Kirkland Lake drills wide gold intervals outside Detour Lake resources
Highlights from the Central Saddle zone include 26.9 metres of 13.95 g/t gold; and 58 metres of 3.63 g/t gold. Drilling in the eastern portion of Saddle returned 105.9 metres of 1.21 g/t gold; and 120.3 metres of 1.1 g/t gold, confirming continuous mineralization to the west and below the Main pit resources and reserves.
Notable intercepts from areas below the West pit reserves include 119 metres of 1.47 g/t gold; and 128 metres of 0.92 g/t gold. Grounds west of the West pit returned 11.3 metres of 2.34 g/t gold, with the mineralization extended by 300 metres west of the latest reserves.
“With today’s results, we are increasingly confident that a large continuous deposit is situated along the Detour Mine Trend (DMT) that extends from the Main pit, through the Saddle zone and continues beyond the West pit location. We are also extremely encouraged by the wide, high-grade intersections being reported at depth across the Saddle zone, which confirm the potential for strong growth in mineral resources and mineral reserves in support of future open-pit and as well as underground mining,” Tony Makuch, Kirkland Lake Gold’s president and CEO, said in a release.
Makuch added that the company plans to release an updated NI 43-101 technical report for Detour Lake by the end of March, which will outline a production profile in line with the company’s prior guidance for 680,000 to 720,000 oz. a year between 2021 and 2023 from the open pit mine, increasing to approximately 800,000 oz. annually in 2025. The report will not include any drilling completed by Kirkland Lake Gold since acquiring the asset – these results will be incorporated into a new mine plan that is expected early next year.
Results from central Sadddle suggest a similar style and grade of mineralization to the existing Main and West pits with wide and high-grade gold intervals near the lower limits of the existing resource shell. Assays from the Detour Mine Trend, east of the West pit, appear to confirm the continuity of mineralization through the western portion of Saddle and into an area under the West pit.
Exploration at Detour Lake is ongoing with 12 drills, which are expected to drill approximately 270,000 metres by year-end.
(This article first appeared in the Canadian Mining Journal)