To: VAUGHN who wrote (580 ) 10/27/1997 9:20:00 AM From: Jimsy Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 11676
VAUGHN - Helpful for map printing, any map: 1. Press print screen on any map 2. Open up Windows Paint and paste map into here 3. Now copy just the outline of the map (hold down mouse button and draw a dotted outline around just the map) 4. Paste the map into Corel, Windows draw, or elsewhere and scale it up to 81/2x11, full colour Presto - you have a beautiful full size colour map that is somewhat more easily readable! And this process works for anything you find on the net. THis should work in Windows 3.1 and 95, it does on my computer because I have both systems. From weakest to strongest response dark blue, light blue, greenish, yellow, red, purple. A rough rule of thumb the colour spectrum is put over the contours blue through to purple just like a rainbow. So whether it be mag em gravity etc blue is usually your weakest reading purple your strongest. And the gravity map is a reading of the pull of gravity of the rocks below, higher gravity inferring denser and possibly mineralisation. Don't be too concerned if drilling locations show off the denser, ie more purple areas. If you thought of the Harp Lake intrusion as the top of a ball just barely protruding in the vicinity of the NDT property, and the surface of the ball of prime location between the rock masses of interest, then step back drilling to the other colored areas is to intersect the rock masses of interest (troctolites), at depth. My perception is that the surface area of interest dips to the NW around the NDT property, to the NE from the Major General property all the way down to the Mineral Hill on the Cypress property south of Labrador. Anywhere along this 15-20km and at depth could be of prime interest, so we have quite an exploration challenge to find the larger dykes and ponding of massive sulphides rich in nickel/copper.