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Gold/Mining/Energy : SOUTHERNERA (t.SUF) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Donald McRobb who wrote (3364)5/15/1999 3:16:00 PM
From: Donald McRobb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7235
 


The Northern Miner Volume 85 Number 12 May 17-23, 1999

SouthernEra finds kimberlite at Munn Lake -- Drill-testing uncovers narrow kimberlite body

By Rob Robertson

Vancouver

Toronto-based SouthernEra Resources (SUF-T) may have found the source of diamond-bearing kimberlite float boulders
at the Back Lake project in the Northwest Territories.

The company discovered a kimberlite sill while conducting a 10-hole diamond drilling program. Results from previous
sonic drilling had suggested that a kimberlite body was associated with a north-northwesterly trending lake-bottom
depression.

The recent program tested an area measuring 300 by 150 metres. Eight of the holes intersected kimberlite with an estimated
true width ranging from 0.25 to 12 metres. The kimberlite sill dips about 30¡ to the northeast and remains open along strike
and downdip.

SouthernEra says the kimberlite hosts up to 60% eclogitic xenoliths, and present in the core are chrome diopsides up to 8 cm
long, pyrope and eclogitic garnets, picroilmenites and chromites. More than 40% of the recovered pyrope garnets are said to
occur in the G-10 field. Microdiamond results from a 50-kg core sample are pending.

The kimberlite float boulders were discovered in the summer of 1997 on the western shores of Munn Lake. The float
material, which contains boulders up to 25 metres in diameter, yielded 62 macrodiamonds and 164 micros from a 581-kg
sample. (A macro is defined as measuring more than 0.5 mm in at least one dimension.) The largest recovered diamond
weighed 0.12 carat, with one other weighing 0.03 carat and three weiging 0.01 carat.

The Back Lake project is 100 km south of the Lac de Gras region. SouthernEra is the operator and holds a 70% interest. The
remaining interest is carried, with Kalahari Resources (KLA-V) holding 19.38% and Island-Arc Resources (IAR-V) owning
10.62%. Kennecott Canada Exploration, a division of London-based Rio Tinto (RTP-N), holds a back-in right to earn a 30%
interest from SouthernEra.

Elsewhere in the territories, the drill testing of five geophysical targets at the Yamba Lake property has resulted in the
discovery of a new narrow kimberlite body, dubbed S141. SouthernEra can earn a 51% interest in the property from
Tanqueray Resources (TQY-A) and partner Mill City International (MIY-V) by spending $10 million on exploration over four
years. Tanqueray and Mill City each hold a 44.5% interest in Yamba Lake, whereas Cypango Ventures (CAV-V) holds 11%.

Yamba Lake lies 46 km north of the Ekati diamond mine. Previous work has identified six kimberlite pipes, including the
Ptarmigan and T-10.

The S141 discovery hole was collared at minus 45¡ into an elongated, land-based magnetic low, 3 km southeast of the
Ptarmigan pipe. A 14.75-metre interval of kimberlite was intersected at a down-hole depth of 62-76.7 metres. A second hole
is testing the dimensions of this new discovery.

To date, 29 airborne geophysical targets have been followed-up with ground magnetic and electromagnetic surveys, which
are continuing on additional targets.

SouthernEra also re-tested the Ptarmigan pipe with one new hole, and the T-10 pipe, with three. Ptarmigan has yielded
indicator mineral microprobe chemistry results that suggest diamond potential, whereas past microdiamond results from
T-10 include the recovery of six macros and 62 micros from 83.6 kg of sample.

The processing of more than 1,000 till samples collected from the property last summer continues to yield positive results.
Several pyrope garnets with "excellent G-10 chemistry" have been recovered from samples, SouthernEra says, adding that
these results suggest good potential for the discovery of further kimberlite bodies.

SouthernEra expects to keep drilling into the summer as it evaluates land-based and near-shore kimberlite targets.

On the Lac de Gras property block, preliminary microdiamond results have been returned from the EG-5 kimberlite pipe,
discovered earlier this year by Kennecott. A 129.4-kg sample of core from the third hole yielded one macro and 27 micros.
The EG-5 kimberlite was found in shallow water about 75 metres from the southern shore of Lac de Gras. Four holes were
drilled into the pipe. The first two holes were lost, and the third hole recovered 46.7 metres of kimberlite before being
abandoned as a result of difficult drilling conditions.

A fourth hole pulled 183 metres of kimberlite, ending in kimberlite. Pending are microdiamond results from more than 600
kg of sample recovered from hole 4.

The Lac de Gras block is contiguous with the southern boundary of the Ekati mine property and is a 60-40 joint venture
between Kennecott and SouthernEra.

A land-based, narrow, intrusive kimberlite body discovered by Kennecott on the DHK claim block at the southwestern end
of Lac de Gras yielded six micros from a 7-kg sample. A 2.1-metre true width interval of volcaniclastic kimberlite was
encountered 150 metres northeast of the DD42 kimberlite body. The kimberlite consists of 70% olivine and up to 1% purple
pyrope garnets.

Kennecott can earn a 51% interest in the DHK block, leaving SouthernEra with a 25% stake and DHK Resources with the
remainder. DHK Resources is owned equally by Dentonia Resources (DTA-V), Horseshoe Gold Mining (HSX-A) and Kettle
River Resources (KRR-T).