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Gold/Mining/Energy : Diamonds North Resources Ltd -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Letmebe Frank who wrote (304)3/26/2004 6:37:07 AM
From: kidl  Respond to of 334
 
Diamonds North and Teck expand their gem hunt

Diamonds North Resources Ltd DDN
Shares issued 23,831,982 Mar 24 close $1.33
Thu 25 Mar 2004 Street Wire
Also (TEK)
by Will Purcell
Diamonds North Resources has received confirmation that its Victoria Island diamond partner will be taking up its option to earn a 30-per-cent stake in the Blue Ice property that hosts a string of encouraging kimberlite finds in the central part of Victoria Island. The move by Teck Cominco was an expected one, after a number of those kimberlites delivered a round of encouraging diamond counts, but there was an unexpected twist to the development, as Teck and Diamonds North have expanded their partnership to cover the nearby White Ice and Hadley Bay properties as well. The additional ground includes a second string of kimberlites that could add to the merits of the play, which needs kimberlite tonnage as well as diamond grade and value to succeed, as well as some additional targets. According to the expanded agreement, Teck will have to spend $11.5-million to earn a 30-per-cent stake in the three properties, which is $2-million more than the original deal covering Blue Ice had called for. Teck can earn a 50-per-cent share in the three properties by spending $16.5-million by the end of 2008 and it can ultimately acquire a 70-per-cent share by carrying Diamonds North to production. As a result of the agreement, Teck is upping its planned expenditure on the Victoria Island play to about $3-million this year, and similar amounts would be required in subsequent years to meet the terms of the deal. Some of that new cash will undoubtedly be directed at some existing kimberlite finds along a northwesterly trending line that lies about 25 kilometres to the north of the Galaxy structure. Galaxy delivered all of the diamond promise last year, but there are a number of existing kimberlites along the more northerly feature, which cuts across the southwesterly portion of the Hadley Bay property, and at least one of the bodies delivered a set of toutable diamond counts when it was last tested in 2002. In 2002, Diamonds North's former Hadley Bay partner, Canabrava Diamond, processed nearly 390 kilograms of kimberlite from King Eider, coming up with 64 diamonds larger than a 0.106-millimetre sieve. That modest haul amounted to only 164 diamonds per tonne, but there were encouraging signs that the King Eider diamonds had a favourable size distribution curve. In all, 14 of the diamonds were large enough to remain on a 0.30-millimetre screen, or about 22 per cent of the entire parcel, and 10 of the stones had been recovered by a 0.425-millimetre mesh, accounting for nearly 16 per cent of the King Eider diamond collection. Offering additional support for the notion that the body had a coarse size distribution curve was the fact that two of the King Eider diamonds were large enough to be recovered by a 0.85-millimetre sieve, which is often used as the minimum cutoff in a small mini-bulk test. At least three of the diamonds were longer than one millimetre. One of those diamonds exceeded 1.1 millimetres in three dimensions, while a second stone was 1.45 millimetres long and 1.2 millimetres wide. As well, there were signs that King Eider had variations in its diamond content, although it is also possible that at least some of the variation was due to random statistical variation on the tiny samples. Three of six kimberlite samples, weighing just over 230 kilograms, had accounted for 42 of the stones, or about 180 stones per tonne. That was not significantly higher than the rate that the entire sample had produced diamonds, but the three richer samples accounted for all of the larger diamonds, suggesting a more favourable size distribution. A dozen of the 42 diamonds were retained by a 0.30-millimetre screen, or nearly 29 per cent of the stones, and all 10 of the diamonds recovered by the 0.425-millimetre sieve had come from the three richer samples, which resulted in a proportion of nearly one-quarter. King Eider now appears to be larger than first thought, and that adds to the possibility that the body has a variable diamond content with potentially richer zones. When De Beer had first discovered the body in 1997, the anomaly was initially described as about 50 metres in diameter, but Diamonds North now touts the feature as a magnetic anomaly that is 300 metres long and 200 metres wide. As well, the work to date indicates that King Eider is a complex kimberlite with multiple phases, with potentially different diamond grades. That would make King Eider seem a likely target for additional drilling by Teck and Diamonds North, and there are a few other old finds on the Hadley Bay property that could be worth a look as well. Canabrava and Diamonds North tested a 20-kilogram batch of rock from the Turnstone kimberlite, and there was nothing in that material to suggest the result was significantly different than what King Eider had delivered. There were just three diamonds in the sample, but that yields a rate that is comparable with King Eider, and although two of the stones were