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  • Mining Explorers 2011: Romios Gold Resources Inc.

    Updated Nov 6, 2011

    RG: TSX-V/RMIOF:NASDAQ OTC/D4R:FE President and Director: Anastasios (Tom) Drivas Chief Financial Officer: Michael D'Amico, CA Vice President, Exploration and Geologist: Thomas Skimming, P. Eng. Romios Gold Resources Inc. is a Canadian exploration company actively engaged in precious and base metal exploration in British Columbia and Quebec with a primary focus on gold, copper, silver and molybdenum. Romios has acquired nine strategically located gold-copper properties between Nova Gold/Teck Cominco's and Barrick Gold's...

  • Recent activity covers entire spectrum

    Curt Freemen, For Mining News|Updated Oct 30, 2011

    As termination dust settles over Alaska, the diversity of mineral exploration, development and production news this month covers the entire spectrum of mining industry activities. The last of the seasonal early-stage exploration projects are reporting in, a major producing company has entered the state for the first time, Alaska finished its first off-shore mineral lease process in more than a decade, several projects reported on resource definition and feasibility studies, a gold deposit was sold, a ballot initiative aimed... Full story

  • NANA, NovaGold sign landmark agreement

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Oct 30, 2011

    NovaGold Resources Inc. and NANA Regional Corp. have forged a landmark partnership to explore and develop the Ambler Mining District - a region of Northwest Alaska renown for a 110-kilometer- (70 miles) long belt of world-class volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits rich in copper, zinc, lead, gold and silver that sweep across its breadth. The progressive agreement, penned by NovaGold President and CEO Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse and NANA President and CEO Marie Greene Oct. 19,...

  • NovaGold capital requirements top US$6B

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2011

    Preliminary estimates released by NovaGold Resources Inc. in early September plants an anticipated US$7 billion price tag on building the facilities needed to mine the 38-million-ounce Donlin Creek gold deposit. That is about US$2.5 billion more than was calculated for a feasibility study completed in 2009. Though the preliminary capital costs seem staggering, both NovaGold and its equal partner in Donlin Gold, Barrick Gold Corp., seem confident the feasibility study...

  • Discoveries fail to keep up with output

    Curt Freemen, For Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2011

    A recent article in the Newsletter of the Society of Economic Geologists discussed ways of addressing an arresting trend in the mining industry that affects Alaska's mining future. Authors N. Stephen Enders of the Colorado School of Mines and Cliff Saunders of Too Serious Unlimited, showed that the discovery rate for gold has been dropping steadily since 1999, while the gold mined by operating mines worldwide has remained essentially unchanged at about 80 million ounces per year. The low for ounces discovered coincided with...

  • 'Spell of the Yukon' still rings true

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Aug 28, 2011

    YUKON TERRITORY - "There's gold, and it's haunting and haunting; It's luring me on as of old; Yet it isn't the gold that I'm wanting; So much as just finding the gold." This passage from the "Spell of the Yukon" is as applicable to the contemporary stampede of explorers seeking mineral riches in the home of the Klondike as it was to the prospectors of which Robert Service wrote more than a century ago. It is estimated that the modern rush of prospectors to Yukon Territory...

  • Silent summer spells good news in Alaska

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Jul 31, 2011

    Every year about this time, I notice new ways to gauge just how busy the Alaska mining industry is. This year, it is the silence. Not the amazing silence of a mountaintop in the Alaska Range but the virtual and literal silence being practiced by the people who make up the industry. In an age where communications options are abundant and the opportunity to be "connected" is a 24-7 reality, people in the Alaska mining industry go silent in the depths of summer, primarily...

  • Alaska mines, utilities eye LNG imports

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Jul 31, 2011

    Alaska boasts some of the largest metals deposits on earth as well as vast quantities of coal, oil and natural gas. Ironically, companies such as Donlin Gold LLC (formerly Donlin Creek LLC) and Pebble Limited Partnership are looking overseas to find a reliable source of natural gas as they study the economics of building global-scale mines at their projects. "My guess is, our base case will be imported LNG. Which seems sort of weird to import natural gas into the State of...

