Mobilization for 2022 Exploration Season to Commence Early
April
TUCSON,
AZ, March 29, 2022 /CNW/ - Western
Alaska Minerals (the "Company" or "WAM") (TSXV: WAM) is
pleased to announce its final 2021 drill results and provide an
update on the re-interpretation and new targeting at its 100% owned
Illinois Creek property in western Alaska.
The 2021 drill program tested four different target areas across
the Illinois Creek property highlighted by bonanza grade Ag-Zn-Pb
CRD (carbonate replacement deposit) mineralization intersected at
Waterpump Creek which has become a primary focus for 2022.
Additional results are reported for vein hosted gold mineralization
at the Honker prospect and oxide-gold targets near the Illinois
Creek open pit.
Highlights
- Re-interpretation of the Illinois Creek property now shows
fold-thrust belt geometries that define a series of stacked CRD
manto targets along the >6-kilometer distance between Waterpump
Creek and the Central Illinois Creek pit. Fold-thrust belts are a
critical metallogenic control for the major CRD belts of the world,
and this new interpretation highlights the tremendous potential of
the target-rich Illinois Creek property.
- Drilling at Waterpump Creek in 2021 intersected significant
oxide and sulfide mineralization highlighted by 9.1 m true thickness of high-grade sulfide
mineralization grading 522 g/t Ag, 22.5% Zn and 14.5 % Pb in hole
WPC21-09 and 15.6 m true thickness
high-grade oxide mineralization grading 256 g/t Ag, 6.4% Pb and
0.7% Zn in hole WPC21-02 (previously reported). The new geological
interpretation indicates potential for the project to host multiple
CRD deposits like Waterpump Creek.
- Drilling on the Honker vein system intersected 7.6 m true thickness grading 2.42 g/t Au,
including: 1.1 m @ 3.98 g/t Au, 1.3
m @ 4.45 g/t Au, 1.1 m @ 5.33
g/t Au (drill hole HK21-06)
- Initial exploration drilling south of the Central Illinois
Creek pit, encountered broad zones of shallow oxide mineralization
with anomalous Au, Ag, Cu, Pb, Zn (up to 40 meters thick).
Individual sample intervals assay up to 2.16 g/t Au. New soil
sampling has expanded this target area 1200 meters to the south and
up to 400 meters in width. A deep gravity low and geochemistry
suggest vectoring to a possible porphyry source in this
direction.
- The 2022 exploration season will begin mobilizing the first
week of April. Two C-130 Hercules flights to provide drill and camp
expansion materials are planned in mid April. A +6,000 m drill program is anticipated to re-start
in mid May and continue through early September. The program is
expandable based on success thru mid-October. The focus will be on
step out drilling of the WPC sulfide mineralization to gauge the
overall footprint of the bonanza mineralization encountered in
2021.
Kit Marrs, Western Alaska
Minerals CEO commented, "The Company had a very successful 2021
drilling program. Three targets at Waterpump Creek, Illinois
Creek oxide gold and the Honker gold vein system were tested for
the first time since 1984. Drill hole WPC21-09 was an extraordinary
drill intercept and has transformed the company. We now have both
excellent precious metal and polymetallic base metal potential. The
intercept of 9.1 meters true thickness grading 522 g/t Ag, 22.5% Zn
and 14.5 % Pb is one of the best drill intercepts in the silver
space over the past few years.
Going forward, this year's drill program will focus on the
sulfide CRD potential now apparent on the Illinois Creek property
and include defining a resource at Waterpump Creek and exploring
the high-grade potential at Last Hurrah. Our two company owned
drill rigs are on-site and ready to start drilling in mid-May. The
plan is to complete a minimum 6,000-meter drill program. If the
early drilling is successful, we will add to the drill budget as
warranted."
________________________________________________________________________________
WAM's 2021 drill season at the Illinois Creek property focused
on a series of underexplored historical target areas:
1) the Waterpump Creek Ag-Zn-Pb CRD deposit (Carbonate
Replacement deposit),
2) the Honker intermediate sulfidation Au vein swarm,
3) potential extensions to the Illinois Creek oxide Au-Ag-Cu
deposit and,
4) the Ag-Zn-Pb Last Hurrah CRD prospect.
