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Ecuador

Cascabel (Alpala) Project

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Overview

Mine TypeUnderground
StagePre-Feasibility
Commodities
  • Copper
  • Gold
  • Silver
Mining Method
  • Block caving
Mine Life... Lock
SnapshotThe Alpala and Tandayama-America (TAM) deposits are wholly contained within the Cascabel Property.

The current assessment of the TAM deposit is not at the PFS level and is therefore not included in the Cascabel project economics or the PFS mine plan.

The PFS designs considered the staged ramp up in production starting at 12 Mtpa for six years, followed by an expansion to 24 Mtpa thereafter.

Owners

SourceSource
CompanyInterestOwnership
SolGold Plc 100 % Indirect
Exploraciones Novomining S.A. (operator) 100 % Direct
Exploraciones Novomining S.A. (“ENSA”) is the registered titleholder of the Cascabel Concession, which comprises the Property. SolGold owns 100% legal and beneficial interest in ENSA.

Contractors

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Deposit type

  • Porphyry
  • Hydrothermal
  • Intrusion related
  • Vein / narrow vein

Summary:

The mineralisation observed at the Alpala and the Tandayama-America deposits is considered a classic porphyry Cu-Au system. These mineralised systems are hosted within a linear belt (Andean Porphyry Belt) that extends from southern Chile right through to Ecuador and Colombia to Panama. The Andean Porphyry Belt hosts the largest concentrations of copper in the world, including numerous deposits with active mining operations.

Alpala Deposit
Major host rock types of the deposit consist of gabbroic and basaltic basement rocks, overlain by Cretaceous siltstones and minor sandstones that are unconformably overlain by a sequence of Tertiary volcano-sedimentary and andesitic lavas. The volcanic and volcano-sedimentary sequences that host the deposit were previously mapped as the Macuchi Unit (Vallejo 2007), a volcanic arc of tholeiitic and calc-alkaline composition which was formed on oceanic crust during the Eocene.

This sequence has been intruded by a series of Middle to Late-Eocene (Bartonian) hornblende-bearing diorites, quartz diorites and tonalities that form plutons, stocks, and dykes. Intrusions have been emplaced episodically such that each subsequent intrusion has introduced mineralising fluids (notably as porphyrytype quartz and quartz-sulphide veins) into the Alpala porphyry system, and/or remobilised existing mineralisation or contributed to localised overprinting and destruction of the pre-existing mineralisation.

Thin-section petrography reveals the presence of very fine-grained quartz in the groundmass of the intrusions, which suggests compositions that range from quartz diorite to tonalite. However, the intrusive rock types have been classified on observations made by the field geologist using a 20 times magnification hand lens (Garwin et al., 2017).

Intrusions are typically emplaced with a stock-like geometry that is moderately elongate in a northwest direction. Intrusions often hold typically vertically and laterally extensive northwest trending, steeply dipping dyke extensions beyond their stock margins.

The equigranular to sub-porphyritic, hornblende-bearing intrusions at Alpala are narrow, taper upwards, and are geometrically similar to grade models of Cu, Au and Ag mineralisation. Mineralisation occurs as a prolate body approximately 2,400 m northwest by 1,200 m northeast and 2,800 m in vertical extent, defined at a Cu equivalent (CuEq) cut-off criteria of greater than 0.15% CuEq and/or greater than 0.55% B-type quartz veins.

The porphyry-related vein types and mineralisation paragenesis at Alpala indicate a systematic progression in time and have been described by SolGold using the nomenclature originated by Gustafson and Hunt (1975).

Understanding the intrusive phase relationships within the Alpala Deposit was advanced following a detailed review of the drill core in 2014, which focused on identifying the different vein types and their paragenesis. This work resulted in advances in the recognition of inconspicuous intrusive contacts and clearly showed that each intrusive phase contains a specific set of veins and resultant Cu and Au grades.

The geometry of the intrusive units and porphyry style B-type quartz vein abundance zones correlates with Cu-Au grade distributions.

Planar and pervasive, B-type quartz veins crosscut the early vein types and consist of quartz- magnetite-chalcopyrite. At least two stages of B-type veins have been recognised, B1 and B2, with magnetite more abundant in early B1 veins and chalcopyrite more common in the later B2 veins. B-type veins contain the majority of the Cu and Au in the deposit.

Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) techniques indicate that the primary Cu minerals are chalcopyrite and bornite. Gold occurs as discrete grains of electrum (typically 65% to 85% Au) that range from one to 50 microns in diameter. The electrum grains occur within chalcopyrite, bornite, pyrite and rarely quartz and anhydrite. Grains of low-Ag electrum (greater than 90% Au) that are 1 to 3 µm in diameter are associated with sulphide grains and occur locally within silicate minerals.

