Maximus Resources have identified highly prospective nickel, gold and platinum group zones earmarked for deeper drilling after the receipt of the remaining assays from its multi-target air core programme over a Spargoville project sitting just 25 kilometres away from Kambalda in Western Australia.
Kambalda is synonymous with nickel, and the elevated returns of metals within the regolith is strongly associated with the high-grade nickel sulphide deposits which have typified the region.
In addition to the success in defining a fertile nickel sulphide komatiite channel at the Misho nickel prospect, the complete multi-target low-cost air-core drill programme has delineated additional gold and nickel targets at Central, Hilditch and Kemble,” Maximus Managing Director Tim Wither said.
“These early-stage air-core drill programmes provided vital geochemistry to vector-in on prospective targets for follow-up RC drilling.”
Intersections of anomalous PGEs at the Central Nickel target were notably found at a comparable stratigraphic level to the electromagnetic conductors along strike of the Andrew Shaft Nickel Mine and given the abundance of metals found in the area, indicated that untested legacy conductors could be related to nickel sulphides at depth.
Featuring a 16-kilometre extension of a fertile regional ultramafic belt, the Spargoville tenement package is not only considered highly prospective for Kambalda-style mineralisation, but has noted potential for orogenic gold deposits, and still lies underexplored after its previous owners held through times of historically low commodity prices.
Structural analysis and geological review of the Wattle Dam and Redback areas has been underway for several weeks, potentially yielding more targets to grow its gold resource as Maximus move ahead on more AC drill programmes to explore untested nickel areas across its tenements.
Drilling highlights:
Central – Nickel
Hilditch West – Nickel
Kemble – Nickel
Kemble – Gold