In addition to the widely targeted 2021 exploration drilling, a
major soil sampling program was completed and was utilized along
with the extensive historical geophysical surveys to reinterpret
the Illinois Creek property and district as part of the
northwestern Alaska mid Jurassic
fold-thrust belt.
Waterpump Creek – 2021 Drill
Results
Results from the Waterpump Creek deposit have been released in
two previous news releases dated November
15, 2021, and January 18,
2022, and are shown in Table 1.
Table 1. 2021 Waterpump Drill
Results
Drill
hole
|
From
(meters)
|
To
(meters)
|
Thickness
(meters)
|
No Recovery
(meters)
|
True Thickness
(meters)
|
Ag
g/t
|
Pb %
|
Zn %
|
Ag Eq
g/t*
|
WPC21-01
|
21.5
|
32.4
|
7.4
|
3.1
|
7.4
|
20
|
0.4
|
2.5
|
134
|
WPC21-02
|
23.2
|
39.9
|
16.7
|
|
15.7
|
256
|
6.4
|
0.7
|
484
|
including
|
23.2
|
26.2
|
3
|
|
2.8
|
1094
|
27.4
|
0.3
|
1960
|
|
36.9
|
39.9
|
3
|
|
2.8
|
287
|
2.1
|
2.8
|
466
|
WPC21-03
|
50.9
|
52.4
|
1.5
|
|
1.4
|
1337
|
nil
|
nil
|
1337
|
|
63.1
|
75.6
|
9.7
|
2.8
|
9.1
|
89
|
7.7
|
6.3
|
584
|
WPC21-04
|
64.9
|
71.2
|
6.3
|
|
5.9
|
76
|
nil
|
5.2
|
283
|
including
|
64.9
|
66.4
|
1.5
|
|
1.4
|
315
|
nil
|
0.5
|
335
|
WPC21-05
|
35.6
|
50.9
|
11.9
|
3.4
|
11.2
|
149
|
nil
|
2
|
230
|
including
|
35.6
|
39
|
3.4
|
|
3.2
|
507
|
nil
|
0.4
|
523
|
WPC21-06
|
119.7
|
122.8
|
3.1
|
|
2.9
|
8
|
0.4
|
2.5
|
122
|
WPC21-07
|
FW
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WPC21-08
|
Lost HW
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WPC21-09
|
109.4
|
120.9
|
10.5
|
1.0
|
9.1
|
522
|
14.5
|
22.5
|
1886
|
* Ag Equivalencies based on spot prices of $22/oz Ag, $1.00/lb
Pb, and $1.30/lb Zn
A total of nine drill holes totaling 851 meters have been
completed at Waterpump Creek targeting both shallow high-grade
oxide mineralization and deeper high-grade sulfide mineralization
culminating in the bonanza sulfide intercept encountered in drill
hole WPC21-09. WPC21-09 lies downdip and along strike of four
historical sulfide intercepts drilled by Anaconda (1984) and
NovaGold (2005) and are summarized in Table 2.
Table 2. Historic Sulfide
Intercepts Waterpump Creek
Drill
hole
|
From
(meters)
|
To
(meters)
|
Thickness
(meters)
|
True Thickness
(meters)
|
Ag
g/t
|
Pb %
|
Zn %
|
Ag Eq
g/t*
|
WPC84-027
|
107.3
|
115.1
|
7.8
|
6.8
|
771
|
9.8
|
10.5
|
1402
|
WPC84-031
|
124.4
|
135.0
|
10.6
|
9.2
|
289
|
10.1
|
12.1
|
979
|
WPC84-038
|
145.1
|
153.6
|
8.5
|
6.8
|
170
|
6.0
|
15.3
|
832
|
KH05-02
|
102.4
|
110.0
|
7.6
|
6.6
|
608
|
18.4
|
27.3
|
2029
|
High-grade sulfide mineralization encountered in WPC21-09 and
the historical Anaconda and NovaGold drilling is open down dip and
to the north and south. Additional drilling is highly anticipated
in 2022.
