Tumi adds to its property base.
Tumi Resources Ltd TM Shares issued 4,134,000 Oct 7 2002 close $ 0.30 Wednesday October 23 2002 News Release Mr. David Henstridge reports NEW ACQUISITION POSITIONS TUMI AS A PREMIER JUNIOR SILVER-GOL ... Tumi Resources has acquired, subject to regulatory approval, a very significant addition to the company's portfolio of silver-gold properties in Mexico. The company now has an extensive portfolio of early-stage silver-gold properties, all having the potential to host large silver-gold resources. This acquisition will catapult Tumi into one of the premier junior explorers for silver-gold deposits in Mexico. The company has signed a heads of agreement (HOA) with Minera San Jorge, SA de CV (MSJ), a private Mexican company, to acquire up to a 100-per-cent working interest in the Gran Cabrera properties. The Gran Cabrera properties are located across the border of two states, Nayarit and Jalisco, and cover a group of historically high-grade silver-gold mines. David Henstridge, president of Tumi, noted: "We are extremely pleased with this new acquisition. In July we concluded an agreement to acquire the Cinco Minas property on which work has already started. These new properties are located about 40 kilometres northwest of Cinco Minas. They show significant exploration and development potential which will enhance our Cinco Minas property, and can be exploited in conjunction with our Cinco Minas work programs." Under the terms of the HOA on the Gran Cabrera properties, the company may earn a 60-per-cent interest by expending $2.5-million (U.S.), over three years, on the Gran Cabrera or Cinco Minas properties and issuing an initial 250,000 shares upon regulatory approval, and a further 500,000 shares over two years. At Gran Cabrera, the company has committed to incur minimum expenditures of $75,000 (U.S.), $100,000 (U.S.) and $150,000 (U.S.) over three years. The company has the right to purchase the remaining 40-per-cent interest in the Gran Cabrera properties should a development area be identified. The Gran Cabrera properties, totalling 3,950 hectares, are centred on three large silver-gold epithermal systems associated with volcanic units northwest of Guadalajara, Mexico. San Jos, Espada-La Deseada and Las Caridades are groupings of rich, historic, silver-gold mines located in the historic Hostotipaquillo mining district. The Cabrera megasystem contains stockworks, breccia hosted orebodies and large vein feeder subsystems at the intersection of the Sierra Madre and the Trans Mexican volcanic arc. Within the property areas there are more than 15 significant old precious metals mines that historically produced high-grade silver-gold ore periodically over a period of more than 350 years beginning with their discovery by early Spanish conquistadors. The mines covered include the San Jos, Esperanza, Crest centsn, Espada, Deseada, Paloma, Dura, Esmeralda, Burro, Concordia, Escondida, Banco, Peralta, Caridad and Victoria mines. There are four immediate primary target areas within the property areas, Espada-Dura-Deseada-Esmeralda cluster; and the San Jose cluster (with the Velazquez exploration adit driven at a lower level) including the Esperanza and Crest centsn mines, and the Caridad cluster of mines including the Banco, Escondida, Concordia, la Caridad, Victoria, Burro and Paloma mines, the latter two along the Santiago River; and a fourth area around the Peralta mine and adjacent areas. All four areas show evidence of Spanish exploration and mining as well as mining efforts conducted by American mining interests into the early part of the 20th century. The Espada-Deseada-Dura-Esmeralda (Espada mines) cluster of old mine workings represents the west-central part of the Gran Cabrera Mega-shear which is known over a distance of approximately 15 kilometres. According to engineering reports prepared by the American operators in the early 1900s who opened small pits at three of the mines, the Espada ores were the highest grade of gold and silver ores mined in the Gran Cabrera district. The mines, which lie within a brecciated, extensive shear zone in volcanics, are open-pit targets and a breccia pipe may be represented at Espada. The Dura and Deseada mineralization appears to lie within a large, relatively rich stockwork. Within the prospective area, pervasive alteration by quartz and vuggy silica in veins, and stockworks, produced very hard, silicified host rocks which could not be economically mined and processed either by the early Spanish miners or by the Americans in the early part of the 20th century. These zones are also immediate exploration targets as modern mining practices can handle this type of ore. Consultant geologist Kent Ausburn (1997) visited the area, undertook some sampling and concluded: "Early indications of broad zones of potentially bulk minable silver-gold mineralization have been delineated in several locations. The most promising areas are Espada-Deseada and Dura," among others. Mr. Ausburn reported sample results of 30 metres across strike at Deseada grading 0.41 of a gram per tonne Au and 153.3 g/t Ag, and in the upper level of the Espada mine, 12 samples collected along a strike length of 425 metres (width not given) graded 0.55 g/t Au and 398.9 g/t Ag. At the Dura mine, surface sampling of a stockwork area covering about 150 metres by 50 metres averaged 0.29 g/t Au and 206 g/t Ag. These results show the prospectivity of the mineralized zones and justify an immediate start to exploration. At the San Jose mine, the Velzquez adit is 350 metres in length, and was driven for exploration into the surrounding host rocks trying to cut high-grade ore shoots within the larger megashears, breccias and stockworks. It remains unknown as to whether low-grade mineralization was intersected by these cross-cuts simply because no records of sampling of the wall rocks exist and lower-grade mineralization would not have been of interest to the miners driving those workings. Also at the San Jose mine, another adit (the Vida) has been developed for 380 metres and Villafana reported in 1916 from San Jose that ores were found with grades that can be beneficiated by cyanidation, and ore blocks were developed in the mine estimated to be 100,000 tonnes, with an average grade of 1.5 g/t Au and 500 g/t Ag. The initial work program on the Gran Cabrera properties will consist of data recompilation, geological mapping and verification or extension of earlier channel sampling of vein, stockwork and breccia-hosted precious metal mineralization, seeking ore-grade mineralization suitable for open-pit mining. Once target areas have been identified drilling will be programmed as soon as practicable.
regards ralfph |