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Sidney Resources Corp (PK)

Sidney Resources Corp (PK) (SDRC)

0.2951
-0.0094
(-3.09%)
Closed November 21 4:00PM

Empower your portfolio: Real-time discussions and actionable trading ideas.

Key stats and details

Current Price
0.2951
Bid
0.2661
Ask
0.3045
Volume
94,264
0.276 Day's Range 0.3045
0.142 52 Week Range 0.50
Previous Close
0.3045
Open
0.2875
Last Trade
100
@
0.2951
Last Trade Time
Average Volume (3m)
194,691
Financial Volume
$ 27,121
VWAP
0.287717

SDRC Latest News

LUCKY BEN MINE PROJECT UPDATE

Lewiston, ID -- September 21, 2017 -- InvestorsHub NewsWire -- As of September 17, 2017 Sidney Resources Corporation has raised $120,000.00 through the private offer of stock.  Under the...

Sidney Resources Corporation Releases Lucky Ben Mine Project Update

  LEWISTON, ID -- July 7, 2015 -- InvestorsHub NewsWire -- Sidney Resources Corporation (SDRC) (OTCPK:SDRC) today announced an update for operational plans and completed work...

Sidney Resources Corporation Releases Operations Plan Update

LEWISTON, Idaho, May 12, 2015 -- Sidney Resources Corporation (SDRC) (OTCPK:SDRC) today announced it has posted operational plans for the 2015 summer operations on OTC Markets in the regular...

Sidney Resources Corporation Names Project Geologist for Lucky Ben Mine Project

  Lewiston, ID - January 26, 2015 - InvestorsHub NewsWire - Sidney Resources Corporation (SDRC) (OTCPK:SDRC) today announced Richard W. Morris will serve as the Project/Field/Mine...

Sidney Resources Corporation Launches Dramatically Enhanced Website

  Lewiston, ID - January 20, 2015 - InvestorsHub NewsWire - Sidney Resources Corporation (SDRC) (OTCPK:SDRC) today announced that it has launched a dramatically enhanced website...

Sidney Resources Corporation Secures Lease for Private Patent Claims

LEWISTON, Idaho - January 9, 2015 - InvestorsHub NewsWire - Sidney Resources Corporation (SDRC) (OTCPK:SDRC) today announced that it has executed an agreement with Leland Minerals, LLC (LELM...

Interim CEO & President makes way for new Leadership Team

Sidney Resources Corporation Interim CEO & President Michael Drew has decided to step down to make way for the leadership team he selected to move the company forward.  Gregg Lindner who...

Sidney Resources Corporation Launches New and Improved Webpage

Sidney Resources Corporation is excited to announce the launching of their new website located at http://sidneyresourcescorporation.com/.  Our webpage has been designed to provide easy access...

Sidney Resources Corporation Announces Gold and Silver Assays

BOISE, Idaho, Oct. 5 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Sidney Resources Corporation (OTC:SDRC) (SDRC) today announces the results of Assays on Gold and Silver channel samples. ASSAY RESULTS TEST...

PeriodChangeChange %OpenHighLowAvg. Daily VolVWAP
10.0155.35523027490.28010.30950.26041157280.29449599CS
40.060125.57446808510.2350.3190.19112205590.24545204CS
12-0.03743-11.25612726670.332530.340.19111946910.25791599CS
26-0.0099-3.245901639340.3050.3990.19111525220.28932844CS
520.045618.27655310620.24950.50.1421860640.31547713CS
1560.0528521.81630546960.242250.50.09212080910.21740639CS
2600.27781605.780346820.01730.50.013592230.1143858CS

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SDRC Discussion

View Posts
surrealistrader surrealistrader 10 hours ago
The PGEs' supposed extra-terrestrial origin is the hypothesis. The favorable economics thereof are what is dangerously being treated as a certainty by this company.

In reality, both are going to need a lot more time, study, and tribulation to exhaust certainty. Hasty promotion at such a stage is not the right move and it may become clear eventually that they probably shouldn't have pumped their findings on social media or encouraged their audience run with it as they have. They should make it clear to investors about how uncertain the path is ahead of them and stop over-inflating expectations. Real-world exploration needs to take place: thorough and reputable sampling campaign and drilling. Feasibility studies will be crucial to understand life-of-mine economics and investment worthiness. There is still a large chance that the construction of a PGM processing plant will be found to be a mal-investment. Contrary to purported belief, revenues in itself will not inspire the level of confidence needed to weather the scrutiny of broader markets. Reserves, reputably proven economically feasible to mine, are what will inform the life of the resource, and because SDRC has neglected to prove mineral reserves in any acceptable way, investors cannot evaluate their investment over the long term. This is not important in OTC evidently, but it's definitely important everywhere else. Add a hypothetical meteorite-bearing PGM deposit to the mix, and it will begin to stink.

I say revenues aren't enough because "high-grading" is a well known concept in this industry and analysts look out for it. SDRC exhibits a high risk of high-grading through their resource, learning as they go, making profitability volatile or unpredictable over longer time frames. The temptation to over-rely on historical and proprietary data is another risk that analysts take seriously, their proclivity for shamelessly curating analytical results from larger data sets is another, unplanned metallurgical challenges in the onset of production deadlines is another, no demonstration of feasibility before construction of a mine or facility is another, no relevant registered or otherwise accredited expertise or true independent third parties writing the much needed technical reporting is definitely another, and the list of loud colored flags goes on. We need to be clear about the list of things that we risk-tolerant crazy people in OTC take for granted but are very seriously considered everywhere else. "Too expensive" is a cop out when your people are projecting millions to billions on deck, especially seeing all else less prudent they have moved forward with.