Honker – 2021 Drill
Results
Honker is an intermediate sulfidation vein swarm that lies 10
kilometers (6 miles) NNW from the Illinois Creek pit. Exceptional
Au surface sampling (numerous channel and chip samples >15 g/t
Au) over 800 to 900 m of strike
length along with a few historical drill tests by Anaconda in the
1980s, suggested an opportunity to develop a high-grade gold
resource.
WAM drilled 6 shallow NQ drill holes totalling 636.3 meters in
an initial test of the vein system. No historical core from the
1982 Anaconda drilling has been preserved. Table 3
summarizes both 2021 WAM drill holes and 1982 Anaconda drill
holes.
Table 3. 2021 Honker Drill
Results
Drill
Hole
|
From
(meters)
|
To
(meters)
|
Thickness
(meters)
|
True Thickness
(meters)
|
Au
g/t
|
Ag
g/t
|
2021
Drilling
|
HK21-01
|
27.0
|
28.2
|
1.2
|
0.7
|
nil
|
nil
|
HK21-02
|
40.9
|
41.4
|
0.5
|
0.2
|
nil
|
nil
|
HK21-03
|
32.7
|
33.4
|
0.7
|
0.5
|
nil
|
nil
|
HK21-04
|
12.8
|
15.7
|
2.9
|
2.2
|
1.56
|
5.5
|
HK21-05
|
58.9
|
63.4
|
4.5
|
2.6
|
nil
|
nil
|
HK21-05
|
74.2
|
75.4
|
1.2
|
0.7
|
nil
|
nil
|
HK21-06
|
70.1
|
84.1
|
14.0
|
7.6
|
2.42
|
6.8
|
Including
|
70.1
|
72.2
|
2.1
|
1.1
|
3.98
|
21.3
|
including
|
77.7
|
80.1
|
2.4
|
1.3
|
4.45
|
6.7
|
including
|
82.0
|
84.1
|
2.1
|
1.1
|
5.33
|
9.7
|
1982
Drilling
|
HK-3
|
33.6
|
35.3
|
1.7
|
0.9
|
5.14
|
4.1
|
HK-3
|
56.2
|
57.0
|
0.8
|
0.4
|
3.57
|
8.9
|
HK-4
|
46.9
|
50.8
|
3.9
|
1.6
|
8.68
|
17.2
|
including
|
46.9
|
48.0
|
1.1
|
0.4
|
22.50
|
47.3
|
including
|
47.5
|
48.0
|
0.5
|
0.2
|
38.39
|
79.9
|
HK-9
|
11.3
|
12.5
|
1.2
|
0.7
|
nil
|
43.9
|
HK-9
|
61.1
|
63.1
|
2
|
1.1
|
nil
|
6.5
|
HK-10
|
8.5
|
13.4
|
4.9
|
3.6
|
3.61
|
7.1
|
including
|
8.5
|
9.0
|
0.5
|
0.4
|
11.52
|
22.6
|
Drill results show the top part of a high-level intermediate
sulfidation vein system with grade improving to the north and down
dip. Figure 1 is a long section of Honker main vein showing
drill pierce points, vein thickness and Au grades.
Figure 1. Long section of Honker Main vein
Approximately 300 meters of the 900-meter strike length of the
vein has been tested to a depth of approximately 75 meters. Both
grade and thickness increase to depth and along strike to the
north. H21-06 cut a 7.6-meter vein with numerous 1+ meters splays
grading from 3 to 5 g/t Au. Slightly to the north historical
Anaconda drill hole HK-4 cut 1.6 meters of 8.68 g/t Au including
0.2 meters of 38.39 g/t Au. Importantly, Ag, As, Bi, Cu and W
increase dramatically to the north and down dip with intervals up
to 0.45% Cu, >10000 ppm As, 4619 ppm Bi, and 115 ppm W. Trace
amounts of tennantite, arsenopyrite, and native gold were
recognized in oxidized ferruginous and scorodite-stained vein
silica. Significant additional drilling is warranted.
