Eyes on the prize in northeastern Ontario: Goldeye Explorations Ltd. just one of the juniors in the Shining Tree district.

AuthorLarmour, Adelle
PositionFIVE JUNIOR MINING COMPANIES TO WATCH

Goldeye Explorations is striking while the iron is hot and right now, gold is the mineral of choice in the emerging Shining Tree district.

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Blaine Webster, president and CEO of the Richmond Hill-based junior miner, knows the importance of mineral development when the market is strong.

"Sandy Lake and Shining Tree are the hinterland," he said.

"I think it is important to make sure these projects go ahead," he added, warning that there is a narrow window through which money flows to support resource development projects within the overall commodity cycle.

Sandy Lake and Shining Tree are two of several projects Goldeye has been working on. The remote Sandy Lake property, 200 kilometres north of Red Lake, is 50 square kilometres. Its geology is similar to Red Lake, with a chip sample returning six metres of 11 grams per tonne of gold (g/t Au). Talks for a winter drill program are in progress with the Sandy Lake First Nation.

In the northeastern portion of the province, Goldeye has focused on its Shining Tree property in Tyrrell Township, located 90 kilometres south of Timmins. The property is approximately 34 square kilometres, while a separate 28 claim units are located in the Leonard and Fawcett Townships, hosting a potential nickel-copper deposit. It is accessible by paved and gravel roads and there is hydro on the property.

Webster, a geophysicist who works on regional patterns, said the geology in the Shining Tree district is similar to other areas that host significant gold deposits in the Abitibi Greenstone Belt, like Timmins and Kirkland Lake. Consequently, Goldeye staked the property in 1990 when the Temagami Land Caution opened up. The land caution was a First Nation protest in the '70s against development on Crown land in the Temagami area, encompassing 10,000 square kilometres.

Goldeye began its Tyrrell property exploration as a grassroots' project, optioning the property to a junior that discovered Hydro Creek in 1993. Goldeye went public in 1998 and discovered the Big Dome 1.5 kilometres to the southeast of Hydro Creek.

It is using technology called borehole induced polarization (IP) with 3-D inversions to capture complete images of the rock surrounding the boreholes in order to locate the sulfides in which gold often occurs. These targets are then drilled.

Webster said the same technology was used at the Lake Shore Gold deposit...

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