Concerning the big PGM question, unscientifically, the company has ruled out terrestrial origin, which in turn has ruled out all known PGM producing comparables, bringing the overall level of certainty down across their projects sharing the same metallurgical pipeline. This is especially so if the company has indeed moved forward in pursuit of them as an economic endeavor. Until indicated otherwise, we must assume that the occurrence hasn't been substantiated because the relevant analytical data remains non-public. However, on behalf of shareholders, SDRC is boldly investing in new land parcels, new equipment, designing new processing pipelines, a facility, (more?) and has risked polarizing the brand over it, alienating investors outside their already established and credulous following. This poses yet more red flags that need to be fixed as SDRC awaits the scrutiny of broader markets.

What we did learn in the mean time is that the current bulls, many still sitting pretty from having invested in pennies and double-.00's, will mobilize to pump anything thrown at them, officially and unofficially. They believe in SDRC's success because the change in stock price has treated them well so far. Based on the latest tease on Twitter, you would assume it unobjectionable to say that any producing gold miner not trading at a 4x premium to yearly cash flow (as with Newmont's) is undervalued. I mean, what shameless absurdity is this....? All it amounts to is a damning display of a lack of understanding in what the modifying factors are that contribute to the investor confidence Newmont enjoys as the largest publicly traded gold miner on US exchanges. What confidence can SDRC inspire in the broader markets by confusing simple fundamental analysis, and continuing to drive in the dark with no headlights as they hit every bump high-grading through their resource? What kind of scope, reputation, and risk appetite does SDRC exhibit that can even share the same train of thought as Newmont?

The promotion of PGM's, not to mention their meteorite origin, will continue to cause more harm than good until some serious reporting is released. Obviously we will re-evaluate these issues as the company releases crucial data, and perhaps if all goes well in near term, begins their tenure as a profitable company. Let's hope the correct kind of reporting gets released because I'm sick of pointing out how much damage they're doing and red flags they're flying by not. Bulls are clearly going nuts right now but it remains unreflected by volume and price action.
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dave gruel dave gruel 18 hours ago
figure alien meteor unobtainium will go the same way as the laser, will just disappear. i think it's funny that suddenly it's "no one ever said the PGM's were substantial it's just a hypothesis" when the usual suspects were literally quoting PGM values (complete with hashtags) pumping the stock. the goalposts will continue to be moved (maybe sidways not just back lol) and there may be a few crumbs tossed out here and there but nothing of substance is going to happen. winter will buy them another 6 months, then the "soon" mantra will continue,

hoping this pending agreement disclosure will cause a bump, 'cause i need to liquidate a little to move to weedstocks :)
👍️ 1
surrealistrader surrealistrader 1 day ago
Who's basing Sidney's supposed future valuation off Newmont's? or Lundin Mining's?

The people doing this are shameless.

Who just made a statement saying SDRC's laser tech was in a state fit to pitch for service on Mars?

Also, ask any outspoken enthusiast of OTC stocks to give you a list of legit and successful OTC stocks. Then ask them to give you a list of OTC stocks they made money on. I guarantee the latter list will be vastly longer.
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
SMResources SMResources 1 day ago
"The name of the game here is to stoke expectations and it's perfectly acceptable in this space to inflate expectations to the moon only for exaggerated inference to inevitably be revised down when proven."

that's a lie and you know it. we are done here. Not worth my time
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 1 day ago
There was no reference specifically to the Lucky Ben shutting down in 1934 or because of the act.

Right. I asked before, what are the other mines in the region that ceased production 1934 or later? I guess I'll have to dig in myself.

Nobody is bending the truth from their side.

I was specifically referring to historical interviews and anecdotal evidence made to benefit the person saying it, the Czizcks, and by virtue of this, the people who currently own it and otherwise those standing to benefit from the Czizcks' appraisal now.

You want to call me out on my research on the grounds of conflict?

I did not intend to, but if you insist, I do believe you are listed as a services provider for this company and were awarded shares. You have a vested interest in your stock doing well and have a working relationship with them that is worth something to you. You're biased just like everyone else.

...and help genuine people understand what they are invested in.

Thanks for that. It's hard to figure out sometimes without thought leaders on unofficial channels feeding info to us.

Nobody likes being called a liar and yet that's exactly what you are trying to do is call these people liars.

Is this the first OTC Markets stock or grassroots mining stock you have ever invested in? The name of the game here is to stoke expectations and it's perfectly acceptable in this space to inflate expectations to the moon only for exaggerated inference to inevitably be revised down when proven. Buy the rumor, sell the news. 99.99% of the people who look at such a thing ask themselves "Can I make money on this?" They suppose a yes or no and move on. The people who suppose yes are probably looking at the anthropological phenomenon above all else in their decision - the promotional machine built to support this stock's marketcap. A prominent bullish trader of SDRC stock has said recently: "Some people would rather be right than make money." exhibiting all information expressed is to support a motive to make money, and not truth per se.

