1 May 2024
Bluejay Mining plc / Ticker: JAY /
Market: AIM / Sector: Mining
Acquisition of Sedimentary
Hosted Copper Project
Bluejay Mining plc ('Bluejay' or the 'Company'), the AIM, FSE listed and
Pink-Market traded exploration and development company with
projects in Greenland and Finland, is delighted to announce that an
application to expand Mineral Exploration Licence (MEL) 2015-08
covering a portion of the Company's 100% owned Dundas Ilmenite
Project ('Dundas' or the
'Project') located in
North-West Greenland, to include newly identified high grade
sedimentary hosted copper showings has been accepted by the
Greenland Mineral Licensing and Safety Authority.
Highlights
·
When granted, the proposed enlargement increases the licence
area of MEL 2015-08 from its current size of 86 km2 to 2,833
km2
·
Licence expansion comes at
no cost, leveraging existing exploration
credits for Dundas and is a result of an extensive data review and
analysis beginning in 2019
· The
expanded licence area will cover both historic and newly discovered
copper showings:
o The
Cominco Gossan, Wolstenholme Fjord - 1% Cu over 112ft width (34m) from
outcropping composite rock
chip samples within sedimentary units of the Dundas
Formation
o Hill
620 Showing, Olrik Fjord - sampling up to 0.83% Cu within 100
m2 area
o Existing copper showings within the dolerite dykes of the
original Dundas licence area
· The
Thule Basin represents an area of significant, underexplored mineral
potential. It hosts the first-order controls required for
sedimentary copper deposits and mineralisation is observed within
several geological units across the basin. Encouraging ore-grade
samples of mineralisation locally
exceeding 10% copper have been identified
·
Bluejay has an established and substantial permanent
exploration infrastructure at Moriusaq, which will serve as a
basecamp for activities on the expanded licence area, allowing for
cost effective exploration
·
The expanded licence area is
proximal to the Camelot Project operated by BHP in northern Canada,
illustrating an interest in arctic frontier exploration by the
major mining companies
· The
Acquisition comes as part of the Company's new growth strategy to secure high quality
copper and industrial gas projects whilst continuing to
progress Disko to drilling in 2025
· The
Company is planning to conduct a 2024 field program consisting of
helicopter-supported geological reconnaissance
Eric Sondergaard, Managing Director,
commented:
"This acquisition represents a
strategic opportunity
within a region that we already have a dominant footprint. This
project has seen very limited systematic exploration for its copper
in more than 50 years. This project has been identified as being
strategically located for large scale deposits of copper metal. As
a demonstration of the teams' capabilities the Thule Copper will incur virtually no cost to
the company over the coming
years due to previous expenditure at Dundas and coupled with
our existing exploration camp provides us with unparalleled and
dominant access to the entire region. We note with high interest the endeavours of
industry giants like BHP, who are now appearing at scale in the
northern latitudes in search of copper. Copper is seen as
remaining in deficit for the next 5 years and we are positioning
the Company to take advantage of what will be a highly supportive
environment for copper developers. The Thule Copper project
represents a massive opportunity for shareholders not just for
immediate exploration success, but also as potential for long-term
M&A for strategic early movers as these new regions transform
into strategic geopolitically competitive hubs. "
Map of Licence Area Applied
for
Figure
1. MEL 2015-08 Expanded Application
Area
Qualified Person
The scientific and technical
disclosure included in this announcement has been reviewed and
approved by Roderick McIllree, a director of Bluejay Mining plc,
who is also a Fellow of the Australasian Institute of Mining and
Metallurgy (FAusIMM). Mr. McIllree has sufficient experience,
relevant to the styles of mineralisation and type of deposits under
consideration and to the activity that he is undertaking, to
qualify as a Qualified Person ('QP') as defined by the AIM rules,
and for the purposes of The Australasian Code for Reporting of
Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves. Mr.
McIllree has reviewed this press release and consents to the
inclusion in the press release of the matters based on his
information in the form and context in which this
appears.
Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) Disclosure
The information contained within
this announcement is deemed by the Company to constitute inside
information as stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU)
No. 596/2014 ('MAR') which has been incorporated into UK law by the
European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018.
For further information please
visit http://www.bluejaymining.com or
contact:
Eric Sondergaard
|
Bluejay Mining plc
|
enquiry@bluejaymining.com
|
Ewan Leggat / Adam Cowl
|
SP Angel Corporate Finance LLP
(Nominated Adviser and Broker)
|
+44 (0) 20 3470 0470
|
Tim Blythe / Megan Ray / Said
Izagaren
|
BlytheRay
(Media Contact)
|
+44 (0) 20 7138 3205
|
Proximity to BHP's Camelot
Project in Nunavut & Northwest Territories,
Canada
The Thule Basin, located near BHP's
Camelot Project, reflects a growing interest in mineral exploration
ventures within the high Arctic region. This strategic geographical
adjacency highlights a broader trend of exploration activities
expanding into remote and challenging environments.