  • Miners push exploration to new heights

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Jun 26, 2011

    Another busy summer field season is getting underway in Yukon Territory, and government officials are projecting record numbers of mining companies flocking to the Northwest Canada jurisdiction and spending unprecedented sums on mineral exploration programs scattered across the southern two-thirds of the territory. Based on the industry's spending intentions in February, Natural Resources Canada projected C$39.3 million would be spent in 2011 by the majors on exploration and deposit appraisal activities in Yukon Territory,...

  • Junior eyes potential of Brewery Creek

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated May 29, 2011

    A strategy outlined by Golden Predator Corp. early in the year to focus most of its exploration resources in 2011 on three advanced exploration projects in Yukon Territory has morphed in recent weeks into unblinking attention on the one past gold producer in the company's portfolio - the Brewery Creek Project. "Due to the nature of the mineralization and the grade and consistency, we've certainly accelerated the budget on Brewery Creek … "Our entire thinking about the project has changed," Golden Predator Chairman and CEO Wil...

  • PEA demonstrates robust economics for NovaGold's Arctic deposit

    Shane Lasley|Updated Apr 24, 2011

    NovaGold Resources Inc. April 14 announced the results of a preliminary economic assessment for its Ambler volcanogenic massive sulfide project in Northwest Alaska. "This preliminary economic assessment demonstrates the robust economics of developing one of the highest-grade VMS deposits in the world," said NovaGold President and CEO Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse. NovaGold's Ambler property comprises 36,670 hectares, or 90,624 acres, of State of Alaska mining claims and Federal...

  • Inupiat spirit thrives in two worlds

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Apr 24, 2011

    Two Worlds, One Spirit" is a motto that encompasses NANA Regional Corp.'s dedication to developing its natural resources in a way that preserves the integrity of its land and the traditional values of the people who have called Northwest Alaska home for millennia. "At NANA we like to say we live in two worlds but have one spirit - meaning that we will not forsake our traditional values when participating in the modern economy. We can be Native people and bring Native values...

  • Alaska mines, projects reach milestones

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Apr 24, 2011

    Although the mining news for the last month was rather on the thin side in terms of volume, a number of significant milestones were reached by the Alaska mineral industry. Over the past 30 days or so, we have had new mineral resources published on three gold deposits and one polymetallic deposit. We've had the first preliminary economic analysis released on a deposit from the Ambler Mining District and the schedule for a second preliminary economic analysis announced for...

  • Roads could unlock mineral potential

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Apr 24, 2011

    Alaska is considered one of the most mineralized provinces on Earth, but a vast amount of this wealth is locked up in a more than 350,000-square-mile, or 906,000-square-kilometer, area west of Alaska's contiguous road system. Surface transportation is considered key to unlocking the immense mineral potential of this area, which is roughly twice the land mass of California. In the Survey of Mining Companies: 2010/2011, conducted by the Fraser Institute, top executives from 494...

  • NANA looks beyond Red Dog Mine

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Apr 24, 2011

    NANA Regional Corp. is on the hunt for mineral deposits that will continue to sustain the economic well being of its 12,500 shareholders beyond the life of the Red Dog Mine. "We know that one day we will be done mining at Red Dog, and it is our hope that we will keep finding deposits around the area," NANA Regional Corp. President and CEO Marie Greene told Mining News during an April 11 interview. Aqqaluk, a zinc-rich deposit that NANA and partner Teck Resources Ltd. began...

  • Miners poll hot, cold on Alaska climate

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Mar 27, 2011

    The Fraser Institute recently released its "Survey of Mining Companies, 2010/2011," an annual survey of exploration and mining companies that gauges the pros and cons of working in various countries around the world. This year the survey results came from 494 mining companies working in 79 jurisdictions and representing cumulative exploration expenditures of more than US$2.4 billion in 2010. There was a bit of honey and a bit of vinegar for Alaska in this report. Let's do...

