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PJX Resources Inc
Symbol PJX
Shares Issued 37,974,201
Close 2014-07-08 C$ 0.135
Market Cap C$ 5,126,517
Recent Sedar Documents

PJX Resources identifies gabbro arch at Vine

2014-07-17 09:06 ET - News Release

Mr. John Keating reports

VINE PROPERTY POTENTIAL FOR ZINC-LEAD-SILVER MINERALIZATION

Preliminary drilling and additional geophysics on the Vine property have discovered what PJX Resources Inc. believes may be a structural feature, known as a gabbro arch, and known to be associated with lead, zinc and silver sulphide mineralization. The structure may be similar in nature to those that occur at the Fors and Smoker occurrences, on the company's West Basin property, and at the former Sullivan mine located 35 kilometres to the north of the Vine and West Basin properties.

Dave Pighin, PGeo, consulting geologist managing the Vine drilling program, commented: "Preliminary drilling and geophysics appear to have identified a possible structural feature that could have acted as a pathway for fluids to transport and deposit potential zinc-lead-silver mineralization. The gabbro, intersected by recent drilling, would have later intruded along the mineralizing structure. This situation may be similar to the gabbro arch or gabbro dike at the Fors, Smoker and Sullivan areas. Based on this model, additional geophysics and drilling are required to differentiate between the possible gabbro arch and potential zinc-lead-silver massive sulphide mineralization in vicinity of the arch." Mr. Pighin was responsible for discovering the Fors lead-zinc-silver sedex (sedimentary exhalative) occurrence in 1966 and the Vine lead-zinc-silver-gold vein in 1976 while working with Cominco.

Current exploration is presently focused on the large eastern gravity target area (see press release dated May 6, 2014) in which the possible mineralizing structure and the associated subvertical-dipping gabbro arch occur. The gabbro is believed to crosscut the gravity anomaly in a north-south orientation based on preliminary magnetic data. The company also believes that the eastern, and an additional western, gravity anomaly may represent two possible separate vents, similar to the Fors and Smoker occurences, and the Stemwinder and Sullivan vents in the Sullivan basin. More detailed geophysics is being planned to define potential lead-zinc-silver sulphide mineralization within the eastern and western gravity target areas.

Dr. Trygve Hoy (PEng), former research economic geologist with the British Columbia Department of Mines, noted in a report to PJX about the regional and local geological significance of the Vine and West Basin properties: "In summary, the Vine and West Basin area has potential for discovery of a significant lead-zinc-silver sedex deposit. The area is within a highly favourable structural and metallogenic belt, has characteristics and controls that are similar to those in the Sullivan camp area, has known Proterozoic-age lead-zinc-silver mineralization and a prominent geophysical target. Future exploration should be directed to mainly defining more rigorously the gravity geophysical anomaly and systematic diamond drilling to test the footwall quartzite horizon as well as the overlying Sullivan horizon."

Dr. Hoy was a research economic geologist with the British Columbia Department of Mines for 28 years prior to becoming an exploration consultant in 2002. He co-edited the major treatise on the Sullivan deposit, titled, "The Geological Environment of the Sullivan Deposit," and was an author of several papers in this volume.

"We are encouraged by the results," stated John Keating, president and chief executive officer of PJX. "Our eastern and western gravity anomalies cover large areas. Only three holes have been drilled to a depth of the footwall quartzite in the eastern target area. Two of these holes, drilled in the 1990s, intersected zinc-lead-silver massive sulphide mineralization. The third is PJX's recent hole, which intersected a possible important structure. In addition, the western gravity target area has never been drilled."

Sections and maps of the gravity anomalies, and the gabbro arch relationship to the Fors, Smoker and Sullivan vents, can be seen on the company's website.

The foregoing geological disclosure has been reviewed by John Keating, PGeo (a qualified person for the purpose of National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects). Mr. Keating is the president, CEO and a director of PJX.

In addition to zinc-lead-silver mineralization on the Vine and West Basin properties, the company continues to explore for the bedrock source of placer gold found in creeks on its other properties in the Cranbrook area of British Columbia. More will be announced about these results in the near future.

We seek Safe Harbor.

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