Rio Algom Exploration Inc., a
Canadian subsidiary of BHP licensed to operate in Canada, plans an
early-stage mineral exploration program from 2024 to 2025 across
the Queen Elizabeth Islands, Nunavut, and Northwest Territories,
all within the continuous permafrost zone. The program targets six
potential exploration areas: Melville Island, Ellef Ringnes Island,
Amund Ringnes Island, Axel Heiberg Island, and Ellesmere Island,
collectively known as the Camelot Project. Field activities
including geological reconnaissance, will occur during the
2024-2025 summer season. Additionally, a small acquisition of 1D
geophysical data (magnetotellurics and passive seismic stations) is
proposed for one Nunavut project area.
Figure 2.
Northern Latitude Project Areas
Notable
Mineralisation
Cominco Showing, Wolstenholme
Fjord
Discovered by Cominco during a
regional exploration campaign in 1975 the "Cominco Showing" is
located on the north side of the Wolstenholme Fjord within the
Dundas Formation, reduced sedimentary rocks. It lies only 36 km
southeast of the Moriusaq exploration camp. An extensive zone of
outcropping malachite-azurite mineralisation is present with
chalcopyrite-pyrite noted.
Historical sampling (and logging
notes) of a sedimentary horizon along the base of the mineralised
zone returned results of 34m at 1%
Cu with location notes commenting that the mineralised
horizon disappears under ice). With significant glacial retreat in the last
50 years revisiting this site is expected to yield further
continuity of this mineralised layer inland. The author
notes similarities between the showing and the White Pine type
copper deposit model and deems the lower part of the Dundas Shale
Formation to be favourable for further exploration success (Gill,
1975). This outcrop has never been
followed up and represents a highly prospective starting point for
Bluejays sediment-hosted copper exploration.
Hill 620 Showing, Olrik
Fjord
At "Hill 620" on the south side of
the Olrik Fjord (55km NE of Moriusaq), an area of approximately 100
square meters and 3m thickness shows malachite-azurite-stained and
bleached sandstones and gossans belonging to the Qaanaaq Formation,
situated just north of the Itilleq Fault. This site was initially
identified by the Geological Survey of Greenland (GGU). Analysis of
grab samples returned copper contents between 0.31 and 0.83%.
Petrological investigations have identified the presence of
chalcopyrite, pyrite, bornite, digenite, and covellite as the
primary sulphide minerals. Mineralisation is open along strike
where it disappears under cover. GGU publication "Rapport Nr. 90"
from 1985 noted the target requires follow up and possible
drilling, however, further work was not completed. An EM16 profile
was completed across the cropping out mineralisation and indicated
"the mineralisation could be more widespread than showing on
surface".
Despite these promising findings, no
subsequent exploration activities have been conducted. Notably, the
mineralisation, characterized by redbed-type copper, a different
sub-type of sedimentary hosted copper deposits compared to the
Cominco Showing described above. This offers multiple environments
for exploration within the expanded licence area.
Figure 3.
The green zone in the foreground, outlines the
"Hill 620 showing‟ within the Qaanaaq Formation (Bq). The
juxtaposition of the Dundas Group (Do) against the basement (Ps) is
seen in the background; dotted lines indicate the faults in the
Olrik half graben, adapted from Dawes (2006)
Malachite Staining, Existing
Dundas Exploration Licence
During investigation of the sill
complex immediately adjacent to the raised beaches at the Dundas
project, zones of malachite staining were observed. The
mineralisation was observed coating fractures and disseminated
within the dolerite sills. Preliminary values, using in field
portable X-ray fluorescence scanning returned values up to 7% copper. These showings
represent a possible contact-type mineralisation related to the
emplacement of the sills into the reduced sedimentary package.
Formation of secondary minerals along fracture surfaces indicates
remobilisation of copper, possibly from underlying sulphide
mineralisation.
Figure 4.
Malachite Staining at Dundas within Ilmenite Rich
Dolerite Dykes
Figure 5.
