THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE
INFORMATION AS STIPULATED UNDER THE UK VERSION OF THE MARKET ABUSE
REGULATION NO 596/2014 WHICH IS PART OF ENGLISH LAW BY VIRTUE OF
THE EUROPEAN (WITHDRAWAL) ACT 2018, AS AMENDED. ON
PUBLICATION OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT VIA A REGULATORY INFORMATION
SERVICE, THIS INFORMATION IS CONSIDERED TO BE IN THE PUBLIC
DOMAIN.
8 July 2024
Great Southern Copper
plc
("GSC" or the
"Company")
Great Southern Copper Signs Cerro Negro
Purchase Option Agreement
Preparation for drilling in progress to
extend historical high-grade Cu-Ag-Au deposit,
including multiple drill-ready
targets
Great Southern Copper plc (LSE: GSCU), the
company focused on copper-gold-lithium exploration in Chile, is
pleased to announce that, following a four month due diligence
period, it has finalised signing of the Purchase Option Agreement
for the Cerro Negro exploitation concessions which includes the
historical Mostaza Cu-Ag-Au Mine.
Highlights:
·
Purchase Option Agreement finalised allowing the
Company to acquire 100% ownership of the prospect
·
Includes the historical Mostaza Cu-Ag-Au mine
previously owned by Antofagasta Minerals
·
7 tabular bodies (lenses) of high-grade Cu-Ag-Au
mineralisation identified to date
· An
historical (1981) non-JORC mineral resource estimate for Lens 1 and
2 reported 190,600t of measured & indicated sulphide with
grades of 1.2% Cu, 80 g/t Ag, and 0.45 g/t Au, plus an
additional 63,000t of inferred sulphide
resource at depth
·
Historical drilling of 25 holes (1,024m) at Mostaza indicates
mineralisation is open at depth and along strike. Only 14 holes
reached target depth and deepest drilling was to only
92m
·
Untested alteration-mineralisation traced at
surface along strike for up to 4km
·
Style and type of alteration and mineralisation is
indicative of potential for porphyry copper type
deposits
·
Permitting process commenced by GSC for drilling
authorisation
Next
steps:
·
GSC to commence drilling at the Mostaza Mine
following completion of permitting approval process
·
The Mostaza Mine and greater Cerro
Negro prospect is a compelling exploration target with potential
to:
o significantly
expand on the known mineralisation inventory at the Mostaza mine
both at depth and along strike
o test of the
known "near-mine" lenses to define new mineral inventory
o identify new
targets along the MFZ for preliminary testing
o find further
evidence for and vectors towards porphyry-style
mineralisation
Exploration programmes will employ geological
mapping, geochemistry, geophysics, petrography and other
appropriate techniques, with a view to defining targets for drill
testing as soon as permitting allows.
Drilling
plan
Historical drilling at Mostaza indicates that
high-grade Cu-Ag-Au mineralisation is open in all directions. A
resource definition programme targeting near-mine depth and strike
extensions to the Mostaza mineralisation will be the Company's
initial focus for drilling. Significantly, the results of GSC's
recent due diligence mapping and rock-chip sampling suggests that
the structure hosting the Mostaza deposit extends up to 4km to the
south. However, outside of the immediate mine area this structure
has not been drill-tested, so the potential for significant
up-scaling of the mineral inventory along this trend will
constitute the secondary exploration phase of the Mostaza drilling
programme.
Further, our due diligence research suggests
that the style of high-grade copper-silver-gold mineralisation seen
at Mostaza is consistent with the upper high-sulphidation zones of
porphyry copper type deposits. This is coincident with the location
of the mine stratigraphically below the base of the extensive
Colorado lithocap alteration zone which the Company is targeting
regionally for porphyry copper deposits. The Company's drilling and
exploration programmes at Mostaza and Cerro Negro will be designed
with the aim of vectoring toward large-scale porphyry copper type
deposits.
Sam Garrett,
Chief Executive Officer of Great Southern Copper,
said: "The signing of the Cerro Negro option
agreement represents an important milestone for Great Southern
Copper. We now have the option to become 100% owner of the
historical Mostaza Mine with an existing mineral inventory that has
been drill-tested and remains open for expansion in all
directions.
"With the
Mostaza deposit now in hand, we aim to commence drilling at the
soonest opportunity targeting both extensions to the existing
high-grade resource and upscaling the deposit to the south along
the MFZ, as well as testing the potential for large-scale porphyry
copper type mineralisation.
