Standard Uranium Ltd. (“Standard Uranium” or the “Company”) (TSX-V:
STND) (OTCQB: STTDF) (Frankfurt: FWB:9SU) is pleased to announce
that the spring/summer drill program on the Company’s flagship
Davidson River Project (“Davidson River” or the “Project”) has been
successfully completed ahead of schedule, under budget, and with
intersections of elevated radioactivity. The 25,886-hectare Project
is situated within the Southwest Athabasca Uranium District of
Saskatchewan. The focused drill program followed up on prospective
structures and alteration intersected during previous programs and
tested brand new target areas.
The Company is also pleased to announce the
engagement of GoldSpot Discoveries Corp. (“GoldSpot”) (TSX-V: SPOT)
(OTCQX: SPOFF) in a partnership to develop new and advanced drill
targets on all five of the Company’s projects. Standard Uranium is
pleased to be the first uranium company to collaborate with
GoldSpot’s expert team of geoscientists and data scientists and
utilize cutting-edge exploration techniques through a variety of
traditional and machine learning applications.
Key Focus Points:
- Davidson
River diamond drill program successfully executed, totalling
4,107.7 metres in 10 drill holes.
- Elevated
radioactivity and significant structural and lithological
signatures of a basement-hosted uranium-bearing system were
intersected.
- Highly
deformed and graphitic structural zones identified several new
priority follow-up targets along the Thunderbird and Bronco
trends.
-
Multi-kilometre portions of the conductive corridors on the
property remain to be tested.
- Through
engagement of GoldSpot Discoveries, the Company will extract
further value from existing data sets in addition to new
prospective intersections from the 2022 program.
The fourth drill program at Davidson River
focused on testing the Thunderbird conductor for the first time as
well as following up on prospective graphitic structural zones
intersected along the Bronco conductor in 2021 (Figure 1). Summer
2022 drilling on the Project has confirmed the presence of broad,
graphitic shear zones overprinted by zones of strong brittle
faulting and intense alteration, normally associated with
basement-hosted uranium mineralization, along the Bronco and
Thunderbird conductors (Figures 2 through 6).
Jon Bey, CEO and Chairman stated: “It is well
understood that Tier-one uranium discoveries are incredibly
difficult to find. Our technical team have been very successful in
hitting targets that reveal the ideal geological environment for
uranium mineralization, which leads us to believe we are getting
closer to a major discovery.
While identifying high quality drill targets
below extensive cover, we recognize drilling on the Davidson River
project is very complex and I would like to congratulate the Base
Diamond Drilling team for delivering drilling results that exceeded
our expectations and completing the program ahead of schedule and
under budget. We look forward to again working with the Base team
for our 2023 drill programs as we continue to hone-in on a
high-grade basement hosted deposit.
We are also pleased to announce that we will be
adding to our technical capability with the high-tech expertise of
GoldSpot Discoveries who we expect will assist in refining our
future drill targets via the use of their proprietary artificial
intelligence software.”
Vincent Dube-Bourgeois, CEO of GoldSpot stated,
“We are very excited to partner with the team at Standard Uranium.
In this current global climate, the benefits of nuclear energy have
never been clearer. Our senior staff bring years of Athabasca-based
uranium exploration experience and the combination of that
expertise, and our machine learning targeting makes this a very
exciting opportunity. We look forward to the long-term partnership
with Standard Uranium and working together on both on asset
specific and regional scale uranium targeting.”
Figure 1. Plan map of Davidson River
highlighting spring/summer 2022 drill holes along the Bronco and
Thunderbird conductors.
Davidson River – Spring/Summer 2022
Drill Program Geology Highlights
- DR-22-032;
Bronco Conductor
- 370 m step-out
along strike southeast of DR-21-028.
- Rubbly chloritic fault zone from
165.8 to 182.0 m, hosting mosaic and crackle breccias with local
fault gouge.
- Intensely graphitic fault
zone in mylonitic pelitic gneiss intersected from 210.3 to
212.1 m.
- A 60 m lithological offset between
DR-22-032 and DR-21-028/DR-21-031, indicates significant
reverse faulting along the Bronco conductor.
- DR-22-033A; Thunderbird Conductor
- Collared on the
northern extension of the Thunderbird conductor designed to test an
electromagnetic (“EM”) bright spot and inferred conductor
break.
- Intersection of
hydrothermal alteration zone associated with graphitic shear and
strong hematite-limonite oxidation fronts from
162.4 to 166.5 m – Commonly associated with high-grade uranium
mineralization (Figure 2).
