Test mining at Madsen Project a "resounding success".

PositionBriefs - Pure Gold Mining

A test mining program by Pure Gold Mining at Red Lake yielded 56 per cent more gold than expected.

The Vancouver mine developer is working on a feasibility study to bring the former Madsen Mine in northwestern Ontario mine back into production. Part of that process began last June with the extraction of a 7,100-tonne bulk sample.

In a Nov. 28 news release, the company said the results "exceeded expectations," with the tonnage, grade, and mining width greater than predicted from their resource model.

An overall average grade of 10.2 grams per tonne gold was returned from 1,555 muck samples collected from during mining that bulk sample.

Using a 4.0 grams per tonne gold cut-off, the bulk sample estimate includes 46 per cent more tonnes, eight per cent higher gold grade and an estimated 56 per cent more ounces of gold than predicted from the geological model that forms the company's mine plan.

"Our test mining program has been a resounding success, checking each of the boxes we laid out when we initiated the program earlier this year," said Pure Gold president-CEO Darin Labrenz in a statement.

"From the first round blasted in the ramp to the completion of the program in November, our team has demonstrated it can visually identify, and easily follow gold mineralization underground providing a strong validation of our geologic model."

Madsen is the company's flagship project, located just southwest of the community of Red Lake, along Highway 618.

The current indicated resource estimate is 1,744,000 ounces gold at 8.7 g/t gold (in 6.2 million tonnes) with an inferred resource of 296,000 ounces gold at 7.9 g/t gold (in 1.2 million tonnes).

The feasibility study, with a new resource...

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