tiny microdiamonds, the third was large enough to remain on a 0.60-millimetre screen and measured just over one millimetre in length. As well, the Jaeger kimberlite could be retested this year. The revised deal with Teck now combines three Diamonds North properties into one larger project, and that will increase the chances of coming up with enough kimberlite to make a Victoria Island mine a possibility. For that reason, Mr. Kolebaba now says should never have been split apart, although the company initially split the big play into several smaller chunks to increase the amount of exploration that would be conducted on the play as a whole. Diamonds North had been working smaller bits of its Victoria project on its own hook, but it also acquired a series of partners to help pay for the exploration efforts on other parts of the play. That arrangement helped a bit initially at Hadley Bay, but progress was often painfully slow on much of the company's projects. The arrival of Teck early last summer resulted in an increased pace at Blue Ice, and coming up with exploration dollars should no longer be a major problem for Diamonds North, due to the revised arrangement. Finding enough kimberlite with economic quantities of diamonds remains a challenge, but Mr. Kolebaba is suitably enthused with the chances of adding several new diamondiferous finds in the coming months. The Galaxy structure on the northern part of the Blue Ice property has sustained the play over the past year, and there were a few new discoveries last year. More are possible this year, especially on the northwestern extension of the trend extending onto the White Ice claims. The chances of making a series of new finds along the King Eider trend line also seem promising, as there had been relatively little work completed on the Hadley Bay block last year. That hunt will likely extend northwestward onto the White Ice play as well. Mr. Kolebaba said that the partners would be using geophysics to full advantage this year, and that includes electromagnetic surveys. Most of the current finds were based on magnetic targets, and there have been many important kimberlite finds that did not have a corresponding magnetic anomaly. As a result, an electromagnetic survey could result in a number of new finds. Meanwhile, there are two new regions that should get a good look this year through a variety of methods. One district lies between the Galaxy and King Eider structures and it also appears to be a line trending in a northwesterly direction that could be comparable with its sister trends. That general location would place the new zone in the border region of the
Blue Ice and Hadley properties, and it could theoretically extend
northwestward onto the White Ice property as well.
The fourth zone appears somewhat different, based on an initial geophysical assessment. The targets lie southwest of the Galaxy structure, and they appear to be circular and resemble pipes, not the elongated dikes that predominate in the Galaxy and King Eider regions. As well, the anomalies are believed to occur in a cluster, not along a trend line. After a brief flurry of interest in the late 1990s, the Victoria Island diamond hunt seemed all but dead two years ago, but the play bounced back with a frenzy of new interest after Major General Resources spun off its diamond assets to the fledgling Diamonds North and appointed Mr. Kolebaba to be its first president. The Regina-born Mr. Kolebaba had been hunting gems for the past decade, starting with a junior company in Venezuela, and then with BHP Billiton in Canada. Mr. Kolebaba had previously been working for the Australian mining giant on a gold play near Hope Bay in Nunavut, but it took a stint at exploring a series of dikes in the Guaniamo district to convince his former employer to give him a shot at gems when it expanded its Canadian diamond presence by opening an office in Kelowna. Now a resident of Vancouver, Mr. Kolebaba was heavily involved with the Ekati project during his years with BHP, although he also he was also placed in charge of running the company's exploration efforts in Eastern Canada. Mr. Kolebaba now has a shot at succeeding where BHP and De Beers did not. The South African diamond hunter called it quits on Victoria Island several years ago, turning over its former project to Major General, and BHP abandoned an option deal on the Victoria project that had been acquired through the takeover of Dia Met Minerals in 2001. Mr. Kolebaba has proven to be an effective promoter since he took over Diamonds North in the spring of 2002. The stock traded as low as 31 cents in the summer of 2002, but the Victoria Island story became a market favourite a short time later, with the first of a series of toutable diamond tallies. Although the harsh Victoria Island climate makes for a short work season, Mr. Kolebaba and Diamonds North have managed to sustain interest in their diamond story for the past 18 months. The stock recently crested at $1.79, helped by another batch of diamonds, although things cooled a bit recently, due to a modest stone count in another lot of samples. The revised deal with Teck triggered some renewed optimism however, as Diamonds North added a dime on Wednesday, closing at $1.33.
(c) Copyright 2004 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com