"Alongside
the permitting process for drilling authorisation at Mostaza Mine,
we are also progressing the permitting to commence drilling at
Victoria and Aurelia, all of which sets GSC up for a busy and
exciting period of exploration."
Cerro Negro
prospect and geology:
On 22 February 2024, GSC announced the signing
of a binding Letter of Intent ("LOI") with terms for the 100%
acquisition of the Cerro Negro group of exploitation
concessions1. Following a four-month technical and legal
due diligence period, the Company has finalised the acquisition of
the concessions with the signing of a Purchase Option Agreement.
The Cerro Negro agreement gives GSC the option to acquire 100% of
the mining rights to 83 ha of granted mining concessions that
include the historical Mostaza Cu-Ag-Au mine.
Cerro Negro lies within the Company's
Especularita project which is ideally located close to national
infrastructure including main highways, powerlines, and towns. The
project is situated 170km from the port city of Coquimbo, and 130km
from Antofagasta Minerals' copper concentrate port at Los Vilos.
The area lies at an elevation between 800 and 1200m and is
accessible year-round (Figure 1).
The Especularita project is located within the
north-south trending Cretaceous metallogenic belt that includes
Teck's Carmen de Andacollo Cu-Au Mine 80km to the north, and
Pucobre's El Espino Cu-Au development project 30km to the south. At
Especularita this under-explored belt intersects with a
northwest-trending corridor that controls the "Colorada" advanced
argillic lithocap and extends to the Piuquénes porphyry Cu-Au
deposit in Argentina.
The Cerro Negro prospect includes the
historical Mostaza Mine (Plate 1) which consists of multiple
elongated tabular bodies (or lenses or lodes) of high-grade
Cu-Ag-Au mineralisation hosted within a north-south trending,
west-dipping fault system known as the Mostaza Fault Zone (MFZ).
Individual copper-rich lenses vary from >2-10m in width and
>100m in length with mineralisation occurring as disseminations,
veinlets and crackle networks of quartz and sulphides within
intensely phyllic (quartz-sericite-clay) altered dykes, tuffisite
and/or breccias which invade the MFZ. Petrology studies indicate
the high-sulphidation style copper mineralisation is dominated by
hypogene stromeyerite (copper-silver) and chalcocite, covellite,
digenite, bornite, plus lesser chalcopyrite and pyrite.
The MFZ varies from several metres to tens of
metres wide and forms a major regional feature visible over tens of
kilometres. Hydrothermal alteration, mineralisation, and
brecciation has been observed along the MFZ for up to 4km within
GSC ground which represents a significant exploration target to
potentially up-scale the known mine mineralisation (Plate 2, Figure
2). Untested copper mineralisation also extends up to 500-1000m to
the east of the mine area and is recognised at surface as oxide
copper associated with quartz and quartz-baryte veins and
vein-breccias orientated sub-parallel to the main MFZ structure
(Plate 3, Figure 2). Mapping and sampling is on-going in these
areas to delineate targets for exploration drilling.
The geology of the Cerro Negro area (Figure 2)
exhibits characteristics consistent with the upper parts of a
porphyry-epithermal mineral system, including a felsic dome field
and an extensive quartz-alunite advanced argillic blanket
(lithocap) which is underlain by structurally controlled feeders of
advanced argillic alteration zoning downward into the
phyllic-altered Cu-Ag-Au mineralised lenses (Mostaza). The presence
of mineralised tuffisites and breccias along the MFZ, some of them
potentially phreatic in origin, further suggests an underlying
porphyry intrusive as the source.
The Mostaza
Cu-Ag-Au mine:
Mining of copper and silver from the Mostaza
Mine is first reported in 1884 although there are no production
records. In 1977, the mine was acquired by the Jeraldo Gold Mining
Company which commenced mining of oxide and mixed copper ores from
a small open pit at Lens 1 and from underground stopes at Lens 2,
producing a reported total of 17,500 tonnes of ore with an average
grade of 1.25% Cu, 77 g/t Ag, and 0.5 g/t Au.
From 1978 to 1981 Jeraldo Mining drilled 25
exploration holes (1,024m) to test the continuity of the
mineralised lenses at depth. Most of the holes were angled at -70
degrees and the deepest hole was only 92 mts. Only 14 of the 25
holes reached their required depth to test the target
mineralisation (Figure 3).
