivity defined by
the down-hole logger reaches 751 cps. WM-09-01: Tested the D-1
conductor. The unconformity target was intersected at 676m with a
total depth of 720m. A five-metre wide strongly altered graphitic
pelite occurs from 676m to 681m within a 28m thick highly altered
zone from 776m to 704m. Figure 3
(http://www.canalaska.com/i/maps/012910CVV_McTavish_3.pdf) UTEM
data shows that the conductors successfully drilled by Kodiak this
past winter at West Millennium extend onto the McTavish Project and
appear to intensify. Kodiak drill hole WM09-04, which intersected a
69 metre thick fractured graphitic and pyritic pelite unit
containing up to 0.13 % U(3)O(8), is located only 400 metres from
the McTavish property. These drill-hole intersections of uranium
and alteration associated with the significant sedimentary
graphitic rock package underscores the excellent exploration
potential of the Project. CanAlaska is very pleased to be working
with Kodiak on this strategically-located and technically
interesting property. Kodiak's work will allow for immediate
exploration of the significant geophysical features identified by
CanAlaska's VTEM airborne surveys, which are observed on the
CanAlaska claim blocks. The Qualified Technical Person for this
news release is Peter G. Dasler, P. Geo. About CanAlaska Uranium
Ltd. -- http://www.canalaska.com/ CANALASKA URANIUM LTD. (CVV --
TSX.V, CVVUF -- OTCBB, DH7 -- Frankfurt) is undertaking uranium
exploration in twenty 100%-owned and three optioned uranium
projects in Canada's Athabasca Basin -- the "Saudi Arabia of
Uranium". Since September 2004, the Company has aggressively
acquired one of the largest land positions in the region,
comprising over 2,500,000 acres (10,117 sq. km or 3,906 sq. miles).
To-date, CanAlaska has expended over Cdn$60 million exploring its
properties and has delineated multiple uranium targets. CanAlaska's
geological expertise and high exploration profile has attracted the
attention of major international strategic partners. Among others,
Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi Corporation has undertaken to
provide the Company C$11 mil. in exploration funding to earn a 50%
ownership interest in the West McArthur Project. Exploration of
CanAlaska's Cree East Project is also progressing under a C$19 mil.
joint venture with a consortium of Korean companies led by Hanwha
Corporation, and comprising Korea Electric Power Corp., Korea
Resources Corp. and SK Energy Co, Ltd., in which the Korean
Consortium presently holds a 40.6% ownership interest. Other
Company projects in the Athabasca Basin scheduled for drill testing
during this Winter 2010 season include McTavish, Collins Bay
Extension and Fond Du Lac. On behalf of the Board of Directors
(signed) Peter Dasler, M.Sc., P.Geo. President & CEO, CanAlaska
Uranium Ltd. The TSX Venture has not reviewed and does not accept
responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release: CUSIP#
13708P 10 2. This news release contains certain "Forward-Looking
Statements" within the meaning of Section 21E of the United States
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements, other
than statements of historical fact, included herein are
forward-looking statements that involve various risks and
uncertainties. There can be no assurance that such statements will
prove to be accurate, and actual results and future events could
differ materially from those anticipated in such statements.
Important factors that could cause actual results to differ
materially from the Company's expectations are disclosed in the
Company's documents filed from time to time with the British
Columbia Securities Commission and the United States Securities
& Exchange Commission. DATASOURCE: CanAlaska Uranium Ltd.
CONTACT: Emil Fung, Director & V.P. - Corp. Dev., Tel: (604)
688-3211, Email:
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