Mr. Michel David reports
WALKER ANNOUNCES DRILL RESULTS FROM THE LAPON GOLD PROJECT
Walker River Resources Corp. has provided additional drill results from the late 2019 reverse circulation drill programs on the Lapon gold project, located approximately 60 kilometres southeast of Yerington, Nev.
- RC drill hole LC 19-42 returned 96.03 grams per tonne Au (uncut) over 13.7 metres, including 547.05 g/t Au over 1.5 metres, 115.38 g/t Au over 1.5 metres and 199.06 g/t Au over 1.5 metres, at a depth of approximately 76 metres.
- RC drill hole LC 19-43 returned 94.81 g/t Au (uncut) over 6.1 metres including 305.25 g/t Au over 1.5 metres and 73.86 g/t Au over 1.5 metres, at a depth of approximately 84 metres.
- RC drill hole LC 19-45 returned 346.4 g/t Au (uncut) over 1.5 metres at a depth of three metres.
Key highlights
- Holes 42 and 43 were only the second and third holes carried out in this new zone discovered in hole 19-35 which returned 1.37 g/t Au over 22.9 metres (see news release dated Sept. 4, 2019).
- Significantly, in hole 42, the assay interval of 199.06 g/t Au over 1.5 metres was in granite at the contact with the altered zone.
- To date, mineralization has been discovered in broad, altered, fractured and brecciated northeast-trending structural zones. Anomalous gold values are denoted in many areas within this zone, and significant higher-grade mineralization over significant widths is located within subvertical en echelon zones of intense alteration and gold enrichment.
- To date all the drill holes carried out in the Lapon Rose and the newly discovered zone have returned gold mineralization.
- The 2019 exploration program was focused on the expansion and delineation of the gold mineralized zones discovered by the company, as well as exploring other areas of the project in the search for new mineralization and potential discoveries.
- Walker's initial geological mapping and prospecting on the Lapon gold project, followed by its drill programs, have demonstrated the potential for the emplacement of significant gold mineralization.
SUMMARY OF DRILL RESULTS
Hole From (m) To (m) Length** (m) Assay (Au g/t) uncut Notes
LC 19-42 65.5 79.2 13.7 96.03 New zone
incl. 65.5 67.0 71.5 547.05
incl. 68.6 70.1 1.5 115.38
incl. 77.7 79.2 1.5 199.06
LC 19-43 82.3 88.4 6.1 94.81 New zone
incl. 82.3 83.8 1.5 305.25
incl. 86.9 88.4 1.5 73.86
LC 19-45 1.5 3.0 1.5 346.4 Honeypot. Abandoned due
to caving at 10 m.
** True widths at approximately 80 per cent.The Lapon Rose zone has now been drilled over a strike length of about 365 metres. The width of the zone now exceeds 250 metres, and the zone has been drilled over a vertical extent of 400 metres. The zone remains open along strike and depth.
The morphology of the newly discovered zone, located underneath granite about 130 metres south of Lapon Rose, is unknown at this time.
Drilling at the Honeypot has been challenging. Located in an intense fault zone at intrusive contacts, the company has been unable to attain the drill targets or achieve significant drill lengths, using the current type of RC drill rig. Holes LC 19-45 and LC 19-46 were both abandoned at a depth of 10 metres due to caving.
Significantly though, the two holes (LC 19-45 and LC 19-46) were abandoned at very shallow depths, both returned significant gold values, including 346.4 g/t Au in LC 19-45 and 1.05 g/t Au over 1.5 metres in hole LC 19-46 at a depth of three metres.
Originally, the Honeypot discovery was made during drill road construction, with alteration and visible gold in an outcrop. The company is presently analyzing the type of drill rig required to successfully drill this location.
At the Pikes Peak portion of the Lapon gold project, road access construction is complete. Numerous workings including shafts and adits are located on the claims. Initial mapping and sampling returned significant results including 9.0 g/t Au and 2.22 per cent Cu from an outcrop. Further results from the Lapon gold project will be released as they become available.
About the Lapon project
The Lapon gold project consists of 147 claims (2,940 acres) that include Lapon Canyon, the newly acquired Pikes Peaks claims four kilometres to the north and the Rattlesnake Range Front claims three kilometres to the west and over 600 metres lower than the present drilling at Lapon Canyon. The Lapon gold project is situated in the Wassuk Range, easily accessible by secondary state roads from the main highway (25 kilometres). A state grid power transmission line passes within three kilometres of the Lapon project.
The Lapon gold project is located within the Walker Lane shear zone, a 100-kilometre-wide structural corridor extending in a southeast direction from Reno, Nev. Within this trend, numerous gold, silver and copper mines are located, notably the historic Comstock Lode mines in Virginia City. Also, the past-producing Esmeralda/Aurora gold mine, with reported production of about one million ounces and the Anaconda open-pit copper mine in Yerington, Nev.
The Lapon gold project is cut by a series of steeply dipping cross-fault structures cutting across the Walker trend, analogous to other cross-fault structures responsible for many gold and base metal deposits in the world. These faults are heavily sheared and altered (sericite, iron oxides) with abundant silica, varying in width from 60 to 300 metres. Four of these structures have been discovered at Lapon Canyon, and at least two can be traced for over four kilometres.
The Rattlesnake and Pikes Peak claims cover over eight kilometres of possible extensions of the range front zones to the west, north and south of Lapon Canyon, adding several additional drill target areas to the Lapon gold project. Rattlesnake and Pikes Peak contain numerous historical workings that consist of, milling facilities several adits at different levels, underground workings with vertical shafts, and a network of existing roads providing access to connect all the historical workings.
Small-scale high-grade mining began at Lapon Canyon in 1914. Approximately 600 metres of drifts and raises were developed from two adits and a two-stamp mill was built. Further underground work was carried out, returning numerous assay values in the range of one ounce per ton, with a sample at the end of an adit returning 20.6 ounces per ton (National Instrument 43-101, Montgomery and Barr, 2004). Additional work at Lapon Canyon in the following years included the installation of a ball mill and milling facilities.
Sampling methodology, chain of custody, quality control and quality assurance
All sampling was conducted under the supervision of the company's project geologists and the chain of custody from the drill to the sample preparation facility was continuously monitored. A blank or certified reference material was inserted approximately every 10th sample. The Lapon Canyon samples were delivered to American Assays Laboratories' certified laboratory facilities in Sparks, Nev. The samples were crushed, pulverized and the sample pulps digested and analyzed for gold using fire assay fusion and a 50 g gravimetric finish. Intensely altered samples used a two-kilogram pulp screened to 100 microns. Duplicate assay on screen undersize. Assay of entire oversize fraction.
The scientific and technical content and interpretations contained in this news release have been reviewed, verified and approved by E. Gauthier, geol, Eng (OIQ) a director of the company, and a qualified person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects.
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