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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold and Silver Juniors, Mid-tiers and Producers

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To: ogi who wrote (56682)2/21/2008 12:23:27 PM
From: E. Charters  Read Replies (1) of 78420
 
go CME... go CME...

yo characterizing me? (looks in mirror)

I was never a disassociated cheerleader I have always been integrated and knew what I was doing.

Sometimes I did hear voices. Is that so bad? Maybe the voices are just my conscience. Good voices.

Well you get that with drillers with "evidence".. just goes to show you doing arm chair geology can be dangerous. I do know the CME geos and consultants and they are not idiots. I even did some explo for Cominco with one of them. I think they had a legitimate target. The boulders were moved a tad. Too bad. The real source could be a kilometre or 6 west or east and not very conductive. It could be right below but dipping at a strange angle. The outcrop fooled them. Doing geofizz in that area has disappointed before. Perhaps they should do some mag and look around a bit.

There is a really big intrusive system in that region.
They have to look at the contacts and do some intelligent headscratching. Lost of showings in their too, over wide area. This is just like Timmins in 1964. One big hit and all kinds of smoke for 20 years and no other hits. Against all logic about sulfide clusters. The Voisey's bay thing was sea bed nickel near a sack of ophoiolite copriolites or something like that, right near a few seds and gabbros right close to the sea. So I think it was sea bed. The contact running inland to the Tasiuyak gneiss was never properly explored. I had some of the strike back in 1995. Companies it was sold to never drilled a hole. CME has some ground south of there. Maybe all the nickel is in the sea. But the main contacts of the area run north sout as does the inland Iron Formation. The nickel may run all the way into Wabush. I know there are nickel showings all the way south and north for a hundred miles. The trouble with drilling gossans in that area is that there are 60,000 of them visible from the air. Drilling them all might be a bit prohibitive. Sampling them all would be costly and perhaps you would still end up with more questions than answers. There do appear to be a number of showings near the sea all along the coast that perhaps should be investigated. 90% of them have not been drilled. The troctolite "indicator" is found in nickel shows in Ontario too, but it may be a red herring. Rare as a codfish in a newfie's net, or far too common, like targets on a CME claim.. :)

EC<:-}

So right now we are monday morning quarterbacks.
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