Known Cu Occurrences within Expanded Licence
Area
Operational
Efficiency
Management and employees of Bluejay
Mining have a well-established network and experience of operating
in the high arctic environment. A permanent and fully equipped camp
facility, located at Moriusaq will be used to service field
operations on the newly expanded exploration licence, allowing for
efficient testing of historic and newly developed sedimentary
copper occurrences. Relationships with stakeholders and service
providers will assist in this program and Bluejay will continue to
support the local Inuit population with training and employment
opportunities, ensuring best practice exploration.
Thule Basin Regional
Geology
The Proterozoic Thule Basin
(Supergroup) is a 6-8 km thick continental to shallow marine
sequence straddling Baffin Bay and Smith Sound. The basin is
predominantly preserved in a series of grabens along the coast of
NW Greenland, although smaller exposures are also found on eastern
Ellesmere Island, Canada. These exposures are preserved in
down-faulted areas, with a substantial exposed succession
approximately 2300 meters thick, unconformably underlain by a
high-grade Archaean-Palaeoproterozoic crystalline shield.
Additionally, gravimetric, seismic, and magnetic data suggest an
offshore extension of the Thule Supergroup, with estimates
indicating a thickness ranging between 8 and 20
kilometres.
Limited prospecting efforts by the
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS), have yielded
ore-grade samples of copper mineralisation from several localities
within the basin, with reported concentrations exceeding 10% copper
(Thomassen and Krebs, 2004). Notably, the annual public mineral
hunt program, Ujarassiorit, has returned samples from the Thule
Basin with copper values surpassing 10% (i.e., above the upper
detection limit of the analytical packages used), indicating the
significant mineralisation potential of the region.
Mafic volcanics in the lower portion
of the Thule Supergroup, consisting mainly of pyroclastic flows and
volcaniclastic units are related to the emplacement of the c. 1270
Ma Mackenzie Large Igneous Province.
Figure 6.
Geological map of Northwest Greenland, with
outlined extent of the Thule basin (Dawes, 2006).
Stratigraphy of the Thule
Basin
Thule Basin architecture remains
largely intact. The broad stratigraphy of the Thule Supergroup is
well documented and mapped at a scale of 1:500,000 scale. Five
recognized groups (Smith Sound, Nares Strait, Baffin Bay, Dundas,
and Narssârssuk) comprise the Thule Supergroup, each characterized
by distinct lithological units and depositional
environments.
Figure 7.
Cross Section through Thule Supergroup.
Stratigraphic positions of known Cu occurrences are shown; note
that the Dundas and Narssârssuk Groups are more geographically
constrained than the Baffin Bay, Nares Strait and Smith Sound
Groups (Dawes, 2006).
Nares Strait
Group
The Nares Strait Group represents
the lower Thule Supergroup in the central basin, with a thickness
of up to approximately 1200 meters and dominated by sandstones,
including redbeds, along with basaltic volcanics. Deposition
occurred in alluvial plain, littoral, and offshore environments,
with formations including the Northumberland, Cape Combermere,
Josephine Headland, Barden Bugt, and Clarence Head formations.
Notably, it serves as an excellent copper source, with identified
copper mineralisation present. Sandstone- and volcanic-hosted
redbed type Cu mineralisation has been identified during limited
prospecting. The Nares Strait Gp., signifies excellent Cu source
rocks at the base of the stratigraphy. also has potential for
unconformity-type U mineralisation.
Baffin Bay
Group
The Baffin Bay Group, widely
distributed in the Thule Basin and adjacent areas, has a thickness
ranging from 300 to 1300 meters and is dominated by multicoloured
siliciclastics, including sandstones, gritstones, and quartz-pebble
conglomerates, interspersed with intervals of shales and siltstones
and intruding basaltic sills. Depositional
environments of the Baffin Bay Group range from shallow marine to
terrestrial. The group outcrops in the central and southern parts
of the outcrop belt in NW Greenland, as well as on Ellesmere
Island, Canada. Its formations include the Kap Trautwine, Robertson
Fjord, Wolstenholme, and Qaanaaq formations, with identified copper
mineralisation and potential for unconformity-type uranium
mineralisation.
Smith Sound
Group
The Smith Sound Group, located at
the northern basin margin, has a thickness of up to 700 meters, and
is influenced by basin margin faults and underlying
paleo-topography. Comprised mainly of multi-coloured sandstones and
shales, including redbeds, with subordinate stromatolitic
carbonates and intrusions of c. 1270 Ma mafic sills, the group
reflects a transition from shallow marine to terrestrial
depositional environments. Its formations include the Cape
Camperdown, Pandora Havn, Kap Alexander, and Rensselaer Bay.
Additionally, the Rensselaer Bay Formation presents a complex
sequence of multi-coloured sandstones and siltstones, with shale,
sandstone, and dolomite dominating different parts of the
formation.
