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Gold/Mining/Energy : Nuinsco Resources (NWI) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumell who wrote (2067)3/22/1999 9:41:00 AM
From: Tom Cat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5821
 
Brumell,
I am away from my real time provider , what is the opening bid and ask?
TC



To: Brumell who wrote (2067)3/22/1999 11:48:00 AM
From: E. Charters  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5821
 
In Lynn Lake and Thompson it was noted that the size of the mafic intrusive had no relation to the size of the associated orebody. I asked Puskas, of NVE if he felt that was true about this situation and he averred that he felt that this was so here, too. For one thing we are seeing erosional roots, and the original mass may have been much larger. For another, the amount of nickel a mafic body may source is purely haphazard. Some may contain more than others. The nickel is a differentiate of one kind or another and may separate before the emplacement of the Gabbro. It depends on what theory you embrace as to where you want to put the nickel emplacement in time, but both theories allow the overlying body to be independent of the size of the ore. At any rate, the actual cases support a positive outlook for just about any surface expression of an intrusion.

mineletter.com

EC<:-}



To: Brumell who wrote (2067)3/22/1999 6:01:00 PM
From: mineman  Respond to of 5821
 
Brumell, the gabbro plug may be the remnant of an eroded-off larger differentiated intrusive such as the Rocher-Quenonisca or another completely eroded body, or it may have been injected into a cavernous zone-of-weakness along a fracture from a large body below or alongside.

If this is the case then any of the other bulls-eye mag highs in the area could be similar gabbro bodies which have the potential for hosting similar types of nickel-rich sulphides because the ultramafic plugs were forced out from the same differentiating body at depth. NWI's plug could only be one of many.