Drilling confirmed the depth extent of the
lenses exposed in near-surface mining and returned encouraging
intercepts of Cu, Ag and Au (Figure 4, 5). In 1981 Jeraldo used
these drill results, together with underground sampling and
interpreted cross-sections to calculate an internal non-JORC
compliant mineral resource estimate for Lens 1 and Lens 2 (The 1981
Historical Mineral Resource Estimate - HMRE)2. Assuming
a cut-off grade of 1.5% Cu they obtained the following results for
sulphides (oxide and mixed resources are mined out and not
shown);
1981
HMRE Category
|
Metric
Tonnes
|
Cu %
|
Ag
g/t
|
Au
g/t
|
Measured & Indicated
Sulphide
|
190,600
|
1.2
|
80
|
0.45
|
Inferred Sulphide
|
63,000
|
na
|
na
|
na
|
Total for Lens 1 and 2
|
253,600
|
|
|
|
Table
1: Extract
from the 1981 Historical Mineral Resource Estimate by Jeraldo
Mining. The resource calculation pre-dates the introduction of the
JORC code and therefore is non-JORC compliant. Refer to Cautionary
note.
In 1982 the Mostaza Mine was acquired by the
Centinela Mining Company, a subsidiary of Antofagasta Minerals.
Between 1982 and 1988 Centinela developed a new open pit on Lens 2
and mined mixed and sulphide ores for processing at their nearby
Parral flotation plant until the company's focus shifted with the
acquisition and of the Michilla and Los Pelambres deposits.
Centinela production records are not available.
In 1983 Centinela produced an internal non-JORC
compliant mineral resource estimate for Lens 2 only (The 1983
HMRE)3. Using a cut-off-grade of 1.5% Cu, the exercise
gave the following results for the sulphides (oxide and mixed
resources are mined out and not shown);
1983
HMRE Category
|
Metric
Tonnes
|
Cu %
|
Ag g/t
|
Au g/t
|
Total Measured Sulphide Lens
2
|
55,841
|
1.2
|
73.71
|
na
|
Table
2: Extract
from the 1983 Historical Mineral Resource Estimate by Centinela
Mining. The resource calculation pre-dates the introduction of the
JORC code and therefore is non-JORC compliant (Refer to Cautionary
Note).
Mining at the Mostaza Mine ceased in 1988 and
the property was later acquired by Boroquim S.A. in 2011. However,
since that time the property has been dormant with no further
exploration activity on the property being carried out since the
1980's drilling by Jeraldo Gold Mining Company.
Figure
1: Location
of Cerro Negro prospect, Especularita Project,
Chile.
Figure
2: Geology of
the Cerro Negro prospect with rock chip geochemistry for copper
(%). Internal "dashed" area defines the Mostaza Mine area (Figure
3). The Mostaza Fault Zone (MTZ) extends well south of the mine
area and is untested by drilling to date.
Plate
1: The
Mostaza Mine is currently inactive. Open-pit mining has exposed
evidence of earlier underground workings. GSC aims to target its
initial drilling beneath the old workings to expand the known
mineral inventory to depth and along strike.
Plate
2: Quartz
veining and vein-breccia with oxide copper outcropping within the
Mostaza Fault Zone south of the Mostaza mine. These areas have not
been drill-tested.
Plate
3: GSC Chief
Geologist, David Hopper, mapping and sampling oxide mineralisation
associated with quartz and quartz-baryte veins east of the Mostaza
Mine. Note the abundance of copper oxide in this location. This
area has not been drill tested.
Figure
3: Map of the
Mostaza Mine area adapted from the 1981 Historical Mineral Resource
Estimate, showing historical drill holes and geological
cross-sections on the pre-mining topography. To date mining
activity has only centred on Lenses 1 and 2, with minimal
exploration and drilling outside of the mine
area.
Figure
4: Long
section of the Mostaza Mine adapted from the 1981 Historical
Mineral Resource Estimate of Jeraldo Mining, showing Lens 1 and 2
and the cross-sections and polygons used for estimation. Mineral
resource estimates are non-JORC. The results emphasise that the
Mostaza Cu-Ag-Au mineralisation is open in all
directions.
Figure
5: Geological
cross-section S-00 adapted from the 1981 Historical Mineral
Resource Estimate by Jeraldo Mining. Mineralisation remains open at
depth beneath the historic drilling intersections. (GSCU has not
been able to independently verify the historical channel sample or
drill hole assay results).