Anything special about the mining side is counterbalanced by persisting uncertainties: Low standards for reporting and over-reliance on private/proprietary data whether historical or recent. The company has embraced a policy of non-transparency and non-reputable reporting. This acts as a deterrent to anybody worth their salt in mining analysis even being able to look at this company. The risk to reward, when analyzed honestly, sans the bad math and hubris of the volunteer pump campaign, is entirely unclear, but what is clear is that the company has apologetically embraced it. "Drilling can't find the gold here." I am overwhelmed by the sheer list of bent truths in the history of this company and the people promoting it.

Regarding the meteor, they are reporting a "hypothesis" that the samples they have taken and sent on for further analysis is what looks like evidence of a meteor impact. They even reference this as a potential secondary impact from the time of the beaverhead impact. SDRC reports elemental iron, chromium and nickel.

We are still waiting for reliable and reputable data on this. Its a hypothesis, and if we were to run with it, it does not indicate an economically feasible mine. All proven feasible PGM mines are from terrestrial origin, magmatic, maphic, and whatnot. Ruling out terrestrial origin at such an early stage in the discovery is a bad sign from an economic certainty perspective and should not be done in my opinion. That is, unless, it is not real, then why wouldn't they want to deter any kind of comparative study that they can, which is exactly what SDRC has done by pre-emptively claiming it is of extraterrestiral origin. There are no mines in existence Historical or current that crush meteorites for PGM content as an economic endeavor.

"successfully precipitated four out of the eight targeted precious metals"
That's a report on the labs growing capability. Its not specific to what they are processing out of the Lucky Ben. I miss read that. Yes there are only eight precious metals so they are working on perfecting their lab work for all of them and are up to four now. That doesn't mean they are mining all eight of them or even four of them. It is just a report on the lab capability. What we know for sure is they are mining Gold and Silver so that is two.

SDRC is planning a processing facility with the plan to mine and process ore over the mines' life. Why build something so ambitious just to process some stockpiles found in the woods? The economics of the deposit for any given mineral you are building out processing for needs to be exhausted before investing in a mining facility for the long term. Anything otherwise passes great risk onto investors. I'm not saying its the most risky way to go forward, i'm just saying its enough of a deliberate feign of industry standards that it would only appeal to a small group of very risk-tolerant people and not much of anyone that has real experience analyzing this stuff. I understand Don Durrett was one example contrary to what I am saying, and I wish he would speak more on his diligence. Even he admitted how steep the risk to reward SDRC represents as an investment, despite beginning a small investment himself.

The miners were mining gold and silver. Why is there no real documentation? Again, REE's had no value until the 1990's. who is gonna mine REE in the late 19th and early half of the 20 century? For what purpose? why would historical miners care what amounts of REE there are? What I was describing to you in story on Granite creek is an example of how other metals besides gold and silver were overlooked in early times simply because there was no value in them..

That's all fair. We have not received anything beyond LIBS data for Rare Earth Elements from these claims or piles. Lets revisit REE's when their presence is substantiated and they indicate a persistent and reproducible quantity beyond just average crustal abundance levels. If we were just measuring for occurances, I would say most people in most geological regions could find a list of REE's present. REE's are fairly common, but again, an occurrence does not necessarily indicate an economic deposit that could support a mine. As for PGM's, it looks to me these, besides gold and silver, are what the company is focusing on, and these were certainly valuable and promoted in the early 20th century. There were false positives in the region in prospecting data during times the commodity was in vogue, indicating stock promotion. Yes it happened then just as much as it happens now.

If you are looking for info on REE's in this AREA read this. It is fairly explicit as to the mineral inventory of the beaverhead impact and the source of the REE's

I'm not actively researching REE's. SDRC needs to provide more substantial data so industry comparables could be narrowed down.
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SMResources SMResources 1 day ago
You ask why are SDRC's spokespeople currently saying that the mine ceased production because of the 1934 Gold Reserve Act? They are not.

Read it again, the quarterly report says "mines in the Warren area". There was no reference specifically to the Lucky Ben shutting down in 1934 or because of the act. Nobody is bending the truth from their side. Your taking their words out of context and trying to twist them into your own narrative. You want to call me out on my research on the grounds of conflict? I'll call you out on your accusation. Good luck with that. Do your own research. Part of the reason I come on this filth of a site once in a while is to do my best to dispel the BS that accumulates on here and help genuine people understand what they are invested in. Nobody likes being called a liar and yet that's exactly what you are trying to do is call these people liars.

Regarding the meteor, they are reporting a "hypothesis" that the samples they have taken and sent on for further analysis is what looks like evidence of a meteor impact. They even reference this as a potential secondary impact from the time of the beaverhead impact. SDRC reports elemental iron, chromium and nickel. they never directly said there were an REE's from the meteorite only that the meteor hypothesis may explain the "unique presence of precious metals and rare earth elements within the district". They never said these are samples out of the Lucky Ben mine!

"successfully precipitated four out of the eight targeted precious metals"
That's a report on the labs growing capability. Its not specific to what they are processing out of the Lucky Ben. I miss read that. Yes there are only eight precious metals so they are working on perfecting their lab work for all of them and are up to four now. That doesn't mean they are mining all eight of them or even four of them. It is just a report on the lab capability. What we know for sure is they are mining Gold and Silver so that is two.

