Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

SDV - SciDev Limited

Interesting article in Miningnews.net on Bass Metals which INL own 18.5% of.

WITH trial production at its Que River mine now underway, Bass Metals says the project and its other prospects at Tasmania offer plenty of opportunities for a "hungry" company.

Drilling at Bass Metals' Que River polymetallic project in Tasmania

Bass Metals' managing director Mike Rosenstreich examining drill core from the Que River polymetallic project

Speaking at the RIU Explorer's conference in Fremantle Wednesday, Bass Metals managing director Mike Rosenstreich outlined the opportunities the company saw in northeastern Tasmania.

"It's a happy hunting ground for elephants," he said.

Bass Metals' focus to date has been the Que River project, where trial mining recently began.

The Que River area was historically mined by Aberfoyle from 1978-1991 and then abandoned as uneconomic in favour of the Hellyer deposit to the north, a situation Rosenstreich views as good luck for Bass.

"Que River is in some ways a company-making project in its own right … It has never had a hungry geologist looking over it looking to fill up a hungry mill because they had this feast on their hands at Hellyer," he said.

Within the Que River, the S-Lens and PQ South prospects have "significant" exploration upside, according to Rosenstreich.

"[PQ-South] is an extraordinary area, the grades here are nothing short of spectacular - 20 m at 25% zinc … but they are quite consistent from other grades from historical drilling at this intensely mineralised area," Rosenstreich said.

"Our evaluations are based solely on remnant resource material and we're pretty confident that at least one stope area in the mine was abandoned prematurely, and we hope to win that ore out by coming at it in an open pit."

Bass Metals has already hit an unexpected high-grade zone during trial mining.

"It's very selective mining, it's high value material, so when we have unexpected finds like this our whole mining schedule is based around winning that ore and driving value out of it," Rosenstreich said.

Beyond the existing deposits Rosenstreich was hopeful there are significant other, as yet undiscovered, deposits in the Que River area.

"Bass Metals is the first explorer to go over the ground since the early 1970s. We're dealing with a wide zone of alteration … it's a monster. We think that technology has advanced and we have an appetite for drilling and we think there's excellent prospects for finding more lenses, and if we're successful we'll crack it wide open again," he said.

"We have an untested geophysical anomaly down there we're keen to follow up on, we just haven't had the ability to do that yet."

The company also has several other significant prospects in the same region of Tasmania scheduled for more drilling.

These included the Hellyer prospect, which Rosenstreich said would offer new value given the current metal price climate, and Mt Charter, as well as a zinc deposit 4km from Zinifex's Rosebery mine.

Shares in Bass Metals were up 5% to 33c in morning trading today.
 
I wish they would start licensing their technology and building more of a rep. So far they seemed to be improving perhaps once BSM gets their project up and running with INL technology they will be noticed. Looks like I'll be holding long term now.
 
hi KiwiKarlos they can't licence their tech until it is proven on a comercial scale... that is what the BFS and new plant is for.... I'd say it will be 2009 at the earliest before we see any licensing assuming all goes well.

@ Rafa, OMG 1c!! I think I'll go jump off a cliff ;) hmmmm let me see I hold 26000 INL shares so OMG I'm down $260!!! I'm ruined ;)

Tony.
 
kennas said:
1 cent. :eek:

Testing 20 cents and still holding ok. Waiting for a rebound........


sorry about that, for some reason when i looked it actually said 19.5 cents...
which is a 50% bigger fall that the 1cent, so i suggest you lot take all your wise cracks back!

:D :D :D

But seriously, i was more concerned that it was going to close below 20c resistance!

PS: and i do hold close to 200,000 of this stock!
 
Rafa said:
sorry about that, for some reason when i looked it actually said 19.5 cents...
which is a 50% bigger fall that the 1cent, so i suggest you lot take all your wise cracks back!

:D :D :D

But seriously, i was more concerned that it was going to close below 20c resistance!

PS: and i do hold close to 200,000 of this stock!
LOL. 20 cents is important, but it could probably close just under and still be ok. Would just be concerning....There's always a bit of leeway with these support lines, of course. I'll be waiting for around 24 cents before I'd be happy to be back in, even though I think it's got great potential.
 
