Standard Uranium Ltd. (“Standard Uranium” or the “Company”) (TSX-V:
STND) (OTCQB: STTDF) (Frankfurt: FWB:9SU) is pleased to announce
analytical highlights from the winter drill program and details of
the fall mapping program at its 100% owned Sun Dog Project (“Sun
Dog”). Sun Dog is located at the northwestern edge of the Athabasca
Basin, Saskatchewan, and is south of the first uranium mining camp
in Canada, the Beaverlodge District, near Uranium City.
Key Focus Points:
-
Analytical data from Sun Dog drilling revealed elevated
pathfinder elements and spectroscopy confirms presence of
significant dravite alteration, indicating proximity to uranium
mineralization.
- Elevated
uranium is present in drill holes SD-22-001, -002, and -003,
related to graphitic structures and/or hydrothermal breccias with
pervasive hematite alteration.
- Elevated
uranium in the basement exceeds thorium values by a factor of 2 or
more in multiple intervals supporting a hydrothermal input for
uranium emplacement.
- Several
high-priority drill targets have been identified for the 2023 drill
program.
-
Additional radioactivity >65,535 counts per second
discovered at surface during fall mapping program.
Winter 2022 Drill Program Analytical
Highlights
The inaugural 2022 winter program at Sun Dog
consisted of four diamond drill holes comprising 1,242.3 m
completed at the Haven (SD-22-001), Johnston-Bay (SD-22-002,
SD-22-003), and Java (SD-22-004) target areas (Figure 1).
Systematic and feature-based whole rock geochemistry samples were
taken from basement rocks in all drill holes in addition to
composite samples in the overlying Athabasca supergroup sedimentary
rocks. Although analytical results were received later than
anticipated due to high demand on analytical laboratories, analysis
and interpretation of the results are highly encouraging as the
Company plans the 2023 Sun Dog drill program.
Sean Hillacre, VP Exploration stated, “Analysis
of the geochemistry and spectroscopy data from the inaugural drill
program at Sun Dog has confirmed that we are very close to getting
into more exciting results on the Project. The presence of elevated
pathfinder elements and significant dravite alteration has us eager
to get drilling this coming winter, to truly start testing the
untapped potential Sun Dog holds. Additionally, the fall mapping
program was very successful in bolstering our understanding of what
structures are controlling the high-grade mineralization at
surface, further adding to our targeting toolkit. We will be
chasing these structures deeper in 2023 to uncover the roots of
this high-grade system.”
Figure 1. Plan map showing winter 2022 drill
holes around Johnston Island in the Haven, Johnston-Bay, and Java
target areas. Historical mineralized drill holes, geophysical
conductors, interpreted faults, and surface uranium showings are
highlighted.
Strongly elevated pathfinder elements such as
boron and moderately anomalous uranium (partial digestion) indicate
the possible proximity to mineralization at depth and encourage
continued exploration on the Project in 2023. A summary of
geochemical highlights per drill hole is presented below.
Dravite is dispersed throughout drill hole
SD-22-001, collared 325 m from surficial exposure of high-grade*
uranium mineralization at the Haven showing (Figure 2). This
supports the utility of dravite as a vectoring tool and indicates a
robust alteration profile within the Haven target area.
Multi-faceted lead (Pb) isotope analysis has
shown that Pb isotope ratios may be helpful as an additional
vectoring tool, particularly within basement rocks. A strong
correlation between Pb isotopes and uranium is apparent in basement
lithologies, which will be integrated into 2023 drill hole
targeting. In addition, GoldSpot Discoveries Corp. will be running
historical and current geological, geophysical, and geochemical
information through data driven machine learning practices to
further refine drill targets for the 2023 season.
Priority follow up targets are slated to be
drilled during a larger-scale drill program in February-March 2023.
The Haven and Johnston-Bay target areas are priority follow-up for
the next program based on dravite alteration and significant boron,
structure, and anomalous uranium and pathfinder elements. During
the planned two-drill program for 2023, the Skye target area to the
East of Johnston Island will also be tested for the first time.
Analytical results have been received and
reviewed, with highlights outlined below:
- SD-22-001; Haven target (Figure 2):
- 325 m step out from off-scale surface mineralization at Haven
(>65,535 cps)
- Intersection of dravite-quartz hydraulic
breccia from 320.0 to 320.3 m – Dravite confirmed through
spectroscopic analysis and correlate to returned boron values up to
489 ppm in Athabasca sandstone and 10,400 ppm in basement rock
- SD-22-002; J-Bay target:
- 543 m step out SW along strike from mineralization in drill
hole LA1-005 (620 cps at 148.8 m)
- Intersection of highly deformed graphitic
metapelite, quartz-hematite and limonite
hydrothermal breccias
- Anomalous pathfinder elements associated with basement
structures and elevated uranium (up to 94.8 ppm), including boron
(up to 1,560 ppm), vanadium (up to 335 ppm), nickel (up to 100
ppm), and anomalous lead ratios
- SD-22-003; J-Bay target (Figure 3):
- 450 m step out NNW along strike from mineralization in drill
hole LA1-005
- Weakly anomalous arsenic and nickel concentration throughout
the sandstone with weakly anomalous boron (147 to 181 ppm) from 27
to 60 m
- Elevated pathfinder elements throughout
basement rock from 134 to 167 m, including vanadium (up to 506
ppm), nickel (up to 249 ppm), copper (up to 22 ppm), cobalt (up to
42 ppm), and molybdenum (up to 3.5 ppm)
- Illite-dravite alteration confirmed through spectroscopy at
108.5 m
- SD-22-004; Java target:
- 330 m step out NE along strike from
mineralization in drill hole LA0-1 (2,100 cps at 94.5 m; 1,046 ppm
U over 1.0 m) and 250 m NE of drill hole LA1-015 (2,825 cps at
100.9 m; 725 ppm U over 1.0 m)
- Altered orthogneiss
units with metre-scale brittle structures
- Moderately anomalous metal
concentrations from 45 to 46.1 m in basal Athabasca conglomerate
dissolution zone including 12.1 ppm copper, 18.5 ppm zinc, 11.8 ppm
nickel, and 1.22 ppm silver
- Elevated molybdenum up to 22.2 ppm in
chlorite and quartz veined fracture zone at 79.8 m
- 12.7 ppm uranium in crackle brecciated
damage zone surrounding pink quartz veining from 211 to 211.5
m
Figure 2. Schematic cross-section highlighting
geology, structure, and alteration in drill hole SD-22-001,
relative to mapped surface mineralization at the Haven showing.
