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Gold/Mining/Energy : ABER RESOURCES -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: George J. Tromp who wrote (1265)4/9/1999 7:18:00 PM
From: Gord Bolton  Respond to of 2006
 
1) If it was brecciated as you say George, It was not 8 meters of Kimberlite. Are you now referring to the intersection that recorded two separate intersections. If not why not name the drill hole, the date that it was released and the date that you think it was drilled.

2)How many years have you been following Diamond mining? Anyone who did not know that larger stones are valued much higher than smaller stones probably knows nothing worth while about the diamond business.

3)The Aber court documents are filed with the court. You or anyone else can obtain them from the court. They may charge you for the photocopy charges. Do your own research. Aber might also supply you with copies of their documents.

4) Were you planning on taking part of a private placement in Aberex?



To: George J. Tromp who wrote (1265)4/9/1999 8:20:00 PM
From: WillP  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 2006
 
I'm unclear as to what you are trying to suggest about Winspear's lack of total disclosure. I do find it mildly amusing that the post appears on the "Aber Resources" thread...or subject...or whatever these thingies are called.

I remember the Aber releases of its large diameter coring mini bulk samples for A154-South, A154-North, A418, and A21. Does anyone else? What information was released at that point? Recall? Anyone?

As an example, Aber released the results of eight LDC holes into A154-South and two into A154-North on May 29, 1995. What information was presented? A hole by hole breakdown and total summary for kimberlite interval, total kimberlite weight, carats recovered, and grade per tonne.

There was no mention of stone sizes.

The valuation was announced on June 27, 1995. Still no mention of stone size. They neglected to even state the size of the largest stone recovered.

Throughout 1996, Aber released the results of the bulk sample. Each release included the tonnage mined, carats recovered, and the size of the largest diamond, and the largest gem diamond recovered. That's all.

Is this "total disclosure"?

Now don't get me wrong. I don't have a major problem with the information provided by Aber Resources. Certainly, their disclosure over the years has been much better than Diamet's...in my opinion at least.

I just fail to understand the rationale behind requesting Winspear, and Winspear only, tell all.

Regards