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To: Letmebe Frank who wrote (304)5/4/2004 9:27:01 AM
From: kidl  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 334
 
Street Wire by Will

Diamonds North adds to its Victoria Island diamond haul

Diamonds North Resources Ltd DDN
Shares issued 24,606,527 Apr 30 close $0.95
Mon 3 May 2004 Street Wire
by Will Purcell
Diamonds North Resources and Teck Cominco have received the diamond counts from another key kimberlite on their Victoria Island play. The new numbers from the Sand Piper body brought a mixed result, sparking several new questions without providing many answers, but the company's president since its creation in 2002, Mark Kolebaba, was suitably enthused over the outcome. Speculators seemed content with the result as well, as Diamonds North's shares continued to trade just above the $1 mark. With varying degrees of promise from several Victoria Island kimberlites, the two partners are now making plans to advance the project to the next stage, and Sand Piper could factor into those next steps. In all, Diamonds North and Teck recovered 268 diamonds from 691 kilograms of Sand Piper kimberlite this time out, which worked out to just less than 400 diamonds per tonne. That was a far cry from what a tiny sample had delivered in the late summer of 2002, when Diamonds North processed 6.49 kilograms of rock. That material yielded 118 diamonds, which worked out to a rate of about 18,000 diamonds per tonne. There was little doubt that that gaudy result would not be duplicated in a larger test, but the less favourable diamond size distribution indicated by the latest sample is somewhat disappointing at first glance. Only 31 of the diamonds in the latest sample were large enough to be recovered by a 0.30-millimetre sieve, which worked out to about 13 per cent of the entire parcel, while just over 26 per cent of the diamonds in the tiny 2002 test had exceeded that size.
That pointed toward a diamond distribution that was markedly less
favourable than what was provided by the earlier result, and that trend became more evident with the recoveries in the larger sieve classes. For example, there were only three diamonds large enough to be retained by a 0.85-millimetre screen in the latest test, while the minuscule batch of rock processed in 2002 had delivered five stones of that magnitude. As a result, it might seem easy to write off the Sand Piper feature as uneconomic, but things are rarely simple, and a closer look at the results provides some glimmers of optimism that were largely masked by the latest test. Although there were no signs of the very rich material that had been encountered in the 2002 test, there were indications that there was a significant variation in the diamond content within the core samples drilled from the body. In all, 36 of the 47 diamonds extracted from the core samples had come from less than 17 kilograms of kimberlite, for an indicated rate of nearly 2,200 stones per tonne, while the remaining 45 kilograms of material had delivered just 11 stones, a rate of about 250 diamonds per tonne. That much more modest value was comparable with what the partners had come up with from about 630 kilograms of boulder material, which had delivered 221 diamonds, a rate of about 360 stones per tonne. Including that larger amount of rock adds a considerable amount of pessimism to the cumulative result, but that could be misleading. Mr. Kolebaba said that much of the material had originated from one large boulder. As a result, the bulk of the sample would have come from a localized area of Sand Piper, and that could well have been one of the lower-grade sections of the body. As a result, considering just the drill cores might provide a better idea of the average diamond content within the apparently complex body. There were two batches of kimberlite obtained by drilling in the latest test, weighing a total of about 62 kilograms, and the rock yielded 47 diamonds. That was just 760 stones per tonne, and although the figure was diluted by the inclusion of the lower-grade material that was also encountered in the holes, it was still double the diamond content that the boulders had produced. As well, the size distribution of the drill cores was far superior to the boulders. Over 26 per cent of the diamonds in the latest two holes were large enough to remain on a 0.30-millimetre sieve, comparable with what the tiny sample had delivered in 2002. In all, Diamonds North has processed 145 kilograms of drill core from Sand Piper, including some additional 2002 samples that were separated from the richer result. That rock yielded 195 diamonds, for a rate of about 1,350 stones per tonne, and the diamond size distribution of the cumulative core samples was healthy, with about 24 per cent of the diamonds being larger than a 0.30-millimetre mesh. As a result, there is no doubt that there are higher-grade sections of Sand Piper, but the extents and diamond contents of those zones remain unknown