NorthWest Copper Reports Positive Metallurgical Recoveries of 94% Copper, 71% Gold and 92% Silver at the Lorraine Deposit

NorthWest Copper Corp.
NorthWest Copper Corp.

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- NorthWest Copper (“NorthWest” or “the Company”) (TSX-V: NWST) is pleased to report that  positive metallurgical results have been achieved from the first modern metallurgical work completed on samples from the Lorraine copper-gold-silver deposit, located in north-central British Columbia. Highlights of the test work include:

  • High batch cleaner flotation recoveries of up to 94%, 71% and 92% for copper (Cu), gold (Au) and silver (Ag), respectively.

  • High metal recoveries at a relatively coarse primary grind size of 80% passing 150 microns.

  • Production of Cu concentrates with 31 to 54% Cu that contain 7.4 to 25.4 g/t Au and 152 to 405 g/t Ag, and also up to 1.64 g/t palladium (Pd) and anomalous platinum (Pt).

  • Low concentrations of potentially deleterious trace elements in the Cu concentrate.

“These metallurgical results demonstrate that mineralization in our Lorraine deposit can potentially produce high metal recoveries to a clean, high-grade salable copper concentrate”, stated Tyler Caswell, Vice President Exploration for NorthWest. “The results also highlight several opportunities for optimizing future metallurgical work, improving metal recoveries and evaluating other beneficial metal recovery-energy consumption trade-offs to positively impact future project evaluation.”

The test work program described below was designed by Base Metallurgical Laboratories Ltd. (“Base Met”) and BOMENCO Minerals Engineering Corp. The work was executed by Base Met in their facilities in Kamloops, BC. Both groups are independent of NorthWest. Samples for compositing were collected by the NorthWest Copper geology team.

Composite Samples
The metallurgical program tested five composite samples that ranged from 19.6 kg to 37.4 kg in size, and included  one from the Bishop Zone (BZC) and four from the Lower Main Zone (LMC1-4; Table 1). Two composites were created from half-split historical drill core, which was deemed suitable for scoping test work because it was intact, had been well stored, and had very low pyrite concentration that minimized surface oxidation of sulphide minerals. The remaining three samples are from the Lower Main Zone and comprised assay coarse reject material from drill holes completed by Northwest in 2022.  These crushed materials have a large surface area compared to intact core, and to prevent surface oxidation of the sulphide minerals these three samples were placed in frozen storage immediately after routine geochemical analyses. The samples contain disseminated copper mineralization hosted by pyroxenite and syenite, which are the predominant material types in the Lorraine deposit. The samples were selected to be reasonable geological and geochemical representations of the main styles of mineralization at Lorraine, as currently understood, and therefore are interpreted to be reasonable for use in the scoping metallurgical test work reported here. Copper concentrations in the five composites range from approximately average (0.61 % Cu) to higher grade (1.21% Cu), in comparison to the average grade of 0.55% Cu in the indicated mineral resources estimate at the Lorraine deposit.1