Dundas
Group
The Dundas Group, estimated to be 1
to 3 kilometres thick, is characterized by interbedded fine-grained
sandstone, siltstone, and black shales, along with lesser amounts
of carbonate, chert, and evaporitic strata, indicating a shift
towards deeper water deposition. Neoproterozoic, Ti-rich mafic
sills and dykes, such as the Franklin-Thule dyke swarm dated to
approximately 720 - 716 million years ago, are common within the
group. These formations are associated with minor occurrences of
Cu-Zn-Ba sulphides and the ilmenite-rich heavy mineral sand
deposits found on the raised and active beaches of Bluejay's Dundas
Ilmenite Project. The Dundas Group consists of the Kap Powell and
Olrik Fjord formations. The Kap Powell Formation, characterized by
a greater proportion of sandstone in the central part of the basin
is overlain by the Olrik Fjord Formation, approximately 400 meters
thick, comprising siliciclastic redbed para-sequences with minor
interlayered carbonates.
Narssârssuk
Group
Lastly, the Narssârssuk Group
overlays the Dundas Group in the southern part of the basin, with a
thickness ranging from 1.5 to 2.5 kilometres and consisting of
cyclic mixed siliciclastic-carbonate strata with evaporites,
reflecting tidal deposits in shallow water. Formations within this
group include the Imilik, Bylot Sund, and Aorfêrneq formations.
Importantly, the group is age equivalent to Nanisivik Fm. (part of
the former Society Cliffs Fm.) of the Bylot Supergroup which hosts
the Nanisivik Pb-Zn deposit (18Mt @ 9% Zn, 0.7% Pb, 35g/t Ag) on
Baffin Island mined by Cominco/Teck.
Sediment-Hosted Cu in the
Thule Basin: Mineral Systems Framework
Throughout the Meso- to
Neoproterozoic Thule Supergroup, redbed units are prominently
featured in its stratigraphical succession. Approximately 20 to 55%
of the total stratigraphical thickness in four of the five groups
constituting the Thule Supergroup is estimated to be composed of
these redbed successions, contributing approximately 0.5 to 1.9
kilometres to the basin's sedimentary package. Evidence suggests
significant fluid/brine activity within the basin, possibly
facilitated by block faulting associated with half-graben
structures, which could have created fracture-permeability and
hydrologic conditions conducive to the formation of redbed Cu-type
mineralisation. The distribution of known redbed Cu occurrences
within the Thule Supergroup reinforces this association, as they
are predominantly located adjacent to major faults (GEUS,
2020).
Despite the lack of previous
commercial exploration, all the key components required to form a
viable sediment-hosted Cu mineral system have been identified (or
can be invoked at a reasonable level of confidence) for the Thule
basin from a review of the available data.
· Favourable geological setting (cratonic basin)
· Prolonged depositional history basement Cu
endowment
· Source
rocks (volcanics, redbed sandstones)
· Evaporates (brine production) energy drivers
· Evidence of leaching/fluid flow
· Structure/fluid pathways
· Host
rocks traps/seals
· Existing Cu occurrences recognised
Figure 8.
Sediment Hosted Copper Deposit Model (Hitzman et
al, 2010)
Geodynamic
Environment
Globally, the late Mesoproterozic
was a period of widespread tectonic convergence, culminating in the
amalgamation of the Rodinia supercontinent. However, in Laurentia,
long-lived orogenesis on its eastern margin was punctuated by
short-lived extension that generated the Midcontinent Rift ca.
1110-1085 Ma. Whereas this cratonic rift basin is typically
considered an isolated occurrence, new Re-Os depositional ages
(Greenman et al, 2021) demonstrate a temporal overlap with multiple
cratonic basins in northern Laurentia that also formed during this
period - namely, the Bylot Basins and the Amundsen and Hornby
Basins, all now located in the high Arctic.
Most paleogeographical
reconstructions indicate that during the Late Mesoproterozoic to
early Neoproterozoic, Laurentia, which encompassed present-day
Greenland, was positioned close to the palaeoequator, approximately
±30 degrees on either side of the equator throughout the basin's
depositional history. This positioning suggests a favourable
paleoclimate conducive to sedimentation, carbonate and evaporite
production, among other factors.