quantities. Larger samples would logically be required to answer those questions, but scooping up boulders off of the surface seems unlikely to provide an adequate answer, and surface trenching may also fail to hit the richer sections in a representative way. Mr. Kolebaba said that drilling at a favourable angle was being considered as an option to test Sand Piper and other similar features. The Victoria Island partners are now working on their plans for this year, and the project is expected to carry a hefty budget that is estimated at $3-million, all of it provided by Teck. There will likely be a string of new diamond counts coming from the region late this year, but microdiamond recoveries are no longer the main thrust of exploration on what is becoming an advanced project. "This year's program is about size," Mr. Kolebaba said, adding that the bottom line was value, which would be a combination of grade and size. As a result, Teck and Diamonds North will be developing an array of new drill targets that have a possibility of delivering toutable diamond counts from kimberlites that could have significant dimensions. The partners will be flying a significant geophysical survey over the property this year, and the results should be available in sufficient time to select drill targets this year. As well, the two companies will be considering the collection of small mini-bulk samples from a number of its existing kimberlites that have produced promising diamond counts from bodies that have size potential. Mr. Kolebaba said that one such candidate was Snow Bunting, which he described as having a promising size potential, both from a tonnage and diamond distribution perspective. Originally described as a magnetic low that was about 25 metres in diameter, the body has grown with additional work, and is now believed to be at least 200 metres long and about eight metres wide. The dimensions at depth remain unknown and additional drilling will be required to map out the geometry of Snow Bunting, but if those dimensions prove to be representative, the body could contain over a million tonnes of kimberlite to a depth of 250 metres. So far, the partners have processed about 234 kilograms of Sand Piper kimberlite, coming up with 103 diamonds. That worked out to a rate of just 440 stones per tonne, but about 20 per cent of the diamonds were recovered by a 0.30-millimetre screen, supporting Mr. Kolebaba's notion of a coarse diamond size distribution. As well, there were signs that the diamond content was variable within the body. Sand Piper would also seem to factor into the Snow Bunting equation. Mr. Kolebaba said that the two bodies were close neighbours, and they might well be connected at depth. The former senior geologist for BHP Billiton said that the diamond counts were roughly comparable between the two bodies as well, and that might be another reason to include Sand Piper in any plans for Snow Bunting. Mr. Kolebaba also cited King Eider as a likely candidate for a mini-bulk test of up to 10 tonnes. Nearly 390 kilograms of kimberlite from the pipe has yielded just 64 diamonds, but the body also has a reasonably healthy size distribution, and the body appears to be a pipe that is more than 100 metres in diameter. The best of the Victoria Island lot is still the Sculptor kimberlite, which Mr. Kolebaba described as having diamond counts that were the spitting image of the AV-1 body that was found last year by Stornoway Diamond. So far, Diamonds North has recovered 978 diamonds from 773 kilograms of kimberlite, or about 1,350 stones per tonne. About 23 per cent of them were recovered by a 0.30-millimetre screen, and 3.0 per cent of the stones had been retained by a 0.85-millimetre mesh. Meanwhile, Stornoway had recovered AV-1 diamonds at a rate of 1,380 stones per tonne, and about 26 per cent of the AV-1 crop was large enough to remain on a 0.30-millimetre sieve. The proportion of diamonds retained by a 0.85-millimetre mesh was 3.0 per cent, a match for the numbers at Sculptor. Those numbers confirm Mr. Kolebaba's comparison of the two bodies, and Stornoway's recent mini-bulk test adds a considerable amount of fuel for his promotional fires at Sculptor. Stornoway processed 7.4 tonnes of AV-1 rock, coming up with a diamond content of 0.88 carat per tonne, and there are signs that the result could be conservative. The promotable results have maintained the market's interest since that first six-kilogram batch of Sand Piper kimberlite revived the dormant Victoria Island play more than 18 months ago, and the play could remain a favourite of investors if Diamonds North and Teck can deliver a comparable grade from at least one of its existing finds, as well as demonstrating that there is enough kimberlite to make a mine an economic possibility, either within the existing bodies, or in a new target. Diamonds North shed one cent on Friday closing at 95 cents.
(c) Copyright 2004 Canjex Publishing Ltd. stockwatch.com

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