SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Ride the Tiger with CD -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: E. Charters who wrote (150506)3/13/2009 9:01:50 PM
From: Goose94  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 314091
 
Eric what were you doing at age 10 yrs old in Canada? Read on.
**********************************************

Yemen Looks For Share Of Mining Spotlight - Fipke's Cantex Clears Up Foggy Notions of the Mid-East State

Exploration companies looking for the next big find have seldom thought to look in the Middle Eastern country of Yemen.
But legendary diamond finder Chuck Fipke has, and he hasn't been disappointed.

He first arrived in the country back in 1996, looking for diamonds but finding something else. "I went there to investigate whether or not diamonds could be present," Fipke says. "I went through their library and decided the country had potential for gold and base metals, better than for diamonds." Fipke, along with his partner Chad Ulansky, quickly secured the permits to some 55,000 sq. km of prospective land and started soil sampling.

That early work, which they did through their company Cantex Mine Development (CD-V), yielded some positive results. Still, operating in Yemen was a hard sell back on the streets of Vancouver and Toronto.

"The main issue we have (with operating in Yemen) is the problem with the perception from a Western perspective," says Ulansky, who is Cantex's president and chief financial officer. "People assume that Yemen isn't a good business environment because on CNN you never hear good things about it. It's just painted with a black brush and inevitably that taints most people's perception of the country."

But Ulansky and Fipke, chief executive of Cantex, are committed to doing their part to help change that perception. And they are getting some traction.

In November, Vale (RIO-N) showed its faith in both a Cantex discovery and Yemen by signing onto a joint venture at the Suwar and Wadi Qutabah nickel, copper, cobalt and platinum group element projects. Vale agreed to spend US$2 million by the end of August and has the right to earn up to a 60% interest in the projects through a series of payments and activity thresholds. And while it was Vale that ultimately signed on the dotted line, Ulansky says the process of bringing companies over to view the properties won Yemen no small number of converts.

"Without fail, every time we brought any company over there --and prior to the JV with Vale we had BHP Billiton and all the major companies over to see it -- and without fail, everyone said it was the opposite of what they thought. You get treated like family there," he says. And while Cantex, which is only in the exploration stage, has felt that family feeling by having things like paved roads laid down from the capital to its projects by the government, the country is in the process of making larger gestures to the industry as a whole.

Representatives from Yemen used the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada convention in Toronto in March to announce they are in the process of passing a new mining law that will make opening a mine in the country easier.

Currently, any new mining licence must work its way individually through parliament and be put to a vote. The revised law, if signed, would mean that if companies met the laid out requirements, mining licences could be granted without a parliamentary vote.

Such an adjustment not only increases transparency but also efficiency, as companies wouldn't have to put up with excruciating waiting times or the uncertainty that generally goes with parliamentary processes. Yemen's ambassador to Canada, Khalid Bahah, says he expects the new law to be passed within two to three months. And while there is currently a healthy debate around the proposal, as there should be with any new legislation, he says there is little in the way of real, resolute opposition to it.

That process of winning over parliament has been, no doubt, made easier by the fact that the International Finance Corp. (IFC) -- a branch of the World Bank -- helped prepare the new law.

The new law will have little impact on Cantex -- exploration permits require only the signature of the mines minister, something Cantex has had no difficulties securing -- but Ulansky says it is yet another sign of the positive developments under way in the region.

"When we first went, it was the Wild West," he says. "I mean kids that were ten years old were carrying AK-47s. We were never threatened. . . but still, it's not like that anymore. It's completely changed: now there are no weapons in the capital city at all." The prevalence of weapons when Ulansky and Fipke first arrived was an offshoot of the country's turbulent history.

Until 1990, Yemen was split between the Marxist South Yemen and North Yemen. That partition arose after the north, which was part of the Ottoman Empire, became independent in 1918, leaving the south under British control. South Yemen eventually gained its independence in 1967 and quickly turned to a Marxist ideology. And when unification came in 1990, it wasn't without its hiccups. There was a brief secessionist movement in the south in 1994, but by all accounts that was quickly put to bed and the country has held together peacefully for the last 19 years.