The Thule basin is situated in the
easternmost region of the Bylot basins, spanning NE Canada and NW
Greenland, which include the Borden, Aston-Hunting, Fury and Hecla,
and Thule basins. This system of late Mesoproterozoic
(approximately 1.27-1.0 billion years ago) sedimentary basins
coincided the emplacement of the Mackenzie Large Igneous Province,
the Ottawan phase of the Grenville Orogeny c. 1090-1030 Ma, and the
formation of the Midcontinent Rift. Notably, the Midcontinent Rift
hosts economically viable sediment-hosted copper deposits of the
same age, such as Highland Copper's White Pine deposit. Historical
production records from White Pine between 1953-1995, reveal
extraction of 179.7 million tonnes at 1.14% copper and 7.8 grams
per tonne of silver. Presently, the Highland Copper deposit has an
indicated resource of 133.4 Mt @ 1.07% Cu and 14.9 g/t Ag and an
inferred resource of 97.2 Mt @ 1.03 % Cu and 8.7 g/t Ag.
Figure 9.
Left: Paleogeography with Thule Basin location
adapted from: Roberts et al, 2022. Right: NE Canada and NW
Greenland High Arctic Basins (Greenman et al, 2021)
From a global perspective, the late
Mesoproterozoic to early Neoproterozoic age range of the Thule
basin coincides with various sediment-hosted copper belts
worldwide. These include the Central African Copperbelt
(Zambia-DRC), the Kalahari Copper Belt (Botswana), the Midcontinent
Rift (Canada-USA), and Redstone (Canada).
Although geochronological data is
limited, the Thule basin exhibits an extended depositional history,
spanning from approximately 1270 to 720 Ma. This prolonged duration
is generally viewed as a favourable characteristic for
sediment-hosted Cu deposits.
Figure 10.
Stratigraphy of Bylot Basins (Greenman et al.,
2023)
Studies propose a depositional
environment characterized by shallow marine, subtidal to supratidal
low-energy sedimentation, resembling modern coastal sabkhas in hot,
arid to semi-arid conditions. These conditions, as suggested in
several studies, including Dawes (2006) and Kettanah et al. (2016),
indicate a high potential for the generation of basinal brines. The
intra-cratonic nature of the basin likely contributed to the
formation of a hydrologically closed basinal architecture, where
highly oxidized and saline, moderate temperature basinal brines
were likely produced. These brines could have facilitated
reduction-controlled sulphide precipitation over extended periods,
potentially spanning tens to hundreds of millions of years,
considering the basin's prolonged depositional history, as outlined
in models proposed by Hitzman et al. (2010).
Metals and Fluid
Source
The Thule Basin has multiple metal
sources, including continental clastic sediments featuring
extensive basal redbed sequences, which represent the thickest
accumulation of redbeds across Greenland. Additionally, mafic
volcanic sequences are present in the lower stratigraphy,
accompanied by multiple generations of mafic sills and dykes
throughout the stratigraphy. Some of these intrusive bodies, such
as the Franklin-Thule sills, are reported to exhibit anomalously
high copper content, as documented by Parnell and Boyce
(2019).
Within the underlying
Paleoproterozoic and Archean crystalline basement, known copper
occurrences are documented, notably within the Prudhoe Land
supracrustal complex and the Thule mixed gneiss complex, as
reported by Thomassen and Krebs (2004). Furthermore, iron oxide
copper-gold (IOCG) type mineralisation is observed within the Etah
Group. However, given the substantial volumes of redbeds and mafic
volcanics within the Thule basin, it is conceivable that a basement
source for the metals may not be necessary. Nonetheless, the
presence of known Cu mineralisation in the underlying basement
further enhances the overall Cu prospectivity of the
basin.
The Thule basin presents potential
fluid sources, particularly in the form of evaporite-derived
brines. Gypsum and anhydrite are documented within the shallow
marine sequences of the Dundas and Narssârssuk Groups of the upper
Thule Supergroup. Notably, the Narssârssuk Group's Imilik formation
features an 8-meter-thick homogeneous bed of gypsum, as reported in
a geotechnical drill core south of the Pituffik Space Base by
Davies et al. (1963). Additionally, the Aorfêrneq formation within
the Narssârssuk Group exhibits various forms of evaporite,
including thin beds, veins, nodules, and breccia matrix. Field
studies also report evaporate dissolution breccias, providing
evidence of vanished evaporites and probable brine
generation.
Despite the Mesoproterozoic oceans
exhibiting low seawater sulphate concentrations, the existence of
giant deposits of this age such as White Pine, demonstrates that
viable sediment-hosted Cu systems can develop in the presence of a
readily leachable metal source rock, even without hypersaline and
sulphate-rich brines (Jones et al, 2023).