Figure 3. Schematic cross-section highlighting
geology, structure, and alteration in drill hole SD-22-003 within
the Johnston-Bay target area.
Fall 2022 mapping and
prospecting
From September 19th to 25th, the Standard
Uranium technical team completed additional bedrock mapping and
scintillometer prospecting on the Project, collecting structural
measurements and mapping surface exposures of uranium
mineralization. The surface expression of mineralization on south
Johnston Island (Haven-Walli target areas) was expanded, with
scintillometer readings greater than 10,000 cps and locally
off-scale** (>65,535 cps) (Figure 4 & 5). The expansion of
the Haven surface showing bolsters follow-up land drill targets
corresponding to gravity low anomalies (Figure 1).
In addition, the fall mapping program revealed
outcrop showings of brecciated Athabasca sandstone containing
dravite-kaolinite alteration in both the Skye and Haven target
areas. Dravite is an alteration phase indicative of proximity to
uranium mineralization in the Athabasca Basin, also intersected in
drill holes SD-22-001 and -002. Structural measurements collected
during field mapping added to the understanding of the structural
architecture controlling uranium mineralization on the Project.
This invaluable data will add an additional layer of information to
drill hole targeting for the 2023 drill program.
Figure 4. Plan map of south Johnston Island
highlighting the current Haven and Walli surface expressions of
uranium mineralization, expanded during fall 2022 mapping.
Figure 5. Close-up photos of fault-controlled
black uraninite and secondary yellow uranium mineralization on
surface at the Haven target area, reaching >65,535 cps
(off-scale) on the RS-125 scintillometer.
Figure 6. A) Dravite-kaolinite alteration at
surface within a quartz breccia outcrop proximal to surface
mineralization in the Skye target area. B) Dravite alteration
within a faulted sandstone outcrop in the Haven target area.
*The Company considers uranium mineralization
with concentrations greater than 1.0 weight percent (wt%) U3O8 to
be “high-grade”.
**The Company refers to off-scale as any
intersection of radioactivity reaching 65,535 counts per second or
greater on a Radiation Solutions handheld RS-125 superspec or
RS-120 superscint.
Samples collected for analysis are sent to
Saskatchewan Research Council Geoanalytical Laboratories (“SRC”) in
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan for preparation, processing and ICP-MS
multi-element analysis using total and partial digestion, gold by
fire assay and boron by fusion. Sandstone samples were tested using
the ICP-MS1 uranium multi-element exploration package plus boron.
Basement samples were tested with ICP-MS2 uranium multi-element
exploration package plus boron. All sandstone samples, and basement
samples marked as radioactive upon arrival to the lab were also
analyzed using the U3O8 assay (reported in wt %). All samples were
tested with the Au1 gold by fire assay (reported in ppb and
converted to g/t where appropriate). Basement rock split interval
samples range from 0.1 to 0.5 m and sandstone composite samples are
comprised of multiple equal sized full core “pucks” spaced over the
sample interval. Fire assay samples are chosen based on geological
features and comprise 0.5 to 1.0 m split samples in areas of
interest. SRC is an ISO/IEC 17025/2005 and Standards Council of
Canada certified analytical laboratory. Blanks, standard reference
materials, and repeats were inserted into the sample stream at
regular intervals in accordance with Standard Uranium’s quality
assurance/quality control (QA/QC) protocols.
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 uranium exploration
company with a focus on the world-class Athabasca Basin in
Saskatchewan, Canada. Since its establishment, Standard Uranium has
focused on the identification and exploration of Athabasca-style
uranium targets with a view to discovery and future
development.
Standard Uranium’s Davidson River Project, in
the southwest part of the Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan, comprises
7 mineral claims over 20,006 hectares. Davidson River is highly
prospective for basement-hosted uranium deposits due to its
location along trend from recent high-grade uranium discoveries.
However, owing to the large project size with multiple targets, it
remains broadly under-tested by drilling. Recent intersections of
wide, structurally deformed and strongly altered shear zones
support provide significant confidence in the exploration model and
future success is expected.
Standard Uranium's Sun Dog project, in the
northwest part of the Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan, is comprised
of 6 mineral claims over 17,309 hectares. The Sun Dog project is
highly prospective for basement and unconformity hosted uranium
deposits yet remains largely untested by sufficient drilling
despite its location proximal to uranium discoveries in the
area.
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. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited
to, statements regarding: the timing and content of upcoming work
programs at Sun Dog; 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 are highlighted in the “Risk and Uncertainties” in the
Company’s management discussion and analysis for the fiscal year
ended April 30, 2022, dated August 26, 2022.
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 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.
Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
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