"The president has done a great job," Fipke says of Ali Abdallah Saleh, who has served as president since 1990. "After the war in 1990 between the north and south, he amalgamated things and brought a lot of the losers into the government."

Yemen has a population of 23 million people and its economy has been largely based on agriculture and oil. It turned out 320,660 barrels of oil per day in 2007, and familiar names like Nexen (NXY-T) have long operated within its borders without major incident.

Despite its oil reserves, Yemen has remained one of the poorest countries in the Arab world and the government has set out to diversify its economy in an effort to improve things.

"They realize their oil reserves, one day, are going to dry up," Ulansky says. "They see their future being in the mineral sector and they are putting a considerable amount of their energy into making sure they'll have the mineral sector to rely on."

In 2006, the government began its official economic reform to bolster non-oil sectors of the economy. The international community got behind the move by pledging roughly US$5 billion for development projects -- a significant amount considering the country's gross domestic product is currently US$60 billion.

As for the development of mining, there is activity beyond Cantex. On March 1, the foundation stone for the country's first mine was laid by Prime Minister Ali Mujawar.

The Jabali zinc project is a joint venture between British firm ZincOx Resources (ZOX-L), which holds a 52% stake and Ansan Wikfs Investments, which holds the remaining 48%. The mine, on the Sulb Mountain in Nehm area, 110 km northeast of the capital of Sanaa, will be built for roughly US$200 million.
Targeted production is 80,000 tonnes annually with zinc ready for export in mid-2010. Jabali hosts reserves of 8.7 million tonnes at an average grade of 9.2% zinc.



To: E. Charters who wrote (150506)3/13/2009 9:06:05 PM
From: Goose94  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 314091
 
What's the history of gold mining in Shinning Tree area?

********************************************************

News Friday March 13th, 2009
Platinex (PTX-V) has released results from the first 19 drill holes of a 26-hole, 1,270-metre diamond drilling program on its Herrick prospect in Churchill township, Ont. The Herrick prospect is one of several historic gold deposits located at Platinex's Shining Tree gold project. Drilling commenced on Feb. 8, 2009, and was completed on Feb. 21, 2009.

The program set out to confirm gold mineralization indicated by channel sampling of veins by earlier workings through systematic sampling beneath the surface exposures of the Herrick vein system. This objective has been met, with the additional indication that significant gold mineralization occurs in broader zones than was previously recognized.

Results of the drilling program are presented as gold values in grams per tonne over calculated true thickness intersections. Two parallel vein systems (West zone, Central zone) dip steeply west, and are between 15 and 50 metres apart. The Herrick shaft was sunk on the West zone circum 1920. Later underground work drifted on both the West and Central zones.

Two holes in particular confirm the presence of significant widths of gold mineralization.

SIGNIFICANT WIDTHS OF GOLD MINERALIZATION AT SHINING TREE

Hole ID Au (g/t) Core length (m) Calculated true width (m)

HP09-24 4.11 5.20 2.98

including 6.23 3.20 1.84

HP09-36 3.19 7.15 5.05

including 4.70 3.35 2.37

Other significant results from the latest drilling program include the following.

OTHER SIGNIFIANT RESULTS FROM SHINING TREE

Hole ID Au (g/t) Core length (m) Calculated true width (m)

HP09-16 3.84 1.65 1.35

HP09-17 3.68 2.70 1.35

HP09-21 6.84 1.25 0.80

HP09-27 2.63 10.40 6.24

including 5.46 2.70 1.62

HP09-29 8.52 1.00 0.82

HP09-30 6.47 1.81 1.03

HP09-31 2.88 3.00 2.37

HP09-37 2.09 5.60 4.10

including 4.88 2.28 1.67

Seven holes remain to be logged and sampled. Results for these holes are expected to be announced in early April. Many of the samples will be subject to pulp and metallic assay methods which deliver improved accuracy in grade estimates.