The miners were mining gold and silver. Why is there no real documentation? Again, REE's had no value until the 1990's. who is gonna mine REE in the late 19th and early half of the 20 century? For what purpose? why would historical miners care what amounts of REE there are? What I was describing to you in story on Granite creek is an example of how other metals besides gold and silver were overlooked in early times simply because there was no value in them..

If you are looking for info on REE's in this AREA read this. It is fairly explicit as to the mineral inventory of the beaverhead impact and the source of the REE's. . https://www.mbmg.mtech.edu/pdf-publications/fs9.pdf

Rare earth elements (REE) occur in the Phosphoria Formation, which was previously mined for phosphorous (P) at the Canyon Creek, Maiden Rock, and other smaller mines throughout the county (Emsbo and others, 2015). The Phosphoria Formation extends northward to Silver Bow County, eastward to Madison County, and southward into Idaho. The Phosphoria Formation may also be a potential source of the critical minerals vanadium (V), chromium (Cr), nickel (Ni), and Zn. A few REE placer deposits can be found along the Montanaโ€“Idaho border, where there are well-documented bedrock deposits (e.g., Austin and others, 1970), and similar deposits may occur on the Montana side of the border.
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 2 days ago
I did answer your question. Just not very well. Here goes. From the article

โ€œIโ€™m not going to touch this. I am going to will it to you, Jay, and when we work it again, weโ€™ll work it together.โ€ J.A. Czizek

That's why the mine was closed. If you read Jay's bio, they never got back to it. It was a nest egg. They meant to mine it only if they needed the money but they never did need to.. When the gold act was passed in the 30's it only made sense to hold onto the mine as property. The gold in the mine isn't going anywhere and the price for gold keeps going up. Its a form of security.

Ok, thanks for that, but you just confirmed via documentation / an old interview that they stopped mining for reasons other than the 1934 Gold Reserve Act. Maybe you would understand my question if I asked it again: Why are SDRC's spokespeople currently saying that the mines ceased production because of the 1934 Gold Reserve Act? Mining stopped in 1915, and the owners public-ally alleged that the land is not depleted of reserves. That much is clear, but we do not know to what degree these men were bending the truth. I'm not assuming anything. You have done quite a bit of reading of old newspaper articles, and anecdotal accounts from back in the day; Are these reliable to you given the apparent conflict of interest? These are the owners of the land. Why wouldn't they try to make it seem more valuable than it is especially with the intent to sell it eventually regardless of the degree of depletion?

As far as rare earth elements go. SDRC indicates there are. From their report:

"Additionally, geological evidence from the area, including distinct rock formations and mineral anomalies, has been collected and submitted for further analysis. These findings align with impact signatures observed in known meteorite strikes, adding scientific weight to our hypothesis. If confirmed, the meteorite strike could explain the unique presence of precious metals and rare earth elements within the district, potentially positioning Warren as a significant source of both
economically and scientifically valuable materials."

The above comes after staking more claims. It is good they are using two different assay labs to process their samples.

1. A question: Where else on earth has a meteorite impact been offered as the geological backdrop for an economic REE or PGM deposit? Somebody name one mining company, please.

2. I agree it is "good they are using two different assay labs to process their samples." Parallel studies are crucial. I would also like to see some kind of gesture of reliability to the sampling process. I hope they publish these in full, uncurated, and hopefully with a reputable independent third party written report. I made a post below about what I would be looking for in the interest of reliability to these much anticipated pieces of analytical data. Can't wait!

"We have successfully precipitated four out of the eight targeted precious metals" but this does not mention REE's.

Besides Gold and Silver I don't know what they are referring to as precious metals. Your right, gold and silver are traditionally the two precious metals associated with this area. However, that's all they were looking for in them days. Copper forms with gold and silver deposits so that can be speculated. They do mention Nickel.

REE's, copper, & Nickel are not precious metals. The only things that are culturally known to be PM's are Gold, Silver and the 6 Platinum Group Metals. That makes 8. You make an interesting story relating to this below, but obviously gold was produced in the past and whatever was alloyed with it will have been separated whether it was considered valuable or not. It is surprising that there is no documentation about this cited by our community, nor any that could be found via internet searches of academic papers, geological survey, or any derivative proprietary documents, in the history of the Idaho Batholith. Historical data is not informing the present metallurgical issues because they are apparently a complete departure from what can be derived from historical documentation about Warren's gold production and local smelting.

For example, there is a story on Granite Creek BC in the 1880's. ... My point is, Gold and Silver were the only things of value in them days and all they were looking for. Only those two Chinese miners were saving their platinum. This is why I think REE have never been explored for in this region. It can be inferred that they are doing broad spectrum assays which would include REE analysis. I am looking forward to seeing more on their findings.

That's a fair and tempting train of thought. As we move forward a decade or two as Warren continued to be explored and worked, Platinum was certainly known about by geologists, and I assume the local smelters as well. It was pursued and promoted by mining men everywhere especially as the century turned. There was a futures market for platinum as well, and those promotions became more vigorous as that price ebbed and flowed. We know this. Your story takes place in a completely different geological region, making your point only relevant in terms of the time Warren was most likely to be aggressively explored but not by geography. As far as the Idaho Batholith is concerned, I posted here 4 examples of platinum prospecting documents in Idaho that never came to fruition. This is because investors cared enough about platinum then to be attracted to it and their promoters saw it worthwhile to publish in newspapers and commission reports about them, regardless of the geology being conducive to its presence nor the intention to move forward with constructing a mine. There is no documented production of PGM's in this region. Those prospects were later dismissed as false positives, or at best uneconomical occurrences.

