The Sleeping Giant mill is turning again for the first time since 2014, says Abcourt Mines (TSXV:ABI; OTCQB:ABMBF). The company has invested approximately $42 million in restarting the 950-t/d mill and the gold mine below it.
The Sleeping Giant mine lies beneath the mill, and 98% of the estimated resources are at a depth accessible from the existing shaft. The measured and indicated resource is 755,000 tonnes grading 7.14 g/t gold, containing 173,330 ounces. There is also an inferred resource of 884,000 tonnes grading 8.74 g/t gold, containing 248,300 ounces.
The company says the estimate is conservative as it does not include residual pillars or a five-metre buffer zone around existing infrastructure, the 50-metre crown pillar, or historical production.
Development at the 100%-owned Sleeping Giant mine has already begun. A 20,000 metre underground drill program was initiated in December 2023, and the results are aimed at upsizing the resources.
The mill and mine, located in the Abitibi Greenstone Belt, mid-way between Amos and Matagami, in northern Quebe The mine produced over 1.0 million oz. of gold from 1987 to 2014 from ore averaging 10.29 g/t gold. It treated ore from the Elder mine (2015-22) and a bulk sample from the Pershing-Manitou deposit (2024).
“We are very pleased with the way operations are going so far. Having the mill out of its care and maintenance mode is a major milestone that shows the market our constant advancement,” said Pascal Hamelin, president and CEO of Abcourt, in a release. “We’ve operated this mill in the past, and we believe the ramp up and testing phase on the current material should be smooth and without major issues.”
The company also holds 13 early-to-advanced stage gold exploration project in the region, all of which are within trucking distanced of the Sleeping Giant mill. They include the Cartwright prospect discovered in 2024 and the Flordin deposit explored in the 1980s.
See the corporate presentation on www.abcourt.com for more information.
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