Evidence of basinal fluids: a fluid
inclusion study (Kettanah et al. 2016) of the gangue minerals in
the Kiatak Pb-Cu-Ba occurrence (located within the Dundas Group of
the Thule Supergroup and associated with a sill of the
Franklin-Thule dyke swarm, c. 720 - 716 Ma) indicates two fluid
types: prior to galena precipitation a high salinity (~20 wt.% eq.
NaCl) basinal-type aqueous brine cooled from temperatures >300
°C and was trapped first in early calcite, and with further
cooling, in barite together with solid bitumen inclusions.
Following galena crystallisation, secondary inclusions containing a
similar brine, but of lower salinity, higher Ca:Na ratio, and lower
temperature, were trapped in calcite. Corrosion of galena was
followed by precipitation of lower temperature (~100 °C) barite
from a second fluid, comprising immiscible water and
methane.
Evidence of basinal fluids is
apparent in a fluid inclusion study conducted by Kettanah et al.
(2016) on gangue minerals in the Kiatak Pb-Cu-Ba occurrence,
situated within the Dundas Group of the Thule Supergroup and
associated with a sill of the Franklin-Thule dyke swarm dating to
approximately 720 - 716 Ma. Two distinct fluid types have been
identified prior to galena precipitation, a high salinity (~20 wt.%
eq. NaCl) basinal-type aqueous brine cooled from temperatures
exceeding 300 °C, initially trapped in early calcite, and later in
barite along with solid bitumen inclusions. Subsequent to galena
crystallisation, secondary inclusions containing a similar brine,
albeit of lower salinity, higher Ca:Na ratio, and lower
temperature, were confined within calcite. The corrosion of galena
preceded the precipitation of barite from a second fluid at a lower
temperature (~100 °C), composed of immiscible water and
methane.
Furthermore, the presence of high
total organic carbon (TOC) black shales at various stratigraphic
levels within the Thule Basin suggests a probable methane source.
These black shales, akin to those in other Bylot basins described
as shale gas reservoirs by Greenman (2022), indicate the potential
for methane generation within the Thule Basin.
Figure 11.
Fluid Inclusion Study of Kiatak Pb-Cu-Ba
occurrence (Kettanah et al. 2016)
Drivers & Pathways of
Fluid Flow
Energy drivers within the Thule
Basin encompass multiple episodes of voluminous mafic magmatism
associated with two Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs): the Mackenzie
LIP, approximately 1.27 billion years ago, and the subsequent
Franklin LIP around 720 - 716 million years ago, as identified by
Pu et al. (2022) and Dufour et al. (2023). These events suggest a
potential geodynamic trigger for large-scale fluid flow, possibly
linked to incipient basin inversion or compression induced by
far-field stresses from Grenvillian orogenesis, similar to the
contemporaneous Midcontinent Rift.
Fluid pathways within the basin are
delineated by various structural elements, including basin margins,
extensional basinal faults, grabens, half grabens, unconformities,
breccias, and local folding. Evidence of syn-sedimentary faulting
is present, along with inherited structures from the underlying
Archaean and Paleoproterozoic basement. The Thule Basin is
predominantly dissected by the Thule half-graben system,
characterized by WNW-ESE-trending faults, some of which have
experienced displacement of several kilometres. Many major faults
exhibit signs of hydrothermal alteration, with reports of
mineralisation containing quartz-barite-pyrite-chalcopyrite.
Notably, the basin remains unmetamorphosed, preserving its
permeability and facilitating fluid flow processes.
Metal
Deposition
Trap rocks within the Thule Basin
consist of thick sequences of reduced sediments, including
carbonates and pyritic black shales with high Total Organic Carbon
(TOC), predominantly found in the upper stratigraphy of the Thule
Supergroup, as noted by Dawes (1997; 2006). These sedimentary
packages likely served as in-situ reductants or trap rocks for
copper-bearing fluids.
Evidence of hydrocarbons in the
basin, indicated by the presence of methane and solid bitumen in
fluid inclusion and petrological studies conducted by Kettanah et
al. (2016), suggests the existence of mobile reductants. This
presence, alongside the in-situ reductants mentioned earlier, is
believed to enhance the overall copper prospectivity of the Thule
Basin.
Dispersion of
Fluids
Indicators of widespread fluid flow
are evident throughout the Thule Basin, notably in the extensively
leached/bleached redbeds of the Baffin Bay and Nares Strait Groups,
where hematite destruction by reduced fluids is
observed.
The unconformity between the
sediments of the Thule Supergroup and the underlying
Archean-Paleoproterozoic basement exhibits significant hematisation
upon exposure, both in the rocks above and within a bleached
regolith below the unconformity. These findings strongly suggest
interaction with oxidised fluids.
