Line Islands' broader Brazilian hunt paying off KWG Resources Inc KWGR Shares issued 74,636,959 Dec 6 close $0.20 Tue 7 Dec 99 Street Wire See Line Islands Exploration Inc (LIN) Street Wire LINE ISLANDS STEPS UP THE PACE by Will Purcell Line Islands Exploration Inc. continues to earn its interest in the Alto Paranaiba diamond project, located in the states of Goias and Minas Gerais, Brazil. The company recently announced the discovery of a number of kimberlite pipes, and work is under way to test the bodies for diamond content. The Alto Paranaiba project was originally acquired by KWG Resources Ltd. in the spring of 1993, and Spider Resources Ltd. acquired an option to earn a 50-per-cent interest in the bulk of the property during 1997. In the fall of 1998, Spider was running low on funds, and KWG was in the midst of a far greater financial turmoil of its own. As a result, the two partners added a third, when Line Islands agreed to a deal whereby the company could earn a 10-per-cent stake in the large southern block of claims, and a 50-per-cent share of the much smaller northern block. In return, the company agreed to pay $150,000 to the existing partners, and complete $350,000 in exploration over a two-year period. In May, 1999, the deal was amended to allow Line Islands to earn a 30-per-cent share of the entire property. Under the terms of the arrangement, Line Islands was to pay Spider $100,000 and issue 100,000 Line Island shares to the company. In addition, Line Islands was now required to spend $850,000 on exploration over the next two years. An additional arrangement would allow Line Islands to increase its interest to 40 per cent at any point in the next 30 months, by making payment of an additional $1-million to KWG and Spider. At that point, the project would be owned 40 per cent each by Line Island and KWG, and 20 per cent by Spider. Line Islands was formed in April of 1996, and completed a $450,000 private placement of shares to explore three mineral prospects in Quebec. Two of these interests, located to the southwest of Sept Isles, were acquired from St. Genevieve Resources Ltd. and began an association with Pierre Gauthier's various mining companies. The third property was located in the Ungava region of northern Quebec, near Kuujuak. The company began to conduct preliminary exploration on its domestic properties, but also began to acquire a wanderlust, looking farther afield. Late in the summer of 1997, Line Islands announced its intention to amalgamate with Amour International Gold Mines Ltd., a private company whose mineral prospects definitely held an international flavour. Amour held the rights to the Mnogoverchinny gold mine, and other deposits in eastern Russia. The deal appeared to amount to a reverse takeover, and the new company was to be named Amour Gold Mines. Again the relationship with Mr. Gauthier's group of companies came into play, as plans were announced to share the new gold properties on a 50-per-cent basis with KWG. A few months later however, Line Islands announced that the amalgamation had fallen through, and the company drifted back to sleep. Last fall, Line Islands roused from a yearlong slumber with the announcement of the Alto Paranaiba deal with Spider and KWG. The infusion of cash from Line Islands allowed the project operator to continue work, and encouraging preliminary results were obtained. For the past few years, much of the work has concentrated on the Contendas structure contained within the property, and most of the work involved investigation of alluvial gravels. KWG had acquired a small diamond recovery plant, which was moved to the Paranaiba terrace during 1994. At the time, a total of 190 diamonds were recovered from these gravels, with a total weight of 301.5 carats. It was speculated that these diamonds came from an eroding source within the river drainage system. Throughout history, the Paranaiba River has produced some fine, large gemstones. There is documented evidence that a total of 49 diamonds larger than 50 carats have been recovered from the river and its main tributaries, including the 727-carat Presidente Vargas diamond which was found in 1938. Individual Brazilian diamond miners, or garimpeiros, have conducted alluvial dredging and terrace excavations on the Paranaiba property for years. These operators have recovered a number of larger diamonds, including stones weighing 20, 64, 107, and 201 carats. During the summer of 1998, a garimpeiro recovered a 350.65-carat gem from the Paranaiba River, approximately six kilometres upstream of the Rio Verde, and only four kilometres from the Contendas structure. The diamond was a high quality gem, described as rare white and having high clarity with no inclusions, with a value believed to be in excess of $4-million (U.S.). As the garimpeiros continued to dig up diamonds on the Alto Paranaiba property, the partners stepped up their efforts to examine Contendas for its alluvial prospects. Early this year, Spider operated the small processing plant to recover diamonds from a series of pits located on the Contendas structure. The