Illinois Creek South and East
Extensions – 2021 Drill Results
Two scissored drill holes, IC21-07 and IC21-08, totalling 327
meters, were drilled approximately 150 meters south of the Illinois
Creek pit targeting a major developing coincident Au, Cu, Pb, As
soil anomaly. Though the drill holes did not encounter oxide ore
grade intervals, they did cut broad zones of anomalous
mineralization. IC21-07 cut strongly anomalous Au, As, Ag, Cu, Pb
and Zn from the bedrock at 13.7 meters to 51.8 meters in locally
gossanous and Fe-strained quartzite. Individual sample intervals
reach as high as 2.16 g/t Au. Both drill holes encountered gossan
at roughly 100 meters depth at or near the contact between
quartzite and dolomitic quartzite. These gossan intervals,
respectively 4.5 and 10.5 meters in width, are highly anomalous in
Au, Ag, As, Sb, W, and Zn and could represent the farthest west
expression of the East IC manto.
Expanded soil sampling south of IC21-07 and IC21-08 now shows
the anomalous chemistry extending over 1.2 kilometers further to
the south and varying from 200 to 400 meters in width. Historical
gravity data show a deep underlying low which could present a
potential porphyry target driving the system. This represents a
major new untested target on the Illinois Creek property with
significant exploration potential. The anomaly remains open under
deep cover to the south into the Little Mud River valley. Planned
2022 CSAMT geophysics will help to target this exciting new
anomaly.
Six drill holes totalling 425.6 meters were drilled along the
perceived eastern extension of the Illinois Creek syn-mineral fault
structure, host for the existing 525,000 oz AuEq resource (See
February 2021 43-101 technical
resource report). Drilling encountered severe sanding of the
quartzites and dolomitic quartzites resulting in shallow inadequate
tests of the targeted soil anomaly. Several of the East IC holes
cut the East Illinois Creek manto but did not intersect the Au-Cu
enriched Illinois Creek fault, the target of the drilling.
Stratigraphic markers and apparent offsets suggest that the
higher-grade Illinois Creek structure is offset and hidden below
the East IC manto slightly south of the 2022 drill tests. Some
drill profiles are warranted to locate and to begin to develop
oxide resources east of the current resources outlined in the
February 43-101 technical report on Illinois Creek oxide
resources.
Importantly, the 2021 Illinois Creek extension drilling has
recognized that the primary stratigraphic control on the immense
East Illinois Creek manto/gossan is the contact between a roughly
100-meter-thick quartzite unit and underlying dolomitic
quartzites.
Metals zoning in the syn-mineral structures show very elevated
Au, Cu, and As chemistries zoned to the south and west of the
Central pit at Illinois Creek and strongly support our contention
that the porphyry generating the fluid package lies in that
direction.
From a CRD perspective, these stratigraphic observations suggest
that the untested out-cropping gossans at Gossan Hill and Macho
Grande might represent new manto targets at the quartzite/dolomitic
quartzite contact which hosts the East IC manto. These gossans
which occur respectively 400 and 2000 meters to the northwest of
the west pit beyond current limits of drilling might represent a
major new trend of CRD mineralization. The Gossan Hill occurrence
has some notable soil values up to 864 ppb Au and 5.4 g/t Ag.
Last Hurrah - 2021 Drill
Results
Historical drilling in the Last Hurrah area targeted on
extensive Ag, Pb, and Zn soil values in the footwall of the
Waterpump Creek fault encountered numerous thin gossan zones often
with fugitive manganiferous calcite as an indicator to nearby
mineralization. The best historical intervals at Last Hurrah
include 8 meters of 22 g/t Ag, 2.6% Pb and 6.0% Zn and 6 meters of
17 g/t Ag, 2.9% Pb and 8.2% Zn, both in KH06-10. As yet, no drill
tests have been completed on the hanging-wall side of Waterpump
Creek fault that will test the chargeability (IP) and resistivity
anomaly in the 2005 IP survey undertaken by NovaGold.