The presence of zinc-lead
mineralisation higher in the stratigraphy prompts speculation about
its relation to a sediment-hosted copper system. These occurrences
could possibly represent the depletion of such a system or are
associated with a distinct mineralising system or fluid
source.
Figure 12. (A)
Bleaching of ferruginous sandstone with relict
redbeds, Northumberland Ø. (B) Unconformity below the Thule Basin
at Bowdoin Fjord with noticeable bleaching of basal sandstone beds
and a pale regolith zone up to c. 2 m thick.
Thule Basin Exploration
History
The Thule Basin has not been
subjected to systematic or commercial mineral exploration for base
or precious metals. The primary exploration efforts have been
directed towards ilmenite-rich heavy mineral sands found on raised
and active beaches, sourced from the Ti-rich mafic sills and dykes
intruding the Dundas Group of the Thule Basin. Base metal
exploration has been limited to prospecting conducted by the
geological survey.
· 1950's: Geological mapping by the
United States Geological Survey (USGS) of the area surrounding the
US Military's Pituffik Space Base.
· 1950's
- 1994: Geological Survey of Greenland
(GGU; now the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, GEUS)
carried out numerous geological mapping expeditions in Northwest
Greenland including the Thule basin. Resulted in the production of
the 1:500,000 scale geological map of the Thule area in 1991.
Survey geologist, Peter Dawes was responsible for much of the
original mapping.
· 1989 -
Present: Ujarassiorit (Greenland's annual
public minerals hunt) has returned several high-grade Cu and Zn-Pb
samples from the Thule basin including several samples with >10%
copper.
· 2001,
2003, 2007: Geological Survey of Denmark
and Greenland (GEUS) carried out stream sediment sampling and
prospecting. Several sediment-hosted Cu occurrences
discovered.
· 1994-1995: Minor regional prospecting
by the Greenlandic state-owned exploration company, Nunaoil
A/S
· 2010-2015: Hunter Minerals Pty Ltd
began exploration of ilmenite-rich heavy minerals sands
(2010-2015).
· 2015-Present: From 2015 to present
Bluejay Mining plc (through its 100% owned subsidiary Dundas
Titanium A/S) has carried out extensive exploration and drilling of
the ilmenite-rich sands. In 2019, Bluejay shipped a 42,000-tonne
bulk sample from their Dundas ilmenite project to the Port of
Contrecoeur in Canada, representing the most northerly sealift of
dry bulk cargo ever completed globally. Bluejay received an
exploitation mining licence for the project in December
2020.
· 2017-Present: Greenroc Mining plc have
also been exploring an adjacent ilmenite-rich heavy minerals sands
project, which is currently at an earlier stage of exploration
compared to Dundas.
References
Davies, W.E., Krinsley, D.B. &
Nicol, A.H. 1963: Geology of the North Star Bugt area, northwest
Greenland. Meddelelser om Grønland 162, 12, 68 pp. ISSN
0025-6676
Dawes, P.R. 1997: The Proterozoic
Thule Supergroup, Greenland and Canada: history, lithostratigraphy
and development. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin 174, 120
pp. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v174.5025
Dawes, P.R. 2006: Explanatory notes
to the Geological map of Greenland, 1:500 000, Thule, Sheet 5.
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Map Series 2, 97 pp. +
map. https://doi.org/10.34194/geusm.v2.4614
Dufour, F., Davies, J.H.F.L.,
Greenman, J.W., Skulski, T., Halverson, G.P., and Stevenson, R.
(2023) New U-Pb CA-ID TIMS zircon ages implicate the Franklin LIP
as the proximal trigger for the Sturtian Snowball Earth event.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, v. 618, article no: 118259.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2023.118259
Gill, F.D. 1975; Report on the
Melville Bugt reconnaissance project - 1974. Internal Cominco Ltd.,
Canada, company report, 4 pp. (Geological Survey of Denmark and
Greenland, GEUS Report File 20255)
Greenman, J.W., dos Santos, A.,
Patzke, M., Gibson, T., Ielpi, A., and Halverson, G.P. (2023) A
tectonostratigraphic framework for the late Mesoproterozoic Bylot
basins of Laurentia. Journal of the Geological Society, v. 180(3).
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2022-174
Greenman, J.W., Rooney, A.D.,
Patzke, M., Ielpi, A., and Halverson, G.P (2021) Re-Os
geochronology highlights widespread latest Mesoproterozoic (ca.
1090- 1050 Ma) intracratonic basin development of Laurentia.
