- Demand
for lithium batteries in electric vehicles, energy storage devices and
portable electronics continues to fuel lithium market forecasts
- QMC
working with SGS Canada, Inc. to search out buried minerals through mobile
metal ion (“MMI”) geochemical survey
- Company
confident that additional exploration will expand property resource,
historically reported to be in excess of 1.2 million tons grading at 1.5
percent Li2O
As investment research agencies continue to predict a boom
market for lithium suppliers, QMC Quantum Minerals Corp. (OTC: QMCQF) (TSX.V:
QMC) (FSE: 3LQ) is moving forward with its plans to explore and develop a
historical spodumene-bearing pegmatite resource located within Manitoba’s
prolific Cat Lake-Winnipeg River rare-element pegmatite field.
Lithium Investing News joins a variety of market watchers in
predicting that the excitement over junior miners’ efforts to fire up potential
North American lithium extraction sites will be more than a flash in the pan as
electric vehicles, energy storage systems and high-drain portable electronics
call for low-heat, highly efficient batteries — the type that rely on limited
supply elements such as lithium and cobalt. The investment news agency, citing
research by the Freedonia Group, predicts that global demand for lithium metal
will rise to 49,350 metric tons by next year, with a lithium carbonate equivalent
(LCE) valuation of the global market projected to be $1.7 billion (http://ibn.fm/nz4VH).
This optimistic forecast coincides with QMC Quantum
Minerals’ efforts to evaluate and revitalize its 100 percent-owned Irgon
Lithium Mine Project. The property presents the prospect of a quick production
ramp up once the company establishes market potential, particularly as part of
the initial exploration and development 65 years ago, a 500-ton-per-day mill
was erected onsite (which was subsequently removed from the property in 1963).
A future production decision by QMC will be facilitated by the fact that significant
infrastructure remains in place, including an underground complex of a
three-compartment shaft, drifts and crosscuts that can be put to use in new
exploration without having to start from scratch at ground level (http://ibn.fm/b0QK5).
Even though the company has historic underground
development, the Irgon Dike’s lithium mineralization begins directly at the
surface. QMC Quantum Minerals is preparing to evaluate and potentially
expand Irgon Dike strike extensions in addition to evaluating other
spodumene-bearing pegmatite dikes that have been identified on the property by
undertaking a mobile metal ion geochemical survey (mobile metal ions in this
case will include elements such as lithium, cesium, niobium, tantalum,
rubidium, beryllium, etc.). These pathfinder elements have been released
from underlying pegmatite mineralization and have traveled upward through the
soil profile. In May, the company announced that SGS Canada, Inc. would provide
expertise and assistance during the upcoming Irgon exploration and, on July 24,
QMC announced that SGS will be assisting with the collection of the MMI
geochemical samples and will provide analysis of MMI samples using its
exclusive MMI technology (http://ibn.fm/LstIA).
Planning has begun for the MMI survey for buried
mineralization over selected target areas at the Irgon Mine Property. According
to both SGS and QMC, the MMI geochemical survey is a proven, advanced
exploration technique that has been utilized elsewhere to identify buried
mineral (pegmatite) deposits. The search will begin over mineralized areas
above the Irgon Dike and work its way westward to identify any buried strike
extensions of the Irgon Dike.
“Using careful soil sampling strategies, sophisticated
chemical ligands and ultra-sensitive instrumentation, SGS is able to measure
the concentration of these ions. … After interpretation, MMI data will indicate
anomalous target areas on which to focus the subsequent drill program,” the
news release states.
The historical exploration of the Irgon Dike more than six
decades ago, long before the price of lithium reached its current fever levels,
identified a resource estimate of over 1.2 million tons grading 1.51 percent
Li2O over a strike length of 1,200 feet and to a depth of 700 feet. This
historical assessment is currently in the process of being upgraded to modern
NI 43-101 reporting standards, with the reported historic resource expected to
be potentially expanded both along strike and to depth.
QMC has stated that its re-evaluation of historical
assessment reports filed on the property led it to identify an additional
historical exploration target that encompasses “a large, untested lithium soil
anomaly” more than 3,600 feet long and up to 1,150 feet wide across the
southern part of the property. Exploration of this target area will be part of
the upcoming MMI geochemical survey and is certainly a reason for the company’s
enthusiasm.
For more information, visit the company’s website at www.QMCMinerals.com
About QualityStocks
QualityStocks is
committed to connecting subscribers with companies that have huge potential to
succeed in the short and long-term future. It is part of our mission statement
to help the investment community discover emerging companies that offer
excellent growth potential. We offer several ways for investors to learn more
about investing in these companies as well as find and evaluate them.
QualityStocks (QS)
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.QualityStocks.com
480.374.1336 Office
Editor@QualityStocks.com
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.QualityStocks.com
480.374.1336 Office
Editor@QualityStocks.com
Please see full terms of use and disclaimers on the
QualityStocks website applicable to all content provided by QS, wherever
published or re-republished: http://www.qualitystocks.net/disclaimer.php

No comments:
Post a Comment