Dia Met receives encouraging Paul-Mike results                                                                                                          Dia Met Minerals Ltd                                                  DMM.B Shares issued 21,973,496                                 Jan 8 close $19.75 Mon 11 Jan 99                                                  News Release Also Cantex Mine Development Corp (CD) Mr. Charles Fipke reports The Dia Met (51 per cent) - Cantex (49 per cent) joint venture project  has received  encouraging  core  drill results on its Paul-Mike claims situated between the Sullivan lead-zinc-silver mine and past producing Kootenay King lead-zinc-silver mine near Kimberly, B.C. The Paul Mike claims and the two mines lie along the down-faulted  edge  of the  Kanasewich  lineament,  which  is  thought  to  be  the  source of the ore-bearing fluids that formed the mines. The  core  hole  presently  being drilled  is the first hole to test the Lower-Middle Aldridge contact in the Paul Mike area between the two mines.  Core  drilling  has  penetrated  613 metres  of  overburden,  141 metres of young formation cover and a 66 metre thick  hydrothermally  altered  pyrite-pyrrhotite-chalcopyrite  mineralized gabbro sill. Most importantly, 319 metres  of  faulted  Middle  Aldridge,  never  before proven  to occur in this area, has been intersected beneath the sill. Owing to extensive faulting, core recovery  has  been  poor  and  drilling  slow. However,  expert  Aldridge  geologists  Peter  Klewchuck  and  Glen Rodgers believe  the  lower  part  of  the  Middle  Aldridge  formation  has   been penetrates,  which  lies  above the Lower-Middle Aldridge contact (i.e. the contact that hosts the Sullivan mine). Thus further drilling, despite being below  the  original seismic target, should penetrate the contact zone that hosts the Sullivan mine. If  massive  lead-zinc-silver  mineralization  is  intersected  (i.e.  high concentrations of metallic sulphide minerals), the present hole may be used to wedge perhaps six or more additional intersections. In addition downhole EM  geophysics  is  planned  so  that any massive sulphide lead-zinc-silver deposit situated within about 200 metres of the core hole will be  detected and tested with additional drilling.   |