- Intersection of
multiple stacked graphitic shear and fault zones
between 307.9 to 370.8 m.
- No significant
radioactivity.
- DR-22-034A; Bronco Conductor
- 470 m step-out
along strike southeast of DR-21-027.
- Brittle-ductile
graphitic fault zone intersected from 384.5 to 392.0 m with massive
quartz veining indicating significant dilation and fluid
flow within the structure.
- Elevated
radioactivity intersected from 390.4 to 391.4 m within the
structure, reaching 250 cps (Figure 3).
- Strongly
graphitic fault zone within semi-pelitic gneiss from 442.0
to 444.4 m.
- DR-22-035; Thunderbird Conductor
- 280 m step-out
along strike northwest of abandoned hole DR-21-029A.
- Moderate to
locally strong graphitic-sulphidic mylonite zones
throughout (259.0 to 263.0 m, sporadically between 430.0 and 487.0
m).
- Carbonatite
intrusions intersected from 349.95 m to end of hole with
metasomatic alteration halos.
- Local
radioactive peak of 233 cps at 425.05 m; no
significant radioactivity.
- DR-22-036; Bronco Conductor
- 610 m step-out
along strike southeast of DR-22-034A.
- Intersection of
weakly bleached clay-, chlorite-, and
hematite-replaced zone below unconformity contact from 175.8 to
182.0 m.
- Elevated
radioactivity was observed within a biotite-pegmatite from 344.5 to
345.0 m; reaching 380 cps.
- Intersection of
significant graphitic structure zone with
sericitic alteration and local cataclastic fault
gouge from 412.0 to 442.5 m (Figure 4).
- Elevated
radioactivity intersected from 445.25 to 445.75 m; reaching
250 cps.
- DR-22-037; Thunderbird Conductor
- 470 m step-out
along strike southwest of DR-22-033A.
- Clay
altered fault zone observed from 109.9 to 110.5 m;
proximal to unconformity contact.
- Intersection of
multiple deformed graphitic metapelite structures
ranging from 1.0 to > 5.0 m in drill hole thickness.
- No significant
radioactivity.
- DR-22-038; Bronco Conductor
- 65 m up-dip
target east of DR-22-036.
- Intersection of
highly deformed graphitic metapelite structures
ranging from 1.0 to >5.0 m in drill hole thickness – from 366.0
to 395.0 m.
- Elevated
radioactivity (maximum 300 cps)
and smoky quartz veins observed within sheared graphitic
metapelite from 375.0 to 375.5 m (Figure 5).
- Elevated
radioactivity was intersected within a pegmatite from 355.5 to
356.0 m; with a maximum of 380 cps.
- DR-22-039;
Thunderbird Conductor
- 75 m down-dip target south-west of
DR-22-033A.
- Intersection of hydrothermal
hematite-limonite oxidation
fronts within relatively shallow
structure (Figure 6).
- Intersection of highly deformed
graphitic metapelite with reactivated fault gouge
and cataclasite structures.
- No significant
radioactivity.
Figure 2. A) The first Thunderbird drill hole on
the Davidson River project, DR-22-033A, showing strong structurally
controlled hematite-limonite alteration (redox fronts); 163.5m. B)
Strong “worm-rock” textured hematite-limonite alteration
overprinting graphitic shear planes; DR-22-033A; 163.6m.
Figure 3. Elevated radioactivity within a
strongly graphitic-sulphidic shear zone intersected in DR-22-034A;
Up to 250 cps. Overprinting hydrothermal quartz veins and
cataclastic breccias indicate repeated deformation and strong fluid
flow along the Bronco conductor.
Figure 4. Elevated radioactivity within the
footwall of a ~35m-wide graphitic-sulphidic deformation zone
intersected in DR-22-036; Up to 250 cps. Massive hydrothermal
quartz veins indicate dilation within the conductor and strong
fluid flow during reactivation of graphitic basement faults.
Figure 5. Elevated radioactivity within the
lower shear zone of stacked graphitic structures intersected in
DR-22-038 (yellow outlines); Up to 300 cps. Strong reactivation is
evident through the structures, indicated by formation of fault
gouge and brecciation. Sericitic alteration is present throughout
the zones in addition to smoky quartz veins.
Figure 6. Shallow zone of hydrothermal
alteration with structurally controlled hematite-limonite oxidation
fronts and pervasive clay alteration intersected in DR-22-039.
The spring/summer drill program was designed to
follow-up on the most prospective basement structures and
alteration zones intersected during the 2020 and 2021 programs and
begin testing new target areas along the major exploration trends
on the Project. Collar information is summarized in Table 1.