LH21-01 drilled this year to test that geophysical anomaly,
deviated down the footwall side of the fault and did not intersect
the projected structure. Drill core showed numerous thin gossan
zones, fugitive calcite and further defined the marble thrust plate
which overlies manto-form mineralization at Last Hurrah. A
120-meter fluid package characterized by anomalous Pb and minor As,
Zn and Ag has been recognized below the overlying marble thrust
plate adjacent to the Waterpump Creek fault.
LH21-02 was subsequently collared 250 meters east of LH21-01 and
drilled steeply west to approximately 200 meters depth. The drill
hole was terminated in the overlying marble thrust plate due to
adverse weather conditions in October but will be re-entered and
completed as the initial test of the structure and IP/resistivity
anomaly in 2022.
Illinois Creek District
Re-Interpretation
Ongoing analysis of the often-confusing stratigraphic
relationships in the Illinois Creek district has resulted in a
complete re-interpretation of the district geology. The analysis
included the extensive 2021 multi-element soil geochemistry survey,
compilation, and further interpretation of historical aeromagnetic,
gravity, EM and IP geophysical surveys and finally, re-logging of
limited available core from the 2005-2006 NovaGold drill program
along the Waterpump Creek/Last Hurrah trend.
The Illinois Creek district demonstrates an east verging
fold-thrust belt comprised of a series of progressively deeper
water facies thrust on the more continentally derived rocks to the
west. This architecture results in a series of stacked thrust
plates: deep water Triassic Angayuchum basalts (Plate 0);
continental slope to deep water graphite and chlorite schists
(Plate 1); carbonate platform dolomites (Plate 2); platform
carbonates intruded by a major Jurassic greenstone sill (Plate 3);
and continentally derived submarine quartzites and dolomitic
quartzites (Plate 4).
Figure 2 is a preliminary geologic map of the
Illinois Creek property and shows the development of major
manto-form mineralization in part proxied by Pb soil values at or
adjacent to three major syn-mineral structures, the Illinois Creek
fault, the Waterpump Creek fault, and the 32E fault, and their
intersection with a series of major thrust surfaces shown in blue
on the map.
Figure 2. Preliminary Geologic Map of the Illinois Creek
Property
More specifically, carbonate replacement mineralization as
mantos appear to have developed at or near the intersection of high
angle syn-mineral structures and both thrust and stratigraphic
contacts. Specific manto targets occur between 1) overlying
chlorite muscovite graphitic schists (CMGS) and dolomite (DOL); 2)
a dolomitic marble (MBL) and underlying dolomite (DOL); 3) a
massive Triassic greenstone sill (GST) and underlying dolomitic
quartzite (DQTZ), and 4) a major graphitic (GS) and chloritic
schist (CS) package overlying a quartzite (QTZ) capping a major
dolomitic quartzite (DQTZ). This quartzite/dolomitic quartzite
contact is host for the very extensive East IC Manto.
Significant potential for staked mantos exist along the entire
6-km strike length of the Waterpump Creek fault as well as under
stratigraphic traps in and adjacent to the Illinois Creek and 32E
faults. Figure 3 is a schematic cross-section of these
evolving targets. In addition, recent extensive soil sampling and
district-wide metal zonation patterns shown in Figure 2
suggests that the likely porphyry source driving the entire fluid
system lies south and west of the Illinois Creek central pit.
Figure 3. District Schematic Cross-section - Potential Manto
targets at Illinois Creek
2022 Plans and Timetable
As a result of the bonanza sulfide grades encountered at
Waterpump Creek and the ongoing re-interpretation of the district
geology, WAM has made a strategic shift focusing on the sulfide CRD
potential now apparent on the Illinois Creek property versus the
existing oxide Au/Ag resources. Exploration in the 2022 season is
currently planning for two rigs drilling from mid-May through early
Sept and expandable based on success thru mid-October. A minimum
6000+ meters is anticipated with 2/3 focused on immediate step-outs
at Waterpump Creek to gauge the overall footprint of the bonanza
mineralization.