  • First Nations: Respect before prosperity

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Jan 23, 2011

    Ottawa's rejection of Taseko Mines Ltd.'s C$1-billion proposal to build a mine at the Prosperity copper-gold project has highlighted the importance of having the support of the local indigenous people when permitting a mine. "In the 21st century, it is extremely difficult, if not impossible, for industrial projects to proceed if local communities and indigenous peoples have deep concerns," said Dan Jepsen, former president and CEO of the Association for Mineral Exploration...

  • Mining at top of Alaska governor's agenda

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Jan 23, 2011

    Unlocking Alaska's vast mineral resource has been at the top of Gov. Sean Parnell's agenda since being elected to his first full term as the state's governor in November, a position he reiterated during his Jan. 19 State of the State address. "Without liberty, we cannot have a strong economy. So let's take stock of our economy and what we must do to keep it sound. Of course, there are many topics we could discuss: gasline, the university, fish. All are important, but tonight...

  • Miners chase myriad BC mineral deposits

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Jan 23, 2011

    Mining exploration activity in northern British Columbia approached record levels in 2010 with explorers setting a new drilling record and spending about C$168 million in pursuit of a wide range of minerals, including gold, copper, silver, molybdenum, and rare earth elements, according to a top provincial geologist. Paul Wojdak, regional geologist for the Northwest Region of British Columbia's Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources, said the major good news mining story in 2010 for central and northern British... Full story

  • Renewed focus on mineral-rich Ambler

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Jan 23, 2011

    The Ambler Mining District, a mineral-rich region of Northwest Alaska, is getting renewed attention in 2011. While two exploration companies expand their copper-rich volcanogenic massive sulfide projects during the upcoming season, State of Alaska engineers will work on penciling in a potential road to the area. NovaGold Resources Inc. is creating a new company to explore its 36,670-hectare, or 90,614-acre Ambler property and Andover Ventures Inc. plans to return to its Sun...

  • Alaska copper exploration makes comeback

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Oct 31, 2010

    As termination dust falls across most of Alaska, the curtain has come down for the bulk of the exploration projects around the state; however, mine development programs as well as mine-site exploration continue apace as does some exploration work in tropical Southeast Alaska. With few exceptions, preliminary conclusions drawn from 2010 work indicate that 2011 is going to be a busy year. And though a lot of exploration and development is still going on for gold, copper... Full story

  • Buyer wanted for new gold mine near Nome

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Oct 31, 2010

    Focused on becoming a million-ounce-per-year gold producer, NovaGold Resources Inc. put a "for sale" sign at its Rock Creek gold project on the outskirts of Nome in Northwest Alaska. A sale of the nearly completed gold mine would provide the Vancouver B.C.-based junior with additional funds and allow its team to concentrate its resources on developing its two enormous assets - a 50 percent interest in the Galore Creek copper-gold project in British Columbia and half ownership... Full story

  • Mining plays vital jobs role in Alaska

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Oct 31, 2010

    Mining is becoming increasingly important to Alaskans looking for good-paying jobs. Not only does the industry provide high wages, the geographical diversity of the mines provides employment opportunities to oftentimes economically challenged rural regions of the vast state. According to the Alaska Department of Labor & Workforce Development, the number of mining jobs in Alaska has jumped 40.3 percent since 2000, almost triple the statewide average employment growth of 14.1... Full story

  • 2010 Mining Explorers: Explorers trek to Last Frontier

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Oct 31, 2010

    The Last Frontier, as Alaska has long been labeled, is as applicable a moniker today as it was to prospectors who ventured to the territory at the end of the 19th century. Alaska is considered one of the most mineralized provinces on Earth, but due to an inter-related combination of Arctic weather, rugged terrain, limited infrastructure and high exploration costs, the state's vast mineral potential remains at the edge of exploratory expansion. Though the Far North state...

  • 2010 Mining Explorers: Re-energized miners head north

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Oct 31, 2010

    Efforts to build an electricity transmission line critical to economic development of northwestern British Columbia moved closer to reality in 2010. Cheered by the prospect of access to cheap power, scores of miners flocked to the region to re-activate dormant projects and scour the mountainous terrain for new discoveries. The Canadian government allocated C$130 million in funding for construction of the Northwest Transmission Line in September 2009, providing critical funding for the estimated C$404 million needed to build... Full story

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