primary purpose of the operation was to identify diamondiferous zones, and some success was achieved. A total of 11 diamonds were recovered, weighing a total of 5.52 carats, and individual stones ranged in size from 0.19 carats to 1.06 carats, with two diamonds weighing one carat or more. The project was continually hampered by a lack of funds, and equipment breakdowns, and little work was performed through the spring and into the summer. Not all of the past work at Alto Paranaiba was confined to alluvials. KWG did conduct a very limited diamond drill program late in 1997, on the Contendas structure. In all, five holes were drilled on linear magnetic anomalies. Two separate dyke intersections were noted, each about one to two metres in thickness. It is now believed this feature represents a zone of dykes extending from the core vent area. Analysis of the dyke material suggested that the rock was intermediate between lamproite and kimberlite, although it more closely resembles olivine lamproite. A second analysis suggested the rock was orangeitic, although the partners still consider the rock to be lamproite. In 1995, KWG identified a number of kimberlite bodies, and a preliminary sampling program was conducted over these targets. A two-millimetre diamond was reportedly recovered from the material taken from one of the kimberlite dykes. Line Islands is now the operator of the Alto Paranaiba project, and a change in focus has accompanied the change in leadership. Line Islands president, Scott Hogg, said: "We've started out on a two phased attack this year. The property has been under exploration since 1995 and a lot of effort got drawn to a particular feature there, which was a garimpo pit with 5,000 carats production and a lot of effort had been directed to that. This year we decided we would put part of our exploration effort into that, but make a definite point into getting out on the property at large. It's quite a large property, it's not square but its maximum extent is something like 40 by 70 kilometres." Mr. Hogg said that the exploration program to this point had not done justice to looking beyond the Contendas feature, and added that the work under way to explore the remainder of the property was beginning to pay off. He went on to say, "We were quickly successful in identifying, and so far confirming, three more pipes." Mr. Hogg said that work was progressing quickly due to the nature of the kimberlites, and added, "These bodies come to surface, they're only three metres below surface so they're easily accessible." Indeed, drill success has come quickly for Line Island. The company announced in mid-October that it had discovered its first kimberlite pipe, the MK-1 body. The MK-1 is described as steeply dipping, but not vertical in orientation, and is roughly 250 metres in length, and 25 metres wide. A month later, the company announced the discovery of four additional bodies, MK-2, MK-3, MK-4, and MK-5. Two of these bodies, MK-3 and MK-4, are now confirmed to be kimberlitic, and have been interpreted by magnetic data to be 50 metres by 250 metres, and 100 metres by 200 metres respectively. Results are still pending on the MK-2 and MK-5 bodies. Mr. Hogg expressed satisfaction with the multiple discoveries to this point, and stated: "We've got three that have been confirmed by diamond drilling. We're not saying the other ones are definite until we actually have that confirmation, but my own assessment is that I would be very surprised if they weren't. They're all within a group, they all look the same magnetically, everything short of actually getting a bit of core and doing a thin section and probe and so on. We're leaving the number at three and saying we expect more." In the meantime, the joint venture is planning to proceed with the testing of their finds in a novel way. Mr. Hogg said: "The diamond processing plant has given us the opportunity to test these for commercial grade diamonds at a fairly reasonable cost, and what we think may be a fairly short time frame. It's a gelling of things that make the current time very interesting." The accessibility of the kimberlite bodies makes extracting a significant minibulk sample rather easy, and having access to their own processing facility on the site should make for a fairly short waiting period for results. Indeed, Mr. Hogg said that they could process a 100-tonne minibulk sample for about the same cost as a caustic fusion test on 100 kilograms of kimberlite. As a result, investors may not have a long wait for news. Mr. Hogg stated that several hundred tonnes of kimberlite had been extracted from MK-1 and brought to the processing plant. He said that the installation of a pan separator at the plant had delayed the processing somewhat, but he added that the upgrade had just been completed last week, and the system would speed up the process of getting to the concentrate stage, which is then fed to the X-ray sortex device. Mr. Hogg said that he was now hoping for a processing rate of 10 tonnes per hour. As a result, he said: "...by the end of the coming week we will have run a fair