GGL Announces Results From the Fall 2023 Exploration Program and Expansion of Its Gold Point Project, Nevada

In This Article:

VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESSWIRE / January 16, 2024 / GGL Resources Corp. (TSXV:GGL) ("GGL" or the "Company") is pleased to announce results from the fall 2023 exploration program at the Le Champ copper-molybdenum porphyry target ("Le Champ") on its 100%-owned and road-accessible Gold Point Project in the Walker Lane Trend of Western Nevada. The Company is also pleased to announce that it has staked additional claims to better cover the porphyry target and to acquire additional gold-silver veins elsewhere on this district-scale property (Figure 1).

Highlights from this Press Release include:

  • Mapping identified six intrusive phases hosting extensive stockworks, sheeted veins and breccia zones, locally containing limonite after sulphides;

  • Soil geochemical anomalies coincide with the stockwork zones and potentially represent a leached porphyry system;

  • The Gold Point property has been expanded to cover 30.1 sq km (7443 acres); and,

  • Induced Polarization (IP) surveys planned for spring, 2024.

Quote from Doug Eaton, GGL's CEO:

Early-stage assessment of the porphyry target on GGL's Gold Point Project has yielded very encouraging results that demonstrate potential for a porphyry copper-gold-molybdenum system with a buried supergene-enriched core. The age of the intrusive complex is similar to those in major mining districts including Yerington, Nevada, and at new porphyry discoveries, including Hercules Silver's Hercules Project in Idaho.

Le Champ

Detailed mapping and sampling at Le Champ were completed in late October 2023. During the fall program, 377 soil samples and 27 rock samples were collected. A geology map is presented as Figure 2 with copper and molybdenum results shown on Figures 3 and 4 respectively.

Geological mapping identified six separate intrusive phases within the Sylvania Plutonic Complex hosting extensive stockwork and sheeted vein zones. The strongest molybdenum-in-soil anomalies are associated with the stockwork zones. Copper-in-soil geochemistry is moderately anomalous throughout Le Champ with the strongest values near shallowly south-dipping fault structures and stockwork zones.

Large magmatic breccias containing limonite altered cubes and clots, often up to 2 cm across, were identified on the north side of the target area near historical workings containing copper mineralization. A float sample comprising limonite clots collected from the breccia returned 6.29% copper and 203 g/t silver. The exact timing of the brecciation is not yet known, but is thought to be a late event as it includes clasts of mafic dykes which are seen elsewhere on surface cutting the other intrusive phases.