The mining newspaper for Alaska and Canada's North

(547) stories found containing 'Western Alaska Copper'


Sorted by date  Results 376 - 400 of 547

Page Up

  • Mining boom could be just the beginning

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Jul 31, 2011

    Thanks to rising revenue, exports, production and prices, the mining industry in British Columbia is racing toward a potential record year for exploration, development and production activity. The province's mining boom is being fueled by the global recovery in manufacturing, and in particular the strong demand for raw materials in Asia, according to B.C. officials. In 2010, the price of metallurgical coal rose by 70 percent, while prices for copper climbed 45 percent, silver by 37 percent and gold by 25 percent from 2009....

  • 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...

  • Early bird stakes claims in Southwest

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Jul 31, 2011

    While most fortune-seeking juniors and investors joining the recent stampeded to Yukon Territory are scrambling to acquire properties in the highly prospective White Gold area located in the central Dawson Range and the eastern Selwyn Basin districts, a few canny explorers are quietly staking claims far from the heavy traffic in the southwestern corner of the territory. Solomon Resources Ltd. is one such explorer who has reported making a recent play in the region in a big way. Solomon July 18 reported the acquisition of a...

  • Exploration season shifts into high gear

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Jun 26, 2011

    The last month has seen a massive transition in Alaska from planning to execution, from getting ready to go to the field to boots on the outcrop and drills in the ground. Each year the hustle and bustle of the Alaska summer exploration season subsumes virtually everything else (except the Stanley Cup) as field programs launch around the state. This year has been no different with base metal programs in the Brooks Range, gold programs in Interior Alaska and the Seward...

  • Regulatory thorns threaten mining bubble

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

    With a mining boom in full swing in Yukon Territory, government officials can be proud of having created an attractive business climate, one that is bringing hordes of excited miners and investors to the territory, with seemingly no end in sight. But a group of industry leaders recently submitted a report to the Government of Yukon, warning that storm clouds are gathering that could extinguish mining's bright forecast in the territory. In order for the industry to continue to make significant contributions to the economic...

  • Look no farther for rare gold deposits

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated May 29, 2011

    Some months ago I was talking to a senior exploration manager regarding the lack of new discoveries worldwide in the last few years. The subject came up of just how rare a +1-million-ounce gold deposit really was. Then last week one of our project geologists lays a publication in front of me entitled "How Rare are One Million Ounce Gold Deposits?" by Natural Resources Holdings, Ltd. Although this publication comes at the question from the standpoint of which new deposits are...

  • 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...

  • Pebble partner issues pre-sale appraisal

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Mar 27, 2011

    Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. has hung a "for sale" sign on its 50 percent stake in the enormous Pebble copper-gold-molybdenum project. Since Wardrop Engineering Inc. completed an appraisal of the Southwest Alaska deposit, executives have touted the company's merits as a takeover target. "Given the state of the current industry, the competition in the industry and the commodity market conditions we believe that going forward there will be competitive interest in Pebble from a...

  • 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...

  • Stats reflect mining's impact on Alaska

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

    There are some new stats out regarding mining's impact on Alaska that the McDowell Group Inc. produced for the State of Alaska. For 2010, the Alaska mining industry accounted for 3,500 direct jobs and 5,500 indirect jobs. The industry paid US$350 million in payroll with the average salary totaling US$95,000 per year, which is double the statewide average for all sectors. Mining salaries were higher than all other sectors except for the oil and gas sector. The industry paid...

  • Miners usher in 2011 with new urgency

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Jan 23, 2011

    The last half of December and the first half of January are normally relatively slow for business in the mining industry, in general, and in Alaska, in particular. The last two weeks this December were a bit slower than the first two weeks of the month but if anyone was thinking that January 2011 was going to creep silently into being, they were sadly mistaken! With metals prices heading toward recent and, in some cases, historical highs, there seems to be a sense of urgency...

  • Juniors chase minerals without fanfare

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

    Two years after explorers stampeded to Yukon Territory in search of gold and other minerals the rush is showing no sign of abating. In fact, the exploration frenzy appears to gather fresh steam with every new mineral discovery reported in the territory. And the pipeline of discoveries is flowing, fast and furious. Junior mining companies and prospectors also continued to stake hordes of claims in 2010 right up to Dec. 23, stopping only when Government of Yukon mining recorders called a halt for the holidays. The excitement su...

  • New junior raises funds for Tulsequah

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Jan 23, 2011

    Terrence Chandler, former CEO of Redfern Resources Ltd., has joined Chieftain Metals Inc., a newly created company focused on re-opening the Tulsequah Chief Mine, a precious metals-rich volcanic massive sulfide deposit on British Columbia's western border, about 40 miles, or 64 kilometers, northeast of Juneau. Chandler serves as executive vice president of the company. In his former role at Redfern, he spent some 20 years working on exploration, permitting and development of...