Chalcopyrite-rich, C-type veins contain rare to minor bornite and cross-cut earlier vein types. C-type veins contain significant amounts of metal but constitute a small volume of the drill core. B-type and C-type veins are spatially associated with intrusions that show variable feldspar destruction and sericite-chlorite-clay overprinting of biotite-actinolite and chlorite-epidote alteration mineral assemblages.

Late-stage, pyritic D-type veins with quartz-sericite-pyrite selvedges contain chalcopyrite, minor bornite and, locally, molybdenite. Many of the later vein stages exploit and re-open earlier vein stages, as does anhydrite. Transitional to late stage, anhydrite-bearing veins are inferred to form a halo to the deposit core. Late-stage hydrothermal matrix breccia bodies and volumetrically small igneous matrix breccias, including pebble dykes, typically postdate sericite – chlorite ± clay alteration and are locally cut by pyritic D-type veins and anhydrite veins. The breccia bodies cut the volcanic host rocks and the premineralisation, early-mineralisation, and intra-mineralisation intrusions.

A Re-Os age date determined by a commercial laboratory on molybdenite in a D-type pyrite-chalcopyrite bearing anhydrite-quartz vein that cuts a late mineralisation D20 diorite dyke indicates an age of 38.6 ± 0.2 Ma (2 s). The age dates of the QD10, QD20, and late-stage molybdenite are no different statistically.

The relationship between B-type quartz vein (B-vein) abundance and Cu, Au and CuEq grades throughout the deposit show considerable scatter. However, a linear relationship has been defined with selected examples of 0.15% CuEq, 0.70% CuEq and 1.50% CuEq, equating to 0.55% B-veins, 4.1% B-veins and 9.4% B-veins respectively.

The Alpala deposit geological, structural and mineralisation all display a clear anisotropy which is prolate in a sub-vertical sense, dipping approximately 78° towards the northeast and oblate in plan (striking northwest). Recognition of this geometry in the field and various datasets has played a critical role in the path to the discovery of the Alpala deposit. During initial exploration, quartz vein orientation analysis from the Alpala Central area assessed over 400 quartz vein measurements, the majority of which were from B-type quartz veins.

Tandayama-America Deposit
Major host rock types of the Tandayama-America (TAM) deposit consist of a sequence of Tertiary volcano- sedimentary and andesitic lavas of the same age as those at the Alpala deposit. This sequence has also been intruded by a series of Middle to Late-Eocene (Bartonian) quartz diorites and diorites that form plutons, stocks, and dykes.

The mineralisation style and trend at Tandayama-America is essentially the same style as that seen in Alpala.

Reserves

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Mining Methods

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Comminution

Crushers and Mills

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Processing

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Production

CommodityProductUnitsAvg. AnnualLOM
Copper Metal in concentrate M lbs 2716,314
Copper Payable metal M lbs 6,015
Gold Payable metal koz 6,550
Gold Metal in copper conc. koz 2776,875
Silver Payable metal koz 11,196
Silver Metal in copper conc. koz 79418,418
Copper Equivalent Metal in concentrate M lbs 4019,546
Copper Equivalent Payable metal M lbs 9,058

Operational metrics

Metrics
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Ore tonnes mined, LOM  ....  Subscribe
* According to 2024 study.

Production Costs

CommodityUnitsAverage
Credits (by-product) Copper USD  ....  Subscribe
Cash costs Copper USD  ....  Subscribe
Total cash costs Copper USD  ....  Subscribe
Total cash costs Copper USD  ....  Subscribe
All-in sustaining costs (AISC) Copper USD  ....  Subscribe
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Assumed price Silver USD  ....  Subscribe
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* According to 2024 study / presentation.
** Net of By-Product.

Operating Costs

Currency2024
UG mining costs ($/t mined) USD 6.15 *  
Processing costs ($/t milled) USD  ....  Subscribe
G&A ($/t milled) USD  ....  Subscribe
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* According to 2024 study.

Project Costs

MetricsUnitsLOM Total
Pre-Production capital costs $M USD  ......  Subscribe
Closure costs $M USD  ......  Subscribe
Total CapEx $M USD  ......  Subscribe
UG OpEx $M USD  ......  Subscribe
Processing OpEx $M USD 3,993
Site services costs $M USD 182
G&A costs $M USD 551
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Net revenue (LOM) $M USD  ......  Subscribe
Net Income (LOM) $M USD  ......  Subscribe
Pre-tax Cash Flow (LOM) $M USD  ......  Subscribe
After-tax Cash Flow (LOM) $M USD  ......  Subscribe
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Pre-tax NPV @ 8% $M USD  ......  Subscribe
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After-tax NPV @ 8% $M USD  ......  Subscribe
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Heavy Mobile Equipment

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Personnel

Mine Management

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EmployeesContractorsTotal WorkforceYear
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