Geology, v. 49(7), pp. 779-783. https://doi.org/10.1130/G48521.1
Jones, S.M. (2020). Alteration and
fluid flow associated with sediment-hosted stratiform copper
mineralisation in the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent Rift System, USA.
University of St Andrews, UK. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis. DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17630/sta/137
Jones, S.M., Cloutier, J., Prave,
A.R., Raub, T.D., Stüeken, E.E., Stein, H.J., Yang, G., and Boyce,
A.J. (2023). Fluid Flow, Alteration, and Timing of Cu-Ag
Mineralisation at the White Pine Sediment-Hosted Copper Deposit,
Michigan, USA. Economic Geology, 118(6), pp. 1431-1465. DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5382/econgeo.5013
Kettanah, Y., Zentilli, M., Hanley,
J., Tweedale, F. (2016). Geological setting and fluid inclusion
characteristics of a lead-copper-barium occurrence hosted in a
Neoproterozoic mafic sill at Kiatak, Northumberland Island,
Northwestern Greenland, Ore Geology Reviews, Volume 79, pp
268-287, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oregeorev.2016.05.027
Thomassen, B. & Krebs, J.D.
2004: Mineral exploration of selected targets in the Qaanaaq
region, North-West Greenland: follow-up on Qaanaaq 2001. Danmarks
og Grønlands Geologiske Undersøgelse Rapport 2004/42, 64
pp.
About Bluejay Mining plc
Bluejay is listed on the London AIM
market, Frankfurt Stock Exchange and its shares also trade on the
Pink Market in the US. The Company is advancing multiple highly
prospective projects in Greenland and Finland. Bluejay offers both
portfolio commodity diversification focused on base, energy and
precious metals in Tier 1 jurisdictions.
Bluejay's most advanced project,
through its 100% owned subsidiary Dundas Titanium A/S in Northwest
Greenland, is the Dundas Ilmenite Project, which is fully permitted
with a JORC Mineral Resource of 117Mt at 6.1% ilmenite and a maiden
offshore Exploration Target of between 300Mt and 530Mt of ilmenite
at an average expected grade range of 0.4 - 4.8% ilmenite in-situ.
Bluejay has agreed a Master Distribution Agreement with a major
Asian conglomerate for up-to 340ktpa of its anticipated 440ktpa
annual output. The Company has signed on a major European bank to
head the financing syndicate for Dundas. Bluejay's strategy is
focused on finalising and securing financing ahead of commencing
commercial production at Dundas in order to create a company
capable of self-funding exploration on its current and future
projects.
Bluejay, through its wholly owned
subsidiary Disko Exploration Ltd., has signed a definitive Joint
Venture Agreement with KoBold Metals to guide and fund exploration
for new deposits rich in the critical materials required for the
green, future and electrification energy transition (the
Disko-Nuussuaq nickel-copper-cobalt-PGE Project).
The JV has completed intensive analysis and
interpretation of the extensive geochemical, geophysical, and
geological data collected during the previous exploration
campaigns. Leveraging KoBold's proprietary artificial intelligence
(AI) and machine learning (ML) platforms, this comprehensive
analysis has resulted in the identification of seven initial
priority targets within the project area. These seven priority
targets exhibit spatial characteristics indicative of potential
deposits on a scale comparable to renowned mining operations such
as Norilsk, Voisey's Bay, or Jinchuan. The JV is now planning a
focused ground-loop electromagnetic survey to refine and prioritize
each locality appropriately.
Disko Exploration Ltd holds two
additional projects in Greenland - the 692 sq. km Kangerluarsuk
zinc-lead-silver project, where historical work has recovered
grades of up to 45.4% zinc, 9.3% lead and 596 g/t silver; and the
920 sq. km Thunderstone project which has the potential to host
large-scale base metal and gold deposits.
In Finland, Bluejay currently holds
three large scale multi-metal projects through its wholly owned
subsidiary FinnAust Mining Finland Oy. The Company has identified
multiple drill ready targets at the Enonkoski nickel-copper-cobalt
project in East Finland. Bluejay's Hammaslahti
copper-zinc-gold-silver project hosts high-grade VMS mineralisation
and extensions of historical ore lodes have been proven. The drill
ready Outokumpu copper-nickel-cobalt-zinc-gold-silver project is
located in a prolific geological belt that hosts several high-grade
former mines. In August 2023, Bluejay successfully divested its
Black Schist Projects in Finland to Metals One plc in a transaction
worth £4.125 million (Bluejay currently owns c. 29% of the issued
ordinary share capital of AIM listed Metals One plc).