NOW READ OUR ARTICLES IN 40 DIFFERENT LANGUAGES.
WEEKLY ONLINE NEWS STORY
You are receiving this weekly newsletter at no additional cost as part of your subscription to Petroleum News. If you do not want to receive this newsletter, email Shane Lasley at publisher@miningnewsnorth.com to be removed from the list.

March 18, 2010 --- Vol. 04, No. 11March 2010

Northwest Territories

GOLD – Tyhee Development Corp. March 16 reported the first results from its 10,000-meter drill program at Clan Lake in the Yellowknife Gold Project in Northwest Territories. Results include 3.74 grams per metric ton of gold over 7.5 meters in CL144 and 2.64 g/t gold over 9.5 meters and 3.48 g/t gold over 6.5 meters in CL143. “We are pleased to have started our 2010 winter drill program with such positive results,” said Tyhee President and CEO Dave Webb. “We have now completed 15 of the 33 diamond drill holes (that) are planned to test portions of the Clan Lake Main Zone up to 800 meters beyond the limits previously drilled. We have assay results back from three drill holes and expect a steady stream of assay results to be released over the next several months.” Tyhee has exchanged two of the diamond drills at Clan Lake for self-propelled ultra-low ground pressure buggy drills, which are capable of moving about much of the property with minimal impact on the ground. “This will allow flexibility in Tyhee’s program going into the summer at much lower costs than a helicopter-supported program,” Webb said. The drill results reported above are from the initial stages of Tyhee’s winter drill program. The first six drill holes are located near the northwest portion of the Main zone and target a gap within the gold deposit. The remainder of the drill program is focused on the southeast extension of the Main zone. Two diamond drills are actively working on the Clan Lake program while diamond drilling on the Ormsby zone was completed in mid-March. The Clan Lake Main zone is located 50 kilometers, or 37 miles, north of Yellowknife. Mineralization is largely constrained to a 6.5-kilometer-, or 4-mile-long, 900 meters wide north-northeast striking domain (open in strike). The Main zone has an indicated resource of 354,000 ounces of gold.

RECLAMATION – Federal monitors in Canada are taking a closer look at an abandoned Northwest Territories uranium mine that was supposed to be cleaned up 13 years ago, but still has some debris and radioactive waste on site, according to CBC News. The newspaper reported March 8 that the defunct Rayrock mine site, located 74 kilometers northwest of Behchoko, N.W.T., in the Tlicho region, operated for only two years until 1959 and was cleaned up in 1996-97. “Our monitoring has recently — in the last two to three years — indicated that some debris had been left on site,” Ron Breadmore, an environmental scientist with Indian and Northern Affairs Canada told CBC News. Breadmore said monitors found “some non-hazardous steel and building foundations, a small volume of asbestos, as well as a small volume of tailings.” Under its license with the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, the Rayrock site has been inspected once a year for the past 10 years. The mine site has remained a source of concern for the Tlicho people, especially those living in Behchoko, since the mine was upstream from the community’s drinking water supply. Federal monitors have noticed elevated levels of uranium and other metals in some surface water at the Rayrock site, but Breadmore stressed that water testing has shown the mine has no effect on Behchoko’s drinking water. During the original cleanup, buildings were torn down, machinery was removed, and two basins containing 71,000 metric tons of radioactive waste tailings were capped with one-meter thick caps of silt and clay. But Breadmore said the ongoing monitoring revealed that parts of the clay caps have been deteriorating. “While it’s performing quite well, over the years there has been some expected deterioration around the perimeter of the cap, indicating that we may have to go back in and look at some maintenance in those areas,” he said. Mining industry watchdog MiningWatch Canada has called for a moratorium on developing new uranium mines, saying there is no good way to deal with the radioactive tailings. “We don’t really have a great permanent solution for these wastes,” MiningWatch spokesman Ramsey Hart said. As well, about 1,000 square meters of tailings were missed during the initial cleanup and remain exposed on the surface of the mine site. INAC would not release its monitoring reports on the Rayrock site, as they want to show those reports to Tlicho aboriginal leaders first, according to CBC News. Breadmore said the department plans to conduct a detailed health risk assessment at Rayrock this summer, in part by collecting and analyzing samples of fish, small animals, vegetation and sediment from the site.


Did you find this article interesting? Email it to an associate.
Print this story

Mining News North - Phone: 1-907 522-9469 - Fax: 1-907 522-9583
Publisher@MiningNewsNorth.com --- http://www.MiningNewsNorth.com
S U B S C R I B E