The remaining drilling will focus on the Waterpump Ck/Last
Hurrah/Illinois Creek CRD trend testing targets outlined in Figure
3 and 4 as discussed above. An extensive CSAMT/AMT survey by Zonge
Inc. is planned in May/June to help with this exploration
targeting.
Snow removal from the runway is currently planned to begin at
the end of the first week of April. Two C-130 Hercules flights are
scheduled in mid to late April before breakup to mobilize drill and
camp expansion materials. Line cutting will be initiated in early
May for the geophysical survey and drilling is expected to begin in
mid May.
The qualified person who reviewed and approved the technical
disclosure in this release is Stuart
Morris, P. Geo., a qualified person as defined under
NI43-101.
Quality Assurance/Quality Control of drill sample assay results
have been independently monitored through a quality
assurance/quality control ("QA/QC") protocol which includes the
insertion of blind standard reference materials, blanks, and
duplicates at regular intervals.
Logging and sampling were completed at WAM's core handling
facilities located at the Illinois Creek mine camp in Alaska. Drill core was logged under an
established procedure using Geospark commercial logging software,
then diamond sawn on site. Half drill-core samples were securely
transported to SGS Canada Inc. sample prep facilities in Whitehorse
Yukon via air transport to Fairbanks,
Alaska from Illinois creek
and then commercial trucking to Whitehorse under a strict chain of custody
protocol. Sample pulps were sent to SGS's labs in Burnaby, Canada, for analysis. Gold content
was determined by fire assay of a 30-gram charge with ICP finish.
Silver, lead, copper, and zinc along with other elements were
analyzed by ICP methods utilizing a four-acid digestion. Over-limit
samples for silver, lead, copper, and zinc were determined by
ore-grade analyses. SGS Canada Inc. is independent of Western
Alaska Minerals and its affiliates.
SGS also performed its own internal QA/QC procedures to assure
the accuracy and integrity of results. Parameters for SGS' internal
and WAM' external blind quality control samples were acceptable for
the samples analyzed. WAM is unaware of any drilling, sampling,
recovery, or other factors that could materially affect the
accuracy or reliability of the data referred to herein.
About WAM
WAM recently began trading as a Tier 1 company listed on the
TSX-V and maintains corporate offices
in Alaska and Arizona. WAM has reassembled and fully
controls all claims in the historic Illinois Creek Mining district
located in western Alaska near the Yukon River, covering
49,280 acres (77 square miles). This significant district was
originally discovered by Anaconda Minerals Co. in the early 1980's.
Since 2010, WAM and its private precursory company Western Alaska
Copper & Gold Inc. (WAC&G) has been engaged in exploring
and advancing its interests in the Illinois Creek mining district
and now controls a diversified portfolio of five deposits that
contain gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc.
On behalf of the Company
"Kit Marrs"
Kit Marrs
President & CEO
Forward Looking
Information
Certain statements made, and information contained herein may
constitute "forward looking information" and "forward looking
statements" within the meaning of applicable Canadian
and United States securities legislation. These
statements and information are based on facts currently available
to the Company and there is no assurance that actual results will
meet management's expectations. Forward-looking statements and
information may be identified by such terms as "anticipates",
"believes", "targets", "estimates", "plans", "expects", "may",
"will", "could" or "would". Forward-looking statements and
information contained herein are based on certain factors and
assumptions regarding, among other things, the estimation of
mineral resources and reserves, the realization of resource and
reserve estimates, metal prices, taxation, the estimation, timing
and amount of future exploration and development, capital and
operating costs, the availability of financing, the receipt of
regulatory approvals, environmental risks, title disputes and other
matters. While the Company considers its assumptions to be
reasonable as of the date hereof, forward-looking statements and
information are not guaranteeing of future performance and readers
should not place undue importance on such statements as actual
events and results may differ materially from those described
herein. The Company does not undertake to update any
forward-looking statements or information except as may be required
by applicable securities laws.
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SOURCE Western Alaska Copper & Gold, an Alaska
Corporation