  • Geologists must resist 'pigheadedness'

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Dec 19, 2010

    As the last days of the decade tick by, I am tempted to look back on 2010 and distill the year in a few sentences. I'll resist and opt for a bunch of sentences similar to some I recently dumped on the Society of Economic Geologists, an exploration-focused scientific organization of which I am a card-carrying member. Those words prompted more than a few heated responses, both supportive and not so supportive ("You're a pin-head" is the one that will probably stick with me...

  • Alaska faces tough road on global stage

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Nov 21, 2010

    Alaska's mining industry is entering the final lap for what has turned out to be a more robust than expected year for exploration, development and production. Strong worldwide demand for mined products has certainly helped push metallic and energy minerals prices up, but all is not rosy for Alaska's mineral industry. A recent CNBC report placed Alaska dead last of all the states in terms of overall business attractiveness. We were a dismal 46th of 50 in terms of cost of doing...

  • 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...

  • Yukon mines could boost Skagway economy

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

    The resurgence of mining industry activity in Yukon Territory is bringing with it the prospect of more commercial activity in Southeast Alaska, specifically in the coastal community of Skagway. Though tiny in size with only 850 year-round residents, Skagway is home to one of Alaska's most strategically located ice-free, deepwater ports. The Skagway Ore Terminal at the port stores 65,000 tons a year of copper-gold-silver concentrates from Yukon's only operating mine, Capstone Mining Corp.'s Minto Mine. And once a month for...

  • 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: Explorers flood mining hot spot

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

    Primed for booming exploration for several years, the Yukon Territory appears to have hit big in 2010, both literally and figuratively. Emerging as one of the world's mining hot spots, the Northwest Canada jurisdiction is reporting industry investment exceeding C$120 million. Propelled by record gold prices and key gold discoveries, as well as surging demand in Asia for base metals and a mining friendly government, miners flocked to the territory in growing numbers, bringing generous exploration budgets and fresh theories...

  • 2010 Mining Explorers: NovaGold sets sights on production

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Oct 31, 2010

    Over the past 13 years NovaGold Resources Inc. has grown its resource base from 500,000 ounces of gold to more than 17 million ounces of gold reserves, 14 million ounces of gold resources, plus 150 million ounces of silver and 9 billion pounds of copper. While the company intends to continue to add to its stores of metals in the ground, its primary objective is to begin extracting these reserves at Donlin Creek and Galore Creek. "We continue to believe that advancing our asset...

  • 2010 Mining Explorers: TintinaGold Resources Inc.

    Updated Oct 31, 2010

    TAU: TSX-V President and CEO: Raj Chowdhry Chairman: Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse Vice President, Exploration: Jerry Zieg TintinaGold Resources Inc. emerged on the Alaska mining scene in 2009 when NovaGold Resources Inc. (see NovaGold Resources Inc.) rolled 397,680 acres of its early-stage exploration properties in Alaska into the Vancouver B.C.-based junior. This transaction included two gold exploration claim groups in the Kuskokwim region (Tintina gold properties and the Colorado Creek gold project) and three western Alaska base...

  • A little gold might be a good idea

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2010

    As we near the end of September and the metals market remains robust, the mining industry is breathing a sigh of relief as we remember the market meltdown of early September 2008. Although nobody is suggesting that the larger economy is in any way out of the woods yet, the worldwide demand for metals and metal products continues to expand. For example, the gold price hit US$1,274.95 earlier this month, well above the previous record of US$1,261 hit on June 28. Some believe...

  • Columnist tips hat to mine developers

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Aug 29, 2010

    In the last month, several of Alaska's major metal mines reported strong operating numbers; one company released a preliminary economic assessment and three new mineral exploration companies acquired exploration interests in Alaska. While the functions of explorers and producers are quite different, the symbiotic relationship between the two ends of the mining cycle is unequivocal: exploration would not exist without production and production would eventually cease without...

  • Juniors pour millions into Yukon projects

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Aug 29, 2010

    DAWSON, Yukon Territory - Hardrock mining explorers are capitalizing on unprecedented investor interest and going after paying gold, silver, copper-rich porphyry, lead-zinc and other metal deposits here with uncommon gusto this summer. A few years ago, a multimillion-dollar, single-season exploration program would have been a rare commodity in the Yukon. But this year, at least a half-dozen juniors have joined one major, Kinross Gold Corp., and the Yukon's only producer, Capstone Mining Corp., in forking over megabucks to...

Page Down