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Peru

Coricancha Mine

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Overview

Mine TypeUnderground
StatusCare and Maintenance
Commodities
  • Zinc
  • Lead
  • Copper
  • Silver
  • Gold
Mining Method
  • Cut & Fill
Backfill type ... Lock
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SnapshotCoricancha has been on care and maintenance since August 2013.

On December 16, 2022, Gold miner Great Panther has filed for bankruptcy after its major creditor, a subsidiary of Japanese metals conglomerate Asahi, persuaded a Canadian court to lift the stay that was protecting the company while it attempted to restructure under the Companies Creditors Arrangement Act.

Owners

SourceSource
CompanyInterestOwnership
Great Panther Mining Ltd. 100 % Indirect
Great Panther Coricancha SA. (operator) 100 % Direct
On December 16, 2022, Great Panther Mining Limited filed an assignment in bankruptcy pursuant to s.49 of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and Alvarez & Marsal Canada Inc. was appointed trustee of the bankrupt estate.

The Great Panther Mining Ltd. is 100% owner of Great Panther Coricancha S.A. (formerly Nyrstar Coricancha S.A.) through its Peruvian subsidiary, Great Panther Silver Peru S.A.C.

Deposit type

  • Vein / narrow vein
  • Hydrothermal

Summary:

The CMC is a polymetallic hydrothermal, brittle low sulphidation deposit hosted in the andesitic rocks of the Rímac Formation. The veins exhibit pinch-swell type behavior typical of hydrothermal systems found within compressional and extensional structural environments. Vein widths reach upwards of 2.0 m and with a mean width of 0.6 m. The veins are known to split into two or more branches separated by waste rock materials.

The CMC property is almost entirely underlain by the Rímac Formation andesitic volcanic rocks. The base of the sequence is composed of brecciated volcanic rocks overlain by andesitic flows, agglomerate and tuff towards the top of the Cerro Huamanjune at approximately 4,500 masl elevation.

Mineralization at CMC is that of an anastomosed system where most of the secondary and tertiary veins branch off either from the main vein or the secondary veins. This has produced the necessary conduits to be filled by mineralized hydrothermal fluids. The overall system trends towards the NE at approximately 15°, and the veins are primarily sub-vertical to steeply NW dipping. It is thought that the anastomosed vein system is part of a larger tectonic shear zone with associated secondary and tertiary tensional veins.

The three main veins on the CMC property include the Wellington, Constancia and Animas veins. These veins define three structurally dislocated blocks from which a series of secondary and tertiary tensional veins splits off. The veins are extensive and are known to extend over 4 km along strike and more than 1.5 km down dip.

Typically, the veins show Qtz-clay-pyrite argillic alteration, which extends up to 2.0 m into the footwall and hanging wall of the veins. The alteration does not contain any economic mineralization of note.

Main Veins
Constancia Vein
The vein outcrops at an elevation of 4,540 masl. Nyrstar completed drilling that confirmed a down dip extension of over 300 m below the lowest mine workings. This increased the known vertical extent of the Constancia Vein to 1,700 m. The vein has a strike extent of almost 4 km, of which 2.3 km are within the CMC property.

The vein strikes towards 200° SW and dips from 75° to 80° NW. The vein widths range from 0.10 m to 1.20 m wide with a mean width of 0.54 m. Mineralization typically consists of Qtz-AsPy-Py, followed by another band of sphalerite-galena-chalcopyrite.

Wellington Vein
Similar to the Constancia Vein, the Wellington Vein is steeply dipping to the NW. The widths are also similar, with a mean of 0.64 m. The vein commonly splits into two separate branches, which have been mapped up to 1.4 m wide with some local ore shoots of up to 3.0 m in width. The vein is typically associated with clay-silica-pyrite sericite alteration in both the hanging and footwall, as well as fault gouge.

Animas Vein
The Animas Vein extends for over 1 km and has a mapped vertical extent of approximately 300 m. The vein has a mean width of 0.65 m. It was the target of exploration during the 2015 and 2016 drilling program and returned results of 3.64 grams per tonne (g/t) Au and 417 g/t Ag over 0.41 m and 1.50 g/t Au and 107 g/t Ag over 1.20 m, with minor base metals. There has been no known production from the Animas Vein.

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. Annual (Projected)LOM (Projected)
Zinc Payable metal M lbs 24
Lead Payable metal M lbs 12
Copper Payable metal M lbs 2.2
Silver Metal in zinc concentrate koz 148
Silver Metal in doré koz 201
Silver Metal in lead concentrate koz 1,026
Silver Metal in copper conc. koz 1,429
Silver Payable metal koz 2,510
Gold Metal in zinc concentrate koz 1
Gold Metal in copper conc. koz 2
Gold Metal in lead concentrate koz 2
Gold Metal in doré koz 59
Gold Payable metal koz 63
Silver Equivalent Metal koz 3,10011,742
Gold Equivalent Metal koz 40149
Zinc Concentrate kt 10
Lead Concentrate kt 5
Copper Concentrate kt 2
Silver Metal in concentrate koz
Gold Metal in concentrate koz
Zinc Metal in concentrate kt
Lead Metal in concentrate kt
Copper Metal in concentrate kt

Production Costs

Commodity production costs have not been reported.

Heavy Mobile Equipment

Fleet data has not been reported.

Aerial view:

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