Investors in SDRC are placing a bet on something completely new and undocumented even after 100+ years of study and commercialization, and came at a time when expectations (over first revenues from gold and silver) have been invoked to their highest degree. New mineral discoveries and a promise of even greater profits and sensational breakthroughs as a main moment of truth approaches have indicated to me something wrong and a desire to hedge their core thesis. My position remains that substantiating their discovery will stun the academic community and perhaps exploration interest in the region, but that does not guarantee profitable mining and processing. Feasibility studies to determine cut-off grades and reserves and a necessary 3D intersection of their resource are what would do that. Overall certainty about the feasibility of their portfolio of projects has gone down with the decision to invest investor capital in pursuing these new commodities.

I wish SDRC would pitch a deal to uncle Musk to use their tech on Mars. I'd sign up for that

Let's prove laser mining's efficacy on Earth first.
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SMResources SMResources 2 days ago
I did answer your question. Just not very well. Here goes. From the article

โ€œIโ€™m not going to touch this. I am going to will it to you, Jay, and when we work it again,
weโ€™ll work it together.โ€ J.A. Czizek

Thats why the mine was closed. If you read Jay's bio, they never got back to it. It was a nest egg. They meant to mine it only if they needed the money but they never did need to.. When the gold act was passed in the 30's it only made sense to hold onto the mine as property. The gold in the mine isn't going anywhere and the price for gold keeps going up. Its a form of security.

As far as rare earth elements go. SDRC indicates there are. From their report

"Additionally, geological evidence from the area, including distinct rock formations and mineral anomalies, has been collected and submitted for further analysis. These findings align with impact signatures observed in known meteorite strikes, adding scientific weight to our hypothesis. If confirmed, the meteorite strike could explain the unique presence of precious metals and rare earth elements within the district, potentially positioning Warren as a significant source of both
economically and scientifically valuable materials."

The above comes after staking more claims. It is good they are using two different assay labs to process their samples.

"We have successfully precipitated four out of the eight targeted precious metals" but this does not mention REE's.

Besides Gold and Silver I don't know what they are referring to as precious metals. Your right, gold and silver are traditionally the two precious metals associated with this area. However, that's all they were looking for in them days. Copper forms with gold and silver deposits so that can be speculated. They do mention Nickel.

For example, there is a story on Granite Creek BC in the 1880's. They were mining gold. it was about 19 dollars an ounce. They were also capturing Platinum with the gold. At that time Platinum was worth about .25 cents per ounce. The miners would separate the gold out from the platinum and throw the platinum away. Later the Chinese also worked this creek and in the 1980's when prices exploded a cabbie picked up a couple really old Chinaman and gave them a ride to the old Granite Creek townsite. They said wait here and went down to the townsite. About 20min later they returned with sacks full of something. The cabbie dropped them off and was so curious he went back to the old townsite. in one of the cabins there was a hole in the floor and empty tins were strewn about the cabin. One tin still had a flake of platinum in it. You see these Chinese mining Granite creek separated out the platinum and kept it. One hell of a pay check for these old boys.

My point is, Gold and Silver were the only things of value in them days and all they were looking for. Only those two Chinese miners were saving their platinum. This is why I think REE have never been explored for in this region. It can be inferred that they are doing broad spectrum assays which would include REE analysis. I am looking forward to seeing more on their findings.

I wish SDRC would pitch a deal to uncle Musk to use their tech on Mars. I'd sign up for that
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 3 days ago
You didn't answer my question and nor did your article. It looks like neither of us know the answer. Why is everyone saying production stopped because of the 1934 gold reserve act when it in fact the last year Lucky Ben was mined was in 1915? Yes, in 1935, it seems was when it was caved in, but that's not when production stopped. Why was it left dormant for 20 years before that?

Sir, I know you have been awarded shares for your services in the past. I've read your article multiple times over the years. Your investigative reporting is informative and entertaining. The historical resurrection story of these past gold producing properties has always been intriguing and exciting to me. I don't appreciate the insult though. It still escapes me why the company is promoting a Rare Earths resource without anything beyond unreliable Libs data to substantiate it. This has always been a gold and silver story and the change in the past few years is abrupt to say the least, indicating to me a desire to hedge their core thesis. It is hard to believe that no other company in the district over the past 100+ years it was commercialized has documented half the minerals SDRC claims to find in economic quantities.
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SMResources SMResources 3 days ago
Read the article about the Lucky Ben published in the Golden Shovel. A picture of the tunnel is on the front page. There you will find why they choose to close the tunnel in the early years.

http://www.ominecaminingassociation.com/uploads/5/6/7/0/56701493/jan2021final.pdf
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SMResources SMResources 3 days ago
There is nothing shameless about the truth and you obviously know nothing about the Warren District
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 3 days ago
How could the mining of the little giant stop because of the 1934 Gold Reserve Act if the last year of Czizek's production at the Lucky Ben was 1915? Did the other portals intersecting that vein stop production later?

My father had quite a bit of money when he came out here as the Idaho representative and I don't think he worked it after that.

...and that would have been about? 19??

About 1915. It was before that because he was sent out here from Idaho and at a salary in 1915 to build & supervise the building of the Idaho building at the Exposition. That's over where the Palace of Fine Arts is. Probably then, he left 1914 or 1915. That was the last then.

