Eric,
Analyze this.
Unsatisifed with the results of the 1986 drilling, Richardson gathered samples from the cores and from surface and sent them for analyses at various labs he had "investigated" in the U.S. The results showed "good" values in gold, silver and platinum group metals. Oddly enough, considering the reliance H.M.S. had placed on the old reports from Allan and Bradley, most of the samples did not come from the Precambrian basement rock where Bradley said he had found his "half pound" of gold.
HMS Properties also sent three samples of core it had obtained from the Scurry-Rainbow well and had them re-assayed by one of the labs. All three samples returned what H.M.S. described as "excellent values" of gold, palladium, platinum, rhodium and silver. All the labs mentioned in the report are best known for their work on "desert-dirt" projects in the U.S., where the gold appears and disappears, depending on who does the assaying.
H.M.S. Group acquired the metallic mineral leases in the summer of 1991. In the late 1980s, a report by Myrrholm Financial of Edmonton began circulating, citing the potential of the Alberta properties. It stated that a "dossier is available and a dore bullion bar can be extracted for further analysis, subject to interested parties meeting certain qualifying conditions." It said the minerals were disseminated throughout the host material "in salt form."
The report included an unauthored geological section that was bullish beyond all expectations. "The values of the minerals extracted from the cores and surface samples suggest a very rich orebody. Presently, H.M.S. is upgrading their extraction processes in order to improve the quantity and quality of the recovered products."
The report cited grades of 345 grams silver, 4 grams gold and 4 grams combined platinum-group metals per tonne, and implied that these were average grades from sampling the whole project.
Ken Richardson then set out to spread the word, which he did by calling up newspaper reporters. The gold "discovery" got plenty of press, though Richardson candidly admitted that modern assay methods showed no gold content in his samples. He told reporters this was because the tests were "designed for hard rocks that normally host gold in Canada."
Working from a basement lab, Richardson then claimed to have found a secret way to extract gold and platinum from the limestone "in breathtaking quantities." The reports were met with raised eyebrows or worse in mining circles, at least in the beginning.
Some juniors acquired ground, including Focal Resources (FCJ-V), which took an option to earn 25% in the H.M.S. property. Focal's own early sampling was encouraging, with multi-ounce grades in gold and platinum group elements. But these results came from made-to-measure assaying shops in the southwestern U.S., and when the Alberta Stock Exchange moved to demand that Focal disclose results from conventional fire-assay analysis of the same samples, the numbers were substantially lower.
The unverifiable grades meant the Fort MacKay gold rush had plenty of skeptics in the beginning. A major mining company sent out a consultant who reported back that the samples were being "pre-treated" before assaying with chemicals the assayer refused to identify. While conventional labs got nothing, the innovative assayer was able to produce a prill of alloyed gold and silver after roasting the sample, leaching it with cyanide solution, and recovering gold from the cyanide solution on a resin.
The procedure included adding chemicals at the roasting stage and immediately after leaching -- chemicals the assayer refused to identify. He also told the consultant that the gold might be in the leached residue, in the resin, or in the cyanide solution, so he needed to assay residue, resin, and a precipitate left behind when the cyanide solution was evaporated.
A Focal vice-president at the time, Richard Fischer, The Northern Miner that Focal was "investigating labs . . . [to] find one that knows the eight steps of doing a fire assay right -- most labs are not aware of all the steps" (T.N.M., May 3/93).
Focal's work was taken more seriously when others joined the search for prairie gold, including Tintina Mines (TTS-T), its joint-venture partner NSR Resources (NSR-T), and Lac Minerals, which did a short-lived deal with the two juniors that died in July 1994. The stocks soared, with Tintina running to $7.12, NSR to $4.10 and Focal to $3.85.
The interest reached its height when results were published from research work done by Geological Survey of Canada scientists Hugh Abercrombie and Rui Feng. Abercrombie and Feng delivered a series of papers in 1994 in which they detailed how they had found gold by examining samples from Focal and the Tintina-NSR joint-venture properties, using a scanning electron microscope.
Describing the discovery of these grains as "a great opportunity for gold and other precious-metal exploration in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin," Abercrombie and Feng suggested the mineralization formed when oxidized formation water leached metals from basement rocks and the lowermost sediments in the basin, then moved upward in the sequence, re-depositing the metals once it encountered reducing conditions.
The idea was scientifically plausible, even attractive: it was a precious-metal twist on widely accepted models for the deposition of zinc and lead in carbonate-hosted deposits and of copper and cobalt in sedimentary rocks. The theoretical geochemistry was not controversial, and it found confirmation in studies of the base metal deposits.
