VANCOUVER, May 7, 2018 /CNW/ - Japan Gold Corp.
(TSX-V: JG) (OTCQB: JGLDF) ("Japan Gold" or the
"Company") is pleased to report results of surface prospecting and
mapping over the historic Kitano-o Gold District. The Kitano-o Gold
District is located in the center of the Company's 19,114 hectare
Ikutahara Project in North Hokkaido,
Japan, Figure 1. Results highlight the presence of
high-grade gold mineralization in grab samples taken from historic
mine dumps and workings.
The Kitano-o Gold District includes the historic Kitano-o,
Ikutahara, Showa mines and the Sakinzawa workings. Japan
Gold work in the district has focused on geological and alteration
mapping and geochemical sampling to develop an understanding of the
controls on epithermal gold-vein mineralization. The company has
designed an aggressive scout drilling program to test these targets
in the 2018 field season.
Rock Sample Results Summary
Assay results were received for 270 selective grab and chip
samples collected from mine dumps, workings and outcrops over the
Kitano-o Gold District. Sample locations and significant gold
results (>1 g/t Au) are presented in Figure 2 and
Table 1.
Kitano-o Mine: One mine dump sample from the western area
of the Kitano-o mine workings gave a high gold result of
54.4 g/t Au. Eight other mine dump and outcrop samples returned
gold results ranging from 1.01 to 8.59 g/t Au, (refer to Table
1). Corresponding silver results are generally low and range
from 1.16 to 13.2 g/t Ag.
Ikutahara Mine: Two mine dump samples from the
Ikutahara workings returned high gold results of 37.3 g/t Au
and 35.3 g/t Au. Seven other mine dump samples returned gold
results ranging from 2.21 to 9.03 g/t Au. Corresponding silver
results are generally low and range from 2.71 to 35.5 g/t Ag.
Showa Mine: Five mine dump samples from the Showa
workings returned high gold results of 93.3 g/t Au, 36.4 g/t Au,
19.35 g/t Au, 18.20 g/t Au and 17.6 g/t Au. These samples contain
visible electrum/free gold disseminated in thin comb quartz veins,
(refer to Table 1 and Figures 3 and 4).
Nine other samples returned gold results ranging from 1.31 to 6.39
g/t Au. Corresponding silver results are generally low and range
from 1.6 to 22.9 g/t Ag.
Sakinzawa Workings: Three outcrop samples of quartz
stockworked rhyolite in the Sakinzawa creek returned gold results
ranging from 1.34 to 17.2 g/t Au, (refer to Figure 5),
supporting a reconnaissance outcrop sample of 43.8 g/t collected in
2013. Corresponding silver results are generally low and range from
2.56 to 15.85 g/t Ag.
Geological mapping completed by the Company over the Kitano-o
Gold District has confirmed the presence of a significant
gold-bearing epithermal system hosted in Late Miocene rhyolitic
volcanics and associated intrusions. The presence of widespread
silica sinter boulders and bedded sinter outcrops at
Kitano-o, (refer to Figures 2 and 6) define
the paleo-surface during gold deposition and importantly the well
preserved nature of the epithermal mineralisation in the
district.
Rock chip results reflect gold and silver grades from historic
mine records and confirm the presence of high-grade mineralization
in the district. The presence of high-grade material in mine dumps
is also supportive of mineralization being open at the time of mine
closure.
John Proust, Chairman and CEO of Japan Gold, stated: "The
significance of newly identified sinter outcrops at Kitano-o
underlain by historically mined eluvial gold deposits and
sub-sinter quartz veins along with confirmatory high-grade samples
reported by us here underscore the compelling nature of these
prospects and the potential to discover additional mineralization
beneath and surrounding these extensive historic workings. A
drilling program to test the Kitano-o Gold District has been
prepared in anticipation of applications being granted and
subsequent approvals for drilling this year."
Historic Kitano-o Gold District
The historic Kitano-o Gold District consists of four known
historic eluvial and hard rock gold mines and workings;
Kitano-o, Ikutahara, Showa and Sakinzawa over
an approximate 6 kilometre by 2.5 kilometre area. The district is
highlighted by an extensive co-incident gold-arsenic-antimony
mercury anomaly in stream sediment samples over the area.
