Cornish Lithium hits new, high-grade mineralization in Cornwall

Cornish Lithium, a start-up hoping to lead the development of a battery metals industry in the UK, has hit the jackpot with the discovery of a new zone of high-grade copper-tin mineralization at Strongbow Exploration’s (TSX-V: SBW) United Downs exploration project, in Cornwall.

The finding comes as the British miner continues to explore
Strongbow’s licences in Cornwall, south-west England, for lithium in brine
occurrences. Rights to any hard rock mineralization, however, belongs to the Canadian
company.

The mining district where the discovery was made — Gwennap —
was the world’s richest copper production in the eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries.

Cornwall’s last mining operation, South Crofty, closed in
1998. But in July 2016, Vancouver-based Strongbow acquired the copper-tin
project and mineral rights for 15,000 hectares.

Partner Cornish Lithium’s drilling in the area intersected
semi-massive sulphide mineralization, at between 90 and 105 metres deep.

The company is drilling further to confirm the width of the
mineralization as well as the strike and dip of the mineralised zone.

In an upcoming exploration phase, Cornish Lithium has
decided to also begin exploring for lithium in hard rock form, having
discovered evidence that it was mined on the surface during World War II.

Additionally, the miner plans to explore for other metals
used in car batteries such as cobalt and copper.

The junior revealed in 2018 that it needed about £5 million ($6.2m) to go ahead with its plans. Since then, it has secured more than £2m ($2.5m) from private backers and it’s already aiming at listing on the London Stock Exchange by 2022.. 

Cornish Lithium has also expanded and consolidated the areas over which it has
rights to explore for lithium and other minerals. Its team has assembled a vast
amount of historical data and reconstructed it in 3D digital format, enabling a
totally new understanding of the geological potential of Cornwall’s mineral
deposits.

Most lithium is produced in South America, Australia and
China, but the UK government designated it last year a metal of strategic
importance to the country.