Several kilometres of graphitic conductors remain to be tested at
Davidson River. Exploration on the Project to date has confirmed
lithological and structural parallels between the uranium-fertile
Patterson Lake corridor and the Davidson River conductive trends,
bolstering the Company’s confidence in continued exploration
success on the Project.
Table 1. Summer 2022 drill hole collar summary.
Easting and Northing coordinates are reported in UTM Zone 12N,
NAD83 datum; EOH = end of hole; m.a.s.l. = metres above sea
level.
DDH |
Trend |
Easting |
Northing |
Elevation(m.a.s.l.) |
|
Azimuth(°) |
|
Dip(°) |
|
EOH(m) |
|
DR-22-032 |
Bronco |
569013.2 |
6388419.7 |
478.7 |
|
070 |
|
-70 |
|
483.00 |
|
DR-22-033* |
Thunderbird |
560250.0 |
6392842.3 |
491.3 |
|
057 |
|
-65 |
|
96.00 |
|
DR-22-033A |
Thunderbird |
560250.2 |
6392841.8 |
490.0 |
|
057 |
|
-70 |
|
421.00 |
|
DR-22-034* |
Bronco |
569371.7 |
6387045.7 |
554.3 |
|
070 |
|
-70 |
|
178.00 |
|
DR-22-034A |
Bronco |
569368.1 |
6387045.0 |
556.5 |
|
070 |
|
-70 |
|
492.00 |
|
DR-22-035 |
Thunderbird |
561023.2 |
6391626.7 |
476.1 |
|
040 |
|
-70 |
|
501.00 |
|
DR-22-036 |
Bronco |
569458.0 |
6386441.0 |
554.4 |
|
083 |
|
-70 |
|
493.65 |
|
DR-22-037 |
Thunderbird |
560542.7 |
6392471.2 |
477.5 |
|
055 |
|
-70 |
|
420.00 |
|
DR-22-038 |
Bronco |
569521.3 |
6386449.7 |
554.2 |
|
083 |
|
-70 |
|
468.00 |
|
DR-22-039 |
Thunderbird |
560207.7 |
6392777.5 |
487.0 |
|
053 |
|
-65 |
|
555.00 |
|
*Drill hole restarted due to difficult ground
conditions.
Priority follow-up targets are being planned and
are scheduled to be drilled in 2023. Continuing exploration plans
for the Project include updating the geological models and
utilization of new machine learning technologies to further refine
geophysical interpretation and prioritize drill hole targeting with
data-driven science. Davidson River contains significant blue-sky
potential to make a high-grade, basement-hosted uranium
discovery.
Now that the Company has broadly drill-tested
all the main conductive corridors on the Project, the Company can
fully leverage GoldSpot’s leading edge targeting tools to further
incorporate drill data with geophysics and geochemistry. Backed by
Standard Uranium’s industry-leading team, GoldSpot’s experts will
work with the Company to produce refined targeting in conjunction
with their machine learning applications. Standard Uranium is
pleased to be the first uranium explorer in the Athabasca Basin to
partner with GoldSpot and utilize their technology in a
geologically information-rich environment where a lot of the
exploration is carried out drilling through cover.
Sean Hillacre, Vice President of Exploration
commented: “I am extremely pleased with how effective our team and
contractors were this program. Base Drilling did an amazing job and
maintained incredible production rates, and we’ve seen the most
prospective rocks to date come out of Bronco and Thunderbird this
summer.
“The scale of the structural deformation we’re
observing in addition to the favorable alteration assemblages
indicating fluid movement through the structures is fantastic. As
we know with these basement-hosted systems, with the structures and
alteration we’re seeing, we could be within 75m of a major
discovery. Our technical team is very much looking forward to
building on everything we’ve learned to date on the Project and
sharpening our pencils in collaboration with GoldSpot as we
continue building towards discovery.”
Drill core samples from all Davidson River drill
holes have been submitted to the Saskatchewan Research Council
(“SRC”) Geoanalytical Laboratory in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, for
whole-rock, multi-element and U3O8 analyses. Geochemical assay
results will be released as they are received and examined by the
technical team in accordance with the Company’s internal quality
control process.
The scientific and technical information
contained in this news release, including the sampling, analytical
and test data underlying the technical information contained in
this news release, has been reviewed, verified, and approved by
Sean Hillacre, P.Geo., VP Exploration of the Company and a
“qualified person” as defined in NI 43-101.