bit of that material through. That gets us to some critical answers pretty quickly." Finding several kimberlites is one thing; finding economic quantities of diamonds is quite another. Brazil has long been a prolific producer of alluvial diamonds, however no economic pipes have yet been discovered in that country, out of more than 500 bodies that have been tested. This situation may be changing shortly, as De Beers has stepped up its own Brazilian exploration program in a major way. Mr. Hogg said: "I don't have any strict confirmation, but there is a site where they've gone into what has been described to me as a mini-mining operation which is a fairly serious test. They have security in place, and they're doing a very large sampling. When you get into a large bulk test you're actually into a mini-mining operation. So, they have one of those going at the present time." The body being explored by De Beers is widely rumoured to display a medium grade, but a high diamond value. The De Beers find appears to be well to the south and east of the Line Islands property, but the company's claims do adjoin the Alto Paranaiba block on the south and eastern boundaries. As well, SouthernEra and Canabrava Diamond Corp. have extensive holdings to the east and south of the Alto Paranaiba project. Mr. Hogg was hopeful that the company would continue to show good results for its efforts. He said that all of the work that has been completed to date covered a very small portion of the total property. He stated that the joint venture had completed photo-geologic work, as well as some mineral sampling, over about one-fifth of the property, and he said that it was that work that led them to the current discoveries. He said: "The area that we've gotten to so far is less than 5 per cent, we've only been at it for three months. We've either been very lucky, or as we think, the area has the potential of being highly productive in finding these pipes." He appears to have a point. Within approximately 10 kilometres of the new discoveries, large alluvial diamonds have been found, up to 300 carats weight. Mr. Hogg said: "There's a limited section of the Paranaiba River where alluvials start being worked and finish being worked. If you plot the large stones they begin to appear within the property boundary, and they taper off within the property boundary. That's kind of an indication to us that the source shouldn't be too far away." He added that had the diamonds originated from a distant ground source, the alluvial diamonds would be distributed in a much more even fashion. While the Alto Paranaiba play has been active for several years, in most respects it is just beginning. Mr. Hogg said, "Although the total property has been under general consideration for five years, we've just started in terms of getting out and getting around it." As Line Islands gets out and about on Alto Paranaiba, potential investors appear to be very slowly warming to the prospect's potential. While investors have flocked in far greater numbers to other emerging plays, such as Mauritania, the Paranaiba property has so far yielded more kimberlites and more diamonds, yet has a much smaller market value. With a number of fairly well heeled rivals exploring in the neighbourhood, any Brazilian success would significantly increase the profile of Line Islands and its partners. Furthermore, as Line Islands is choosing to skip the costly and time consuming caustic fusion stage, results could come quickly. A positive result from one of the minibulk samples would have a significant impact on the project's profile. Line Islands shares traded between 40 and 50 cents for much of the winter and spring, but a rally began with summer and the news of the increased stake in the project. The stock reached a high of $1.45 in mid-October, with the news of the initial MK-1 find, but has tailed off somewhat in the last few weeks, closing Monday at $1.19, up five cents on the day. With just under five million shares outstanding, Line Islands has a market capitalization of approximately $6-million, which implies a value of about $20-million for the project. Spider Resources has also shown signs of a market awakening. The company's shares spent most of the last 12 months trading in a narrow range between four and six cents, but a December rally carried the stock to an intraday high of 14 cents on Monday, before falling back to close at eight cents, up two cents on the day. The spike in share price coincided with a major increase in volume, as over 2.5 million shares changed hands. Shareholders of KWG have yet to experience the fruits of the good news from Brazil. The company was suspended from trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange late in 1997, and the shares were delisted a year later. KWG shares subsequently traded on the Canadian Dealing Network, but were again suspended from trading in June, 1999, due to a failure to make statutory filings. The cease trade order was lifted on Dec. 1, but the stock has not traded as yet. (c) Copyright 1999 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com |