"We are very pleased with these results," commented James Trusler, president and chief executive officer of Platinex. "The Herrick vein system is consistently mineralized and has an excellent hit rate."

The Shining Tree gold project claims cover a number of other gold prospects with historic underground development including the Churchill and Caswell vein systems. Historic drilling of the Herrick vein structure indicates that all of these holes intersected gold mineralization similar in tenor to Platinex's recent drilling assay results, and directly related to the north-south Herrick vein structure along a strike length of 350 metres. Till sampling over the entire property conducted by Platinex in 2008 recovered widespread highly anomalous gold grain counts indicating the occurrence of previous unexplored gold mineralization in several locations.

Two distinct styles of mineralization can be present within the West or Central zones -- narrow quartz vein breccias or quartz ribbon structures variably mineralized with fine-grained muddy brown pyrite stringers, and wider quartz-carbonate stockwork zones with variable chlorite-sericite-iron carbonate alteration and pyrite mineralization. Both the Central and West zones are open to depth and along strike. There is also evidence that the Herrick is part of a series of locally gold-bearing parallel vein structures on the property, which have yet to be explored in detail.

Diamond drilling was contracted to Laframboise Drilling Inc. of Earlton, Ont. A sampling quality control program consisted of inserting known standards, blanks and duplicate core samples into the sample stream during the logging and sampling process. All assaying to date has been completed by Swastika Laboratories, located near Kirkland Lake, Ont. All 22 quality control samples have returned results well within acceptable error and with no indication of cross contamination of samples. The laboratory also implements an internal QA/QC program using standards, blanks and check assaying.

Core logging and sampling took place at a gated core facility near Gowganda, Ont. NQ sized drill core was cut in half with a diamond saw. One-half is archived at the core facility. Core samples were shipped directly to the laboratory in Swastika by Platinex personnel. The samples were analyzed for gold using standard fire assay techniques.

Mr. Trusler, PEng, is the qualified person as defined by National Instrument 43-101 with respect to the content of this release.

DRILL RESULTS FROM SHINING TREE

True

Interval thick

Hole ID Zone From (m) To (m) (m) Au g/t (m)

HP09-16 West 22.0 25.50 3.50 0.51 2.87

HP09-16 Central 48.2 49.85 1.65 3.84 1.35

HP09-17 West 33.5 37.70 4.20 3.05 2.10

including 34.0 36.70 2.70 3.68 1.35

HP09-18 West 22.3 23.30 1.00 5.68 0.78

HP09-19 Central 10.0 11.15 1.15 1.24 0.94

HP09-20 Central NSV

HP09-21 Central 12.75 14.00 1.25 6.84 0.80

HP09-22 Central 14 21.40 7.40 0.71 2.53

HP09-23 West 14.4 15.70 1.30 5.62 0.92

HP09-24 West 40.8 46.00 5.20 4.11 2.98

including 40.8 44.00 3.20 6.23 1.84

HP09-25 West 13.4 13.80 0.04 7.36 0.26

HP09-26 West 17.4 18.00 0.06 3.22 0.30

HP09-27 West 18.6 29.00 10.40 2.63 6.24

including 5.46 1.62

including 4.84 1.20

HP09-28 West 24.9 26.30 1.40 1.94 0.84

HP09-29 West 14 20.50 6.50 1.77 5.33

including 8.52 0.82

HP09-30 West 18.2 28.40 10.20 1.53 5.81

including 6.47 1.03

HP09-31 West 24.2 31.40 7.20 1.74 5.69

HP09-36 Central 36.35 43.50 7.15 3.19 5.06

including 4.70 2.37

HP09-37 Central 18.4 24.00 5.60 2.09 4.10

including 4.88 1.67

HP09-41 Central 124.5 125.50 1 0.58 0.08