JRV acq looks interesting
Esp when you look at this

YOUNG, NSW
Nickel/Cobalt/Scandium/Iron Laterite
Exploration Licences 5527, 5571 and 5152
Resource Statement
0.6% Ni cut-off: 167 million tonnes at 0.72% Ni, 0.07% Co
(140 million indicated, 27 million inferred)
Including 0.8% Ni cut-off: 58 million tonnes at 0.99% Ni, 0.07% Co
(50 million indicated, 8 million inferred)
In addition Low Grade 0.3% Ni cut-off: 113 million tonnes at 0.38% Ni, 0.04% Co
(95 million indicated, 18 million inferred)
Total Resource: 280 million tonnes at 0.58% Ni, 0.06% Co
(235 million indicated, 45 million inferred)
The company has been pursuing for about 2 years, a new process for the recovery of nickel, cobalt
and iron from its vast laterite resources near Young, NSW. The enhanced reaction of hydrochloric
acid in a magnesium chloride brine has been widely recognised for about 20 years. The possible
application to the treatment of nickel/cobalt laterites is of more recent origin. Many other groups
worldwide are seeking an improved treatment of laterites, so far without success. For the
relatively low grade Young resource, a treatment method needs to be found that would place any
operation located there potentially in the lower one third of nickel production cost worldwide. We
are advised by our consultants that the chloride route shows particular promise provided the
hydrochloric acid can be cheaply and effectively re-cycled for re-use. Tests have been carried out
in Canada that indicate that acid re-generation is a strong option, subject to engineering and cost
confirmation. The programme for the next 6 months will include:
1. An update of the Aspen Plus modelling of the metallurgical flowsheet;
2. Confirmatory tests for acid re-generation at a major laboratory here in Australia;
3. Independent expert review of key acid regeneration process and design issues;
4. Preliminary engineering studies to yield Capex and Opex for the operation;
5. On-going process development tests in Canada and Sydney;
6. An in-fill drilling programme of some 4000 metres at Young to provide about 10 tonnes of
metallurgical sample;and
7. Plans for a continuous test of the process at pilot plant stage at a probable cost of $12-15
million dollars.
The company can meet the cost of items 1 through 6 but item 7 will need input from a partner,
perhaps in late 2007.
 
20% of BSM plus offtake agreement, 15% of JRV plus good possibility of Intec process being used in commercial production, currently earning $2.5m a month...God, what more does the market need?

They must have tested samples of JRV's laterite deposit to move to this stage and tests must have been good. :)
 
juddy said:
20% of BSM plus offtake agreement, 15% of JRV plus good possibility of Intec process being used in commercial production, currently earning $2.5m a month...God, what more does the market need?

They must have tested samples of JRV's laterite deposit to move to this stage and tests must have been good. :)
No one is gonna chase this stock while it has a ceiling in place!(imo its at .215c which is when the large orders squash the buyers). The day ivanhoe stop selling will be the day to jump on it!
 
constable said:
No one is gonna chase this stock while it has a ceiling in place!(imo its at .215c which is when the large orders squash the buyers). The day ivanhoe stop selling will be the day to jump on it!

Sorry, that makes absolutely no sense to a long term holder. If IVN are going to sell it down to 13c then I will grab more. It certainly beats buying at 22c. Remember that some of us, being LTHs have a different mindset so chasing stock is what we avoid.
 
with Jervois having an in ground nickel resource of over 1 million tonnes of nickel - this is huge! (albeit low grade resource) INL should surge next week on this news
 
If u check the INL register Ivanhoe haven't sold a single share this calender year, as per their statement. Don't blame them for capping
Only costs $20 to check
 
INL have bought a large stake in JRV

197 mill full price shares at 1.16 cents plus 107 mil oppies

JRV is currently trading at 2.9 cents


that's a 3.5 million dollar capital gain since friday



nice
 
Doesn't look like pre open to me... :confused:

Ann in regard to JRV notice.

INL turning into an interesting company with major holdings in BSM and now JRV. Wonder where this is leading....
 
Just bumping another chart of INL here as it looks to be moving into buy territory for me. At 22 cents now, and moving towards a breakout at 23-24 cents. Around the green circle. One to watch IMO.

The indicators are saying it's recovering.

(not holding)
 

Attachments

  • INL.gif
    INL.gif
    28.5 KB · Views: 101
Top