Cautionary note
on references to Resources:
The Company cautions that all references to
"resources", "mineral resources", or "mineral resource estimates"
in this RNS were calculated internally and reported prior to the
implementation of the JORC code and therefore are non-JORC
compliant. The Company advises that the resource
categories used in the historical estimates, for example "measured,
indicated, demonstrated and inferred", may not have the same
meaning or degree of confidence as current JORC
categories. Historical records indicate that the
quoted non-JORC resources were calculated using the
polygonal method based on underground sampling, 1024m of
drilling in 25 holes, and geological cross-sections and level
plans. GSC is presenting this information
for historical context only and is not treating it as a current
mineral resource estimate. The Company has not been
able to independently verify the results of historical drilling or
mine channel samples.
References:
1. RNS 0741E
(22 February 2024): GSC expands Especularita Project with two new
agreements.
2. 1981
Mineral Resource Estimate; Internal report by Jeraldo Gold
Mining.
3. 1983
Mineral Resource Estimate; Internal report by Centinela Mining
Company.
Enquiries:
Great Southern
Copper plc
|
|
Sam Garrett, Chief Executive Officer
|
+44 (0) 20 4582 3500
|
|
|
SI Capital
Limited
|
|
Nick Emerson
|
+44 (0) 1483 413500
|
|
|
Gracechurch
Group
|
|
Harry Chathli, Alexis Gore, Henry
Gamble
|
+44 (0) 20 4582 3500
|
Notes for
Editors:
About Great
Southern Copper
Great Southern Copper PLC is a UK-listed
mineral exploration company focused on the discovery of copper-gold
and lithium deposits in Chile. The Company has the option to
acquire rights to 100% of two projects in the under-explored
coastal belt of Chile that are prospective for large scale
copper-gold deposits. In addition, the Company has the option to
acquire rights to 100% of a lithium project located in the Salar de
Atacama district of Chile. Chile is a globally significant mining
jurisdiction being the world's largest copper producer and the
second-largest producer of lithium.
The two, early-stage Cu-Au projects comprise
the Especularita and San Lorenzo Projects, both located in the
coastal metallogenic belt of Chile which hosts significant copper
mines and deposits, including Teck's Carmen de Andacollo copper
mine, and boasts excellent access to infrastructure such as roads,
power and ports. Significant historical small-scale and artisanal
workings for both copper and gold are readily evident in both
exploration project areas.
The Company's Monti Lithium project is
strategically located in the pre-Andean region of Salar de Atacama
which is Chile's premier lithium-producing region with
well-established lithium mining operations and
infrastructure.
Great Southern Copper is strategically
positioned to support the global market for copper and lithium -
both critical battery metals in the clean energy transition around
the world. The Company is actively engaged in exploration and
evaluation work programmes targeting both large tonnage, low to
medium grade Cu-Au and Li deposits as well as high-grade Cu-Au
deposits.
Further information on the Company is available
on the Company's website: https://gscplc.com
Competent
Person Statement
The information in this announcement that
relates to exploration results is based on and fairly represents
information reviewed or compiled by Mr Sam Garrett, a Competent
Person who is a Member of the Australian Institute of Geoscientists
and a Fellow of the Society of Economic Geologists. Mr Garrett is
the CEO and a shareholder of Great Southern Copper PLC. Mr Garrett
has sufficient experience that is relevant to the styles of
mineralisation and types 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". Mr
Garrett has provided his prior written consent to the inclusion in
this announcement of the matters based on information in the form
and context in which it appears.
The Company confirms that it is not aware of
any new information or data that materially affects the information
included within the Prospectus dated 20 December 2021.
Forward Looking and Cautionary
Statements
Some statements in this announcement regarding
estimates or future events are forward-looking statements. They
include indications of, and guidance on, future earnings, cash
flow, costs and financial performance. Forward-looking statements
include, but are not limited to, statements preceded by words such
as "planned", "expected", "projected", "estimated", "may",
"scheduled", "intends", "anticipates", "believes", "potential",
"predict", "foresee", "proposed", "aim", "target", "opportunity",
"could", "nominal", "conceptual" and similar expressions.
Forward-looking statements, opinions and estimates included in this
report are based on assumptions and contingencies which are subject
to change without notice, as are statements about market and
industry trends, which are based on interpretations of current
market conditions. Forward-looking statements are provided as a
general guide only and should not be relied on as a guarantee of
future performance. Forward-looking statements may be affected by a
range of variables that could cause actual results to differ from
estimated or anticipated results and may cause the Company's actual
performance and financial results in future periods to materially
differ from any projections of future performance or results
expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. So, there
can be no assurance that actual outcomes will not materially differ
from these forward-looking statements.