But the idea lacked one leg: no credible chemical technique had found significant concentrations of gold in deposits of this sort, at least not in repeated analyses.
Still, Abercrombie was confident enough to tell Michael Byfield of the Sun newspapers that he was guessing the mineralization was "a world-class resource," and Richardson of H.M.S. was ready to "declare Fort McMurray to be the new South Africa."
To determine just how much precious metal was in the mineralization, Abercrombie and Feng started small: one grain at a time, analyzed by energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry. This system, commonly part of any electron microscope or microprobe setup, gives a qualitative determination of the elements making up an individual grain -- that is, it reports the presence or absence of an element, but not its concentration. The two authors' 1994 papers speculated on whether the elements might be held in chlorides, oxides, native metals or other species but never actually suggested what concentration those elements might reach.
Having verified that the samples had tiny mineral grains, and that some of the tiny grains contained gold, Abercrombie and Feng turned their attention to measuring concentrations using laser-ablation mass spectrometry, a technique that vapourizes a small surface area of the sample, passes the vapour to a plasma generator, and measures the quantity of each element in the sample in a mass spectrometer. The two reported in a 1997 G.S.C. paper that samples that underwent laser ablation MS analysis had between 0.04 and 3.71 grams gold per tonne -- not emphasizing that the material with this grade was a square surface about 0.5 mm on a side, and might be unrepresentative of the whole rock.
In the same study, Abercrombie and Feng tried to back up the laser ablation work with chemistry, using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry on 2-gram samples that had been digested using strong nitric acid and highly reactive hydrofluoric acid. They got numbers that were about a tenth of what they had seen from laser ablation, down near typical abundance levels.
They suggested the problem was with ICP-MS, rather than with their qualitative probe work or with laser ablation, arguing that the strong acid attack had somehow not destroyed organic material coating the gold grains, or that the ultra-small gold grains possibly "escape[d] recovery." They did not mention the possibility that the laser ablation work might not be valid, or that the probe analyses implied little or nothing about the grades.
Birch Mountain entered the picture in 1995 when, as an ASE junior-capital pool listing, it acquired privately-owned Birch Mountain Minerals. Birch Mountain held a large land package in the Fort MacKay area surrounding the Tintina-NSR ground, and its new publicly listed parent did little but office work until early 1997, when the GSC's Abercrombie signed on as exploration manager.
After concluding agreements with Syncrude Canada, Shell Canada (SHC-T) and the BHP Diamonds division of Broken Hill Proprietary (BHP-N), Birch Mountain had access to drill cores from oil operators on much of its property package. The most expansive arrangement was with Syncrude, which held the oil rights on a large part of the property where Birch Mountain held the metallic-mineral rights. A "co-development agreement," providing for co-operative drilling and planning, shared infrastructure and access, was signed in May 1997.
Birch Mountain has historically had little trouble raising money. Private placements, often at well above market value, have kept the company cashed up for the Alberta project. In October 1997, for example, while the junior market was lying bloodied by the Bre-X scandal, Birch closed a private placement at $6 per share for proceeds of $9.8 million.
In April 1997, Birch Mountain reported that a sample from a Syncrude drill hole on the Fort MacKay property contained around 0.2 gram gold and between 2.2 and 4.9 grams platinum per tonne. The sample came from the Waterways formation, a sequence of shales and limestones near the middle of the Devonian-age sediments in the area.
Birch Mountain also got Syncrude's leave to sample cores from about 450 drill holes in the area. In June 1999, despite the company's intervening announcements that its examination of Syncrude cores confirmed the view that the sediments carried significant precious-metal grades, management finally announced that four holes, all drilled within 100 metres of old Syncrude holes, had found no gold.
The company said it could not explain the "contradictory results" but turned around immediately to insist that the earlier SEM and probe investigations "prove[d] conclusively that that platinum, palladium, gold and silver are present in anomalous quantities in these rocks . . . the inconsistencies . . . reflect inadequate analytical methodologies, not the absence of precious metals."
Birch Mountain's response to the assaying "problem" was to take four bulk samples from the Moberly limestone member of the Waterways formation. Birch Mountain, in its disclosure release, described the samples as "visibly altered"; Abercrombie told The Northern Miner that the limestone showed siderite, sulphides, barite and iron and manganese oxides, and that major-element geochemistry confirmed that they were altered. Disseminated pyrite is common in the Waterways sediments, often in fractures where it is mixed with bitumen.
The bulk samples were meant to establish whether there was any gold, and to provide large amounts of testing material for different analytical techniques.