Did you ever do any mining after that in that mine?

No, I was too busy doing civil engineering.
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 3 days ago
Rare earth elements exist virtually everywhere in their respective average crustal abundance levels, varying slightly depending on regional geology. Here they are below, listed in ppm or parts per million. SDRC finding these in their average crustal abundance levels does not indicate the potential economic feasibility of mining these, but another shameless promotion, and perhaps a need to hedge their core thesis.

Lanthanum (La) ~30
Cerium (Ce) ~66
Praseodymium (Pr) ~9.2
Neodymium (Nd) ~41
Promethium (Pm) Trace (radioactive, not naturally occurring in measurable amounts)
Samarium (Sm) ~7.1
Europium (Eu) ~2
Gadolinium (Gd) ~6.2
Terbium (Tb) ~1.2
Dysprosium (Dy) ~5.2
Holmium (Ho) ~1.3
Erbium (Er) ~3.5
Thulium (Tm) ~0.52
Ytterbium (Yb) ~3.2
Lutetium (Lu) ~0.8
Yttrium (Y) ~22
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SMResources SMResources 3 days ago
I am curious what presence for rare earth elements within the district they are referring to? Anyone have any historical information in the district[url][/url][tag]insert-text-here[/tag]?
The 17 rare earth elements are: lanthanum (La), cerium (Ce), praseodymium (Pr), neodymium (Nd), promethium (Pm), samarium (Sm), europium (Eu), gadolinium (Gd), terbium (Tb), dysprosium (Dy), holmium (Ho), erbium (Er), thulium (Tm), ytterbium (Yb), lutetium (Lu), scandium (Sc), and yttrium (Y)

"If confirmed, the meteorite strike could explain the unique presence of precious metals and rare earth elements within the district,"
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SMResources SMResources 3 days ago
Know the history.

The mines in the Warren area were not closed due to a depletion of gold but were instead forced to shut down in the1930s due to the Gold Reserve Act of 1934.

These mines were closed in ore. The blockage in the Sidney tunnel goes back to the early times.
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Hawkeye_tt Hawkeye_tt 4 days ago
Why would you continue to hold any shares still. You are truly a non believer in the business.
Move on already....
Best to all LT holders !

Hawk
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 4 days ago
Let's ponder Sunny's Freudian slip: "Dump Truck"

Thursday, October 10, 2024 - Sunnyland:
"You ever see a dump-truck hit a person??"

Using this same phase broadcasted across multiple platforms, as well as his first post on Ihub in years, I'm not sure how much more poignant one can be by warning us of something with the word "dump" in it. This is a guy who is not listed in company filings personally but brags about "Rivaling the Llelands" in how many shares he owns. Whether its by using passthrough entities, accounts in other peoples' names, imposing a desire for legal insulation, who knows what, regardless, a shareholder owning greater than 5% of the company is going under-reported through official channels. Why?
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gitreal gitreal 4 days ago
Bulls are in a circle jerk over bad math, unreliable analytical data, and their unwavering trust of management.

Yup. It would be sooooo easy, and not that expensive to do a few credible assays, signed off by a third party professional to certify they have any PGMs, to certify the concentrates have any value, etc. I have seen supersacks of concentrates......the pictures these guys have shown look nothing like concentrates which tend to be dark, sooty looking from all the sulfides. The photos of these supersack concentrates look like sand, and just sand.

Why won't they do something believable to legitimize all their hype?

Painfully obvious why. Someone(s) going to end up in big legal difficulties soon, IMO. Civil....or worse.
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 4 days ago
Bulls are in a circle jerk over bad math, unreliable analytical data, and their unwavering trust of management.

"Our goal is to process all of this ore by the end of 2024. It will be a very Merry Christmas in 24' "

The company and its spokespeople will say literally anything before an anticipated catalyst to keep the airwaves on their topic of choice and the keep the speculation alive. Even if metals can be precipitated in a beaker in a lab, is that as good as putting it into service at scale? (No.) Does anybody understand how complicated and expensive this process will be? What are the costs associated with this and why is the twitter echo chamber talking as if it carries no cost at all?

Stockpiles conveniently found in the woods, like bags of sand found under a freeway, are not an indication of a profitable or sustainable underground or milling operation. To prevent malinvestment in all this company has moved forward with, investors need feasibility studies and reserves. They need to intersect their resource in the third dimension, and work to understand their cost to produce in a more thorough way than committed to thusfar, and publically. We need a commitment to real transparency and true third party technical reporting. We need someone properly registered to stake their reputation on the integrity of this sampling process and its degree of representativeness of the resource SDRC intends to commercialize over the long term. Just because there's low reporting requirements in OTC Pink Sheets and because so they don't have to, it doesn't mean its the right thing to do to move forward foregoing this kind of diligence and reporting. I say this in the interest of not just attracting (and not deterring) quality investment, but actually demonstrating reliably that this business is being built on a solid foundation. Can anybody besides SDRC establish that Warren is as special as purported? Why is Endomines divesting from their Idaho assets? Why can't any other mineral rights owner in this region provide documentation to the market and attract investment in their own right? Why did "the experts" say this company was "crazy" to move forward when the Lucky Ben portal was still boarded up? What changed fundamentally besides the adoption of a policy of complete contempt for reputable expertise and measurement?