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. Davidson River
is highly prospective for basement hosted uranium deposits yet
remains relatively untested by drilling despite its location along
trend from recent high-grade uranium discoveries. A copy of the NI
43-101 technical report titled “Updated Technical Report on the
Davidson River Property, Northwest Saskatchewan, Canada” with an
effective date of March 16, 2020, that summarizes the exploration
on Davidson River is available for review under Standard Uranium’s
SEDAR profile (www.sedar.com).
For further information contact:
Jon Bey, Chief Executive Officer, and Chairman550 Denman Street,
Suite 200Vancouver, BC V6G 3H1Tel: 1 (306) 850-6699E-mail:
info@standarduranium.ca
Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking
Statements
This news release contains “forward-looking
statements” or “forward-looking information” (collectively,
“forward-looking statements”) within the meaning of applicable
securities legislation. All statements, other than statements of
historical fact, are forward-looking statements and are based on
expectations, estimates and projections as of the date of this news
release. Any statements that express or involve discussions with
respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections,
objectives, assumptions or future events or performance (often, but
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“possible” or variations thereof or stating that certain actions,
events, conditions or results “may”, “could”, “would”, “should”,
“might” or “will” be taken, occur or be achieved, or the negative
of any of these terms and similar expressions) are not statements
of historical fact and may be forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements include, but are not
limited to, statements regarding: the timing and content of
upcoming work programs; geological interpretations; timing of the
Company’s exploration programs; and estimates of market
conditions.
Forward-looking statements are subject to a
variety of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors
that could cause actual events or results to differ from those
expressed or implied by forward-looking statements contained
herein. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove
to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ
materially from those anticipated in such statements. Certain
important factors that could cause actual results, performance or
achievements to differ materially from those in the forward-looking
statements include, among others: general economic conditions in
Canada and globally; industry conditions; governmental regulation
of the mining industry, including environmental regulation;
geological, technical and drilling problems; unanticipated
operating events; competition for and/or inability to retain
drilling rigs and other services; the availability of capital on
acceptable terms; the need to obtain required approvals from
regulatory authorities; stock market volatility; volatility in
market prices for commodities; liabilities inherent in the mining
industry; the development of the COVID-19 global pandemic; changes
in tax laws and incentive programs relating to the mining industry.
This list is not exhaustive of the factors that may affect the
Company’s forward-looking statements. There may be other factors
that could cause actual events or results to differ from those
expressed or implied by forward-looking statements contained
herein. See the section entitled “Risk and Uncertainties” in the
Company’s management discussion and analysis for the fiscal year
ended April 30, 2021, dated August 19, 2021 for additional risk
factors that could cause actual events or results to differ from
those expressed or implied by forward-looking statements contained
herein.
Forward-looking statements are necessarily based
upon a number of factors and assumptions that, if untrue, could
cause actual events or results to differ from those expressed or
implied by forward-looking statements contained herein.
Forward-looking statements are based upon a number of estimates and
assumptions that, while considered reasonable by the Company at
this time, are inherently subject to significant business, economic
and competitive uncertainties and contingencies that may cause the
Company’s actual financial results, performance, or achievements to
be materially different from those expressed or implied herein.
Some of the material factors or assumptions used to develop
forward-looking statements include, without limitation: the future
price of uranium; anticipated costs and the Company’s ability to
raise additional capital if and when necessary; volatility in the
market price of the Company’s securities; future sales of the
Company’s securities; the Company’s ability to carry on exploration
and development activities; the success of exploration, development
and operations activities; the timing and results of drilling
programs; the discovery of mineral resources on the Company’s
mineral properties; the costs of operating and exploration
expenditures; the Company’s ability to identify, complete and
successfully integrate acquisitions; the Company’s ability to
operate in a safe, efficient and effective manner; health, safety
and environmental risks; the presence of laws and regulations that
may impose restrictions on mining; employee relations;
relationships with and claims by local communities and indigenous
populations; availability of increasing costs associated with
mining inputs and labour; the speculative nature of mineral
exploration and development (including the risks of obtaining
necessary licenses, permits and approvals from government
authorities); uncertainties related to title to mineral properties;
assessments by taxation authorities; fluctuations in general
macroeconomic conditions.
The forward-looking statements contained in this
news release are expressly qualified by this cautionary statement.
Any forward-looking statements and the assumptions made with
respect thereto are made as of the date of this news release and,
accordingly, are subject to change after such date. The Company
disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements,
whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise,
except as may be required by applicable securities laws. There can
be no assurance that forward-looking statements will prove to be
accurate, as actual results and future events could differ
materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly,
readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking
statements.
Neither the TSX-V nor its Regulation Services
Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX-V)
accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this
release.
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