Birch Mountain opened up four trenches, sampling about 50 kg of Moberly limestone from each, then sent those bulk samples to Loring Laboratories in Calgary, Alta., to be crushed and ground, then to ITS Bondar-Clegg in Vancouver for analysis. Fire assays on all four bulk samples showed insignificant gold -- 0.002 to 0.003 grams per tonne. One sample, BJ98-008, was also analyzed using neutron-activation analysis, which turned up less than 0.002 gram gold. (Another lab in Kelowna, B.C. analyzed the same sample using an aqua-regia digestion and atomic-absorption analysis, returning 0.08 gram gold and 11 grams platinum per tonne, but that lab found no detectable gold or platinum in any of the other samples.) Most reference works on geochemistry suggest that concentrations below 0.005 gram per tonne are typical of unmineralized shale or limestone.
The fire-assay portions were also analyzed for palladium and platinum, which were either not detected or present at concentrations near the limit of detection. The neutron-activation analysis Birch Mountain requested did not analyze for platinum or palladium, but it did test for iridium, which was below the detection limit.
Similarly, silver values were either low or below the limit of detection in the bulk samples when analyzed by emission spectrometry following strong acid digestion, and by neutron activation.
In 1999, despite the uniformly negative results, the company embarked on a program of laboratory work "to develop analytical methods to resolve inconsistencies between SEM/EMP imaging and precious metals analysis, and to address the problem of repeatability."
Birch Mountain's reasoning rested entirely on the microscopic and probe examinations that had found gold grains and on three previous analytical hits. Two composite samples from the Lac Minerals work in 1994 had returned gold values of 4.1 grams per tonne (analyzed by high-energy X-ray fluorescence) and 0.36 gram per tonne (analyzed by fire assay with an ICP finish). A third surface sample had been sent to the Saskatchewan Research Council for cyanide leaching and activated-carbon recovery; a fire assay of the carbon pulp returned 1.69 grams gold per tonne.
"We have multiple lines of evidence that lead us to conclude that there are not just chemically interesting levels of precious metals," said Abercrombie. "We also concluded, based on this, and repeatedly said this, that standard fire assay is not capable of getting these [levels], and we stand by that statement and the data's there in public."
Using its own lab to prepare the samples, then sending the prepared material out to Loring for fire assay or to the University of Calgary for atomic-absorption spectrometry, the company reported that its testing had shown "important values of gold and palladium" in BJ98-008, which had previously shown very low gold contents: 0.003 gram per tonne by fire assay and less than 0.002 gram by neutron activation. (Variable results at very low concentrations are common, and does not imply that the fire assay and neutron activation analyses did not agree that the sample contained insignificant gold.)
Birch Mountain's in-house sample preparation included reducing, caustic and acid digestion of the samples, with or without agitation. The most successful technique for gold was a modified aqua-regia digestion with the leach liquor analyzed by conventional AA, which returned results showing a grade of 4 to 6 grams gold per tonne in the bulk sample.
Other techniques involving analysis of a collector or precipitate didn't find significant gold but did kick for up to 1.9 grams palladium per tonne.
How Birch Mountain's samples are able to produce so much gold even when neutron activation (a technique known to be impervious to chemical and grain-size effects) finds none, is the principal mystery of the project -- one that Birch Mountain management is currently happy to maintain.
Abercrombie told the Miner that the results of the company's work on the bulk samples has led to a reliable analytical procedure, one Birch Mountain intends to patent. Of the technique that yielded the 6-gram assay, he said, "it is not strictly aqua regia; there is more to it . . . [which] would be part of the subject of what we are patenting."
Company President Douglas Rowe told the Miner that Birch Mountain's patent lawyers did not want the company's assay techniques discussed. "It's really just in the short term. We should have it filed within . . . two or three weeks, and then we can be much more explicit."
The latest developments in the area appear to indicate that Birch Mountain has become the principal operator in the immediate Fort MacKay area. Tintina Mines and NSR Resources have sold their Fort MacKay project to Birch for 600,000 shares -- and on the day the deal was announced, that represented more than $1.7 million: two-thirds to go to Tintina and one-third to NSR.
Birch Mountain recently closed a $2.7-million private placement (2.3 million units priced at $1.15) to finance further work on the Fort MacKay project. Each unit is a share plus one half a warrant, and each warrant gives the holder the right to buy one share at $1.50. About half the common shares in the placement were flow-through shares.
The verification testing by Strathcona Mineral Services, announced by Birch Mountain last November, is "ongoing," says Abercrombie. Strathcona has done its own trench sampling but is awaiting instruction on how the samples are to be assayed. "When we nominate the process and put it forward to them, those experiments will go ahead," says Abercrombie. "At this point, we have not nominated a process for them to verify."
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