Also, how long do chemical assays take? Are lead times long enough to make it appropriate to say "We are still waiting for results" in multiple quarterly reports in a row? Has this so called "PGM bearing meteorite deposit" not unraveled into the PR disaster that it is? Who actually started out here looking for PGM's in the first place? Predictably, work is being done to keep the PGM issue from festering into an indicator of something wrong with the gold thesis itself. It will fade into the background as it must in the onset of revenues and dividends from gold & silver. It's not like every public company has a vigorous cult following led by insiders that can establish and reinforce rhetoric on unofficial airwaves in order to pick up where the PR disasters have left off. Keep your eyes on the prize guys.

Without establishing the scope of the resource, cutoff grades, reserves, all in cost of mining, this company is driving in the dark with no headlights. Without these, given all we know, not to mention blatant overreliance on historical and proprietary data, the margin of error is too great for a public company even if magically found to be legit. I guess that's just my own opinion though. There were enough industry comparables to make it borderline tolerable when it was just a Gold and Silver op, but now the PGM and Meteorite business has made it especially so. I press anybody to find a mining company in documented history that has ever crushed meteorites with the intent of selling PGM's. All (reliable) indicators point to such a thing necessarily unfeasible. The need to prove the market wrong on this is overdue.

As we anticipate revenues directly translating to near term catalysts for the stock: buybacks, cash distributions, more aggressive marketing avenues, bulls throwing more cash in the ring, whatever it takes, 2025 here we come. Who's ready to be run over by a dump truck?
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silverlion silverlion 5 days ago
Real assets here. No doubt, chemical assays have already been completed.
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silverlion silverlion 5 days ago
$SDRC Latest news is quite interesting. Sounds like revenue near term... "In excess of 14 tons of #3 cons and 500 tons of tailings are prepared for sale. Awaiting chemical assays to confirm estimated values."
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Sunnyland Sunnyland 6 days ago
SDRC Q3/2024 ANALYSIS : insert-text-here
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dave gruel dave gruel 6 days ago
how so? same approach i take to weedstocks. and like i've said before, if they (pardon the pun) actually strike gold so to speak and become a $4 divvy stock there will be plenty of time to go all in. i don't mind buying at $1 and missing out on those early gains and still ride it to $4. 5000 shares sold at .28, $1400. repurchase at $.22 at 1100, can pocket the $300 (minus OTC fees). keep your 25k or 30k core shares. it's not rocket science, and if the big one hits jump back in.

but you do you-- just trying to make a little while we wait for "soon" to happen. the goalposts will continue to move-- now that i guess we need to get more smelters and sh*t-- because in all of the mountain region there's not a single place you can take a homer bucket of "cons" and have it processed in the meantime. lol
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CC88Trade CC88Trade 6 days ago
😂 youโ€™re full of shit
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dave gruel dave gruel 6 days ago
keep a core, sell a chunk at high 20's, reload at low 20's, rinse repeat.
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 6 days ago
Especially true in OTC, the stock price has almost nothing to do with the fundamentals of the company itself.

The OTC Markets is known to be a venue for stocks that can move thousands if not tens of thousands of percent in price, from trips to dubs, dubs to pennies, pennies to dollars, and the opposite, all while the companies themselves have amounted to materially nothing.

Thereโ€™s no shortage of people who are necessarily more knowledgeable than you whether theyโ€™re out to provoke FOMO or FUD. Shameless manipulators and innocent enthusiasts alike will assert that the company is legitimate because of how much the price has risen, or a scam because of how much it has fallen. You cannot argue with the majority of people who are taken in by this way of thinking. Entry and exit (stock price) is everything to most people in this space.

We all should know by now how easily these illiquid stocks move. Because of the perpetually liminal stage these companies are in, their spokespeople can say literally anything without fear of consequence, the boiler room rhetoric can take over, it doesn't take much for the stock to get pumped more aggressively on social media, and it only takes 1 person to get FOMO for the stock to trade at higher prices within minutes. Predictably and shamelessly almost everybody will assert that price has proven themselves right and their naysayers wrong. On the flip side, the stock could be down in near term but we are told from bulls to "Zoom Out" to see how much winning has taken place. Winning in OTC is anthropological, not fundamental. Most people are here for a perceived positive catalyst or series of catalysts to sell into, and only care about the health of the company insofar that it can maintain plausible deniability and expectations long enough to take advantage of a growing audience, and support their exit.

The group of people marketing this particular stock day in and day out know this thoroughly. You can go back and observe a history of stories shared about how much money was made trading enormous moves in stocks that were known to be absolute rackets, or speculative failures, whether it was during the weed stock frenzy, or one of the countless other examples of OTC stock pump and dumps.

In my opinion, at some point, price inevitably becomes a double edged sword, and the company itself is subject to greater scrutiny with greater access to new markets. At some point, the grand gesture of legitimacy that investors need ceases to be price, and the higher price becomes a liability. Unlike in more popular forms of stock investing - in more thoroughly regulated markets, SDRC enthusiasts will celebrate success long before any moment truth. All we need is the price to move up and that will be enough. Revenues may or may not amount to profitability and that may not matter ultimately to the majority of present investors, but who's to say it won't to the people they are depending on for an exit? As long as the company works to deter mining stock investors with higher standards for risk, and their audience hell bent on selling to people dumber than them, SDRC will remain an OTC stock. Feasibility and reserves may not matter in OTC like it does in in other markets for mining stocks. Again, most people here will not care, because as we historically know the stock can go up much higher than this before any discernible moment of truth or the company amounting to anything material. Just stay alive long enough and keep people excited long enough for the next speculative tidal wave into smaller mining stocks or OTC and everyone will do fine.
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gitreal gitreal 6 days ago
It's all about making money, and finding "the Greater Fool" to sell shares to. Skepticism and counter points are not allowed.

