High-grade intercepts from GT Gold’s Saddle South

GT Gold’s final 2019 results release is from the Saddle South target at the Tatogga project with only four holes completed at this zone last year.

Drill highlights include:

  • 53.7 metres of 10 g/t gold and 46.84 g/t silver and 14.8 metres of 4.29 g/t gold and 8.53 g/t silver in hole TTD135;
  • 1.8 metres of 30.39 g/t gold and 56.71 g/t silver in hole TTD137;
  • 11 metres of 5.53 g/t gold and 7.88 g/t silver in hole TTD139; and
  • 28.3 metres of 6.58 g/t gold and 26.46 g/t silver in hole TTD140.

All of the reported intercepts are from the first 210 metres down-hole.

“The results from the four Saddle South drill holes, which were drilled primarily to aid our understanding of the geometry of this near-surface gold-silver system, serve to remind of the optionality this target offers to the development strategy of the overall project, as well as to the significant exploration potential across the Tatogga property,” Paul Harbidge, the company’s CEO, said in a release.

Drilling to date has traced near-surface mineralization at Saddle South over 500 metres of strike, covering a width of 100 metres and down to 500 meters below surface. It remains open; the current limits of mineralization lie within a system with a total strike in excess of one kilometre.

The intercepts reported in the current release are from the central part of the Saddle South zone.

The data collected from Saddle South this year will be used to form a preliminary geological model for the zone which will guide future resource estimation work.

The zone was discovered in 2017 and is an epithermal gold-silver system.

The company’s primary exploration focus this year was Saddle North, a high-grade copper-gold porphyry system with mineralization traced to date over 700 metres of strike, for 1,400 metres to 1,600 metres down plunge and across a thickness of 200 metres to 560 metres. A geological model for Saddle North is expected by the end of the first quarter.

The 468 sq. km Tatogga project is located in B.C.’s Golden Triangle district.

(This article first appeared in the Canadian Mining Journal)