Standard Uranium Stakes Two Uranium Exploration Projects in the Eastern Athabasca Basin
09 Julho 2020 - 9:30AM
Standard Uranium Ltd. (“
Standard Uranium” or the
“
Company”) (TSX-V: STND) is pleased to announce
that it has acquired, through staking, two new projects in the
eastern Athabasca Basin, totalling 11,040 Hectares. The Canary and
Ascent Projects are located 40 kilometers north east of the
Company’s Atlantic project (see Figure 1) and approximately 12 and
33 kilometres, respectively, from IsoEnergy’s Hurricane Zone at
their Larocque East Project (See Figure 2).
Figure 1: Standard Uranium Canary and Ascent
Projects relative to Atlantic Property. is available
at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c838ce47-fd07-47de-a1ff-90513d62d344
Canary Project Highlights
- Two claims totalling 7,303 Ha.
- Depth to the sub-Athabasca
unconformity is known to be between 84 and 230 metres from the
surface.
- Historical airborne EM work between
1993 and 2006 has identified three (3) conductive corridors that
identify as graphitic meta-sediments, which are prospective host
rocks for uranium mineralization.
- Historical ground EM and IP surveys
have confirmed two prospective target areas on the property related
to structural disruptions of the conductive corridors.
- Historical drill-hole CRK-137
identified highly anomalous uranium enrichment near the
unconformity with 10 ppm uranium over 7.4 metres
in systematic composite sampling of the sandstone, and strong
hydrothermal alteration was observed throughout the interval.
Within this zone, a discrete 0.5m sub-interval returned 103.1 ppm
uranium; and a 1.0m interval in the graphitic meta-sediments
immediately below the unconformity returned 200.0 ppm
uranium.
- Only one of the three conductive
targets have been tested by drilling, and the one that has been
tested is considered highly anomalous.
Ascent Project Highlights
- One claim totalling 3,737 Ha.
- Depth to the sub-Athabasca
unconformity is known to be between 0 and about 50 metres from the
surface. The eastern part of the project has no Athabasca sandstone
cover.
- Historical airborne EM work in 1979
and 2006 has identified one large, 6-km long and 3-km wide
conductive corridor with numerous target areas related to potential
cross structures.
- In the early 1980’s the area was
covered with ground EM surveys and confirmed the airborne
targets.
- A 1979 lake sediment sampling
program identified a very high-priority Radon-U-Co-Ni-Zn-Mo-Pb-V
anomaly located immediately above the conductive target.
- Regional prospecting by historical
operators identified uranium enrichment in basement rocks located
east of the Athabasca Basin edge and support the exploration model
for uranium on the property.
- Only one drill-hole has tested the
extensive conductive corridor in 1984, with 6 kilometres of strike
length remaining un-tested.
- The current exploration model for
this project is analogous to that of the J-Zone and Roughrider
deposits, that are located next to a similar looking airborne EM
target that has dimensions of roughly 2-km long by 1-km wide. Both
targets at the Ascent project and the J-Zone and Roughrider
deposits are interpreted by the company to be shallow-dipping
conductive bodies, and therefore did not fit the historical
exploration model of a good conductor to focus on.
Figure 2: Standard Uranium Canary and Ascent
Projects relative to IsoEnergy’s Larocque East Project is
available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/83170708-1cd7-462f-a13f-99d7210eb2f5
These two new projects bolster our presence in
the Eastern Athabasca Region, and compliment the Company’s existing
Atlantic Project. The projects can potentially be explored at the
same time in order to see cost savings in future exploration
campaigns. The Eastern Athabasca Basin region has been the hub of
uranium exploration and mining for the past 50 years, and the
region is highlighted by three licensed uranium mills. Even though
the region has been the mainstay of uranium exploration, several
important uranium discoveries have been made in the last 12 years
including Roughrider, J-Zone, Phoenix, Gryphon and Fox Lake. The
northern portion of the Eastern Athabasca Basin where the Company’s
Canary, Ascent and Atlantic projects are situated has seen
relatively less drilling than the rest of the region. The Company
has defined this as an excellent chance to add value and increase
the chances for a new discovery in areas that have fundamentally
strong geology and have positive historical exploration
results.
Atlantic Project Highlights
- Six claims totalling 2,176
Ha.
- Covers 6.5 kilometres of an 18 km
long, east-west trending conductive exploration trend, located due
west of IsoEnergy’s Hurricane Zone.
- Depth to the sub-Athabasca
unconformity is known to be between 230 and 485 metres from the
surface.
- Historical Drilling by Cameco in
1992 (hole BE-04) encountered up to 586 pm uranium over 0.5 metres
in the sandstone, near the unconformity. Additionally, the hole
encountered elevated uranium, nickel, illite and chlorite in the
lower 10 metres of sandstone.
- Follow-up drilling by Denison Mines
in 2012 (Hole BL12-13), next to BE-04, encountered a fault-zone
located 130 metres above the sandstone that contains 10.2 ppm
uranium, 786 ppm lead and 2,270 ppm zinc and other base-metals over
0.1 metres. Additionally, a composite sample of the basal 13.4
metres of sandstone returned 477 ppm uranium.
- At the western claim block,
drilling by Denison Mines in 2016 (Hole BL16-32) encountered 342
ppm uranium over 0.5 metres at the base of the sandstone.
Neil McCallum, VP Exploration, states: ”We are
committed to success at our flagship Davidson River Property in the
southwest Athabasca region where our maiden drill program will
commence within the month given that the COVID-19 situation remains
stable. In the meantime, we have been actively reviewing new
projects that contain technically strong exploration targets with
discovery potential to round out our portfolio in a proven uranium
exploration and mining region with relatively shallow target
depths.”
About Standard Uranium (TSX-V:
STND)
We find the fuel to power a clean energy
future
Standard Uranium is a mineral resource
exploration company based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Since its establishment, Standard Uranium has focused on the
identification and development of prospective exploration stage
uranium projects in the Athabasca Basin
in Saskatchewan, Canada. Standard Uranium's Davidson River
Project, in the southwest part of
the Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan, is comprised of
21 mineral claims over 25,886 hectares. The Davidson River Project
is highly prospective for basement hosted uranium deposits yet
remains untested by drilling despite its location along trend from
recent high-grade uranium discoveries. A copy of the 43-101
Technical Report that summarizes the exploration on the project is
available for review under Standard Uranium's SEDAR issuer profile
(www.sedar.com). For more information visit:
www.standarduranium.ca.
For further information
contact:
Jon Bey, President, Chief Executive Officer, and
Chairman550 Denman Street, Suite 200Vancouver, BC V6G 3H1Tel: 1
(604) 375-4488E-mail: info@standarduranium.ca
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