And when the facts are uncomfortable or hard to support, the "Shorty" nonsense rears its head.

I'd like to know why the PGMs disappeared completely off today's quarterly. If they're really there in the ores, why not provide solid evidence? It would be a stunning discovery if true.

Seems to me they got caught in a serious year-long lie. Investors should be furious.
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mr34 mr34 6 days ago
Whoโ€™s short ? Not me , why are you guys so sensitive when other counter points are brought up?? I literally have been hearing for two years about โ€œdollars very soonโ€ which would be great but nobody calls this out
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gitreal gitreal 6 days ago
Nobody is shorting this garbage. Any failures to deliver?
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silverlion silverlion 6 days ago
Best to all the shorts!
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gitreal gitreal 6 days ago
They never say or credibly prove what is in that concentrate, so calculating a value is useless. And now that PGMs are apparently no longer a "thing", what is really in those concentrates??

And why are the concentrates going to be leached? Why not smelt them? Leaching chunky native metals and probably a lot of sulfides is tricky and not efficient.

Why not send a supersack or two to a smelter for some cash? Wouldn't cash help the operations a bit? Make investors feel a little better about things?
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mr34 mr34 6 days ago
I been hearing this for two years now โ€œvery soonโ€
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silverlion silverlion 6 days ago
64,000+ oz of concentrate! --- up from 48,000 in July! If the estimated values are the same per oz, it holds a estimated value of .... $88 Million ready for leaching. $$$
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 6 days ago
"The mines in the Warren area were not closed due to a depletion of gold but were instead forced to shut down in the 1930s due to the Gold Reserve Act of 1934."

Please someone provide some kind of evidence or citation showing any of the historical mines SDRC is targeting for re-commericalization ended production in 1934 or after.
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 6 days ago
"We have requested bids from multiple high-temperature induction furnace manufacturers and anticipate finalizing the purchase and arranging delivery either in late Q4 of this year or early in Q1 2025."

Crucial processing equipment won't be on site until at least 2025, and any hope of PGM product would come much later. Meanwhile, equipment is purchased and a plant is planned without any public demonstration of feasibility. No reserves = No AISC. Anyone that mentions AISC or Reserves in relation to this company's assets are either stupid or a liar (probably both.)
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gitreal gitreal 6 days ago
PGMs are either there. Or not. All it would take are a few certified assays.

Now they're playing games by calling them "targeted precious metals"? Lol...

Someone got cold feet with the PGM promotion because it is easily "provable" and they couldn't prove it.

Still sticking with the silly meteorite impact story. Safe enough to promote that, can't prove them wrong (or right).
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silverlion silverlion 6 days ago
What a great read! This will be multi $$ in the coming year.
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 6 days ago
No mention of Mike Irish either.

Transparency is down the shitter with this company if it ever wasn't. Important disclosure is dispersed unofficially only. "SDRC has no IR"
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 6 days ago
National Bureau of Mines Inc. is Steve Cyros.

Several of his other companies use the same mailing address (such as MRE Depot.)

The switch to issuing preferred shares instead of common shares kill two birds with one stone: It's one way to make it seem like the company isn't diluting, and it also enables the board to create terms for these new shares outside of what is publicly reported.
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gitreal gitreal 6 days ago
No mention of PGMs in this quarterly. Gone.

What happened?
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silverlion silverlion 6 days ago
Q3 is out! Check the $SDRC website for details.
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silverlion silverlion 2 weeks ago
Another decent day here. The coming weeks will be exciting!
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mr34 mr34 2 weeks ago
Hurry up with Revenues?

How high will gold go now the next four years with the coming world peace, low inflation, and paying down our debts?
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SMResources SMResources 2 weeks ago
Recent article written by Dan Hally. It is about the Warren District and mentions their mining operations
http://www.ominecaminingassociation.com/uploads/5/6/7/0/56701493/september2024digital.pdf
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SMResources SMResources 2 weeks ago
Article on the Lucky Ben from 2021. http://www.ominecaminingassociation.com/uploads/5/6/7/0/56701493/jan2021final.pdf
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surrealistrader surrealistrader 2 weeks ago
Hubris is apparent on both sides.

Present your background research, your evaluation of the probabilities, and that's it.

Good luck to everyone with their investments.
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silverlion silverlion 3 weeks ago
Epic advice. Thanks much!
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gitreal gitreal 3 weeks ago
A little research and business acumen will provide the information needed and rationale.

There is no substitute for some assays of samples collected by a 3rd party geologist. Your "business acumen" is leading you down an expensive path....
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silverlion silverlion 3 weeks ago
Yes, indeed! A little research and business acumen will provide the information needed and rationale.
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gitreal gitreal 3 weeks ago
You actually believe these guys have PGMs? After nearly a year of promoting PGMs, not a single credible assay. You don't find that a bit odd?
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