Historic production from the Kitano-o mine (96,540
ounces at a grade of 5.9 g/t)7 was largely from rich
residual surface gold deposits (gold-bearing eluvium). Lesser gold
production is reported from selective hard rock mining of narrow
sub-sinter quartz-adularia-clay veins and stockworks hosted in
extensively altered rhyolitic volcaniclastics, flow-domes, lake
sediments and silica sinter deposits. Production records sourced
for the Ikutahara and Showa mines are include the following:
Historic Gold and Silver Production Records for the Ikutahara
and Showa Mines1.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mine
|
Tonnes
|
Gold
g/t
|
Silver
g/t
|
Operating
Years
|
Source
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ikutahara
|
96,812
|
5.2
|
40.6
|
1934-1943
|
MMAJ, 1990
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
216
|
35.6
|
Not
recorded
|
1960-1961
|
MMAJ, 1990
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Showa
|
12,323
|
16.8
|
7.8
|
1934-1943
|
MMAJ, 1990
|
In the late 1980's MMAJ (Metals Mining Agency of Japan) conducted exploration over the Kitano-o
Gold District and surrounding area as part of a metallogenic study
of the region. Their work included geological mapping, gravity and
CSAMT geophysical surveys, a low-density regional soil geochemical
survey, petrological studies, age dating and culminated in the
drilling of two vertical diamond holes testing geophysical
targets.
The MMAJ work defined a large shallowly eroded epithermal system
encompassing the Kitano-o Gold District, documented a close
relationship between gold mineralization and rhyolite intrusions
and provided valuable information on the depth to basement rocks
(up to 700 m).
The hard rock mine workings at Ikutahara and
Showa, at the southern end of the Kitano-o Gold District,
are defined by a series of collapsed tunnels and large mine dumps
distributed along a north-northwest trending ridgeline.
The mine workings at Kitano-o are represented by numerous
shallow diggings, pits, sluicing benches, and collapsed tunnels
distributed over a 2.5 kilometre by 0.4 kilometre east-west
alignment of altered conical hills and curve-linear ridges.
Historic reports and papers written on the Kitano-o mine
workings1,2,3 indicate that free gold was won from rich
eluvial placer deposits described as a yellow-brown
clay-sand-boulder soil overburden ("Dosha-ko" ore). The
auriferous eluvium averaged about 5 m
thickness (max. 15 m thick) with a
reported gold grade of about 5 g/t Au (max. 40 g/t Au) in the most
productive areas. The dosha-ko gold deposits were formed by
the disintegration and oxidation of the underlying hydrothermally
altered mineralized bedrock under freezing-and-thawing cold-climate
conditions ("cryogenic weathering")2.
Multiple narrow gold-quartz veins (>130) were reportedly
worked beneath and surrounding the auriferous eluvium, however,
mine records on the depth of mining of the veins is sparse. The
veins varied in width from <1 to 30 cm and thicker mineralised
veins were only rarely encountered. Strike-lengths varied from
several metres to several 10's of metres and veins longer than 100
metres were rarely encountered. Several types of mineralised
epithermal veins were reported in the district; banded
quartz-chalcedony-adularia veins (Figure 7), fine-grained
crystalline quartz veins, clay-rich veins and a late-stage
porcellaneous clay veins1, 2.
The Sakinzawa workings are located at the northern end of
the Kitano-o Gold District. Alluvial and colluvial gold was
worked along Sakinzawa creek and its broad floodplain during the
1930's, however, there are no production records. Small hard rock
gold workings on quartz breccia and stockworks have also been found
along Sakinzawa creek and on the western flank of Maruyama peak,
which is a prominent rhyolite flow-dome landform.
MMAJ and the NICAM Joint Venture (Nissho Iwai Corp/Austpac/MIM)
carried out exploration work on Sakinzawa creek and Maruyama ridge
in the 1990's. This work included geological mapping, ground
geophysics (CSAMT), trenching, RC drilling and one diamond drill
hole by MMAJ.
Trenching in Sakinzawa creek exposed a 100m x 300m zone of
silicified, brecciated and quartz veined mudstones and rhyolitic
volcanic rocks beneath shallow colluvium and returned highly
encouraging channel-chip results including 9
m at 24 g/t gold and individual 1 metre samples ranging from
15 to 109 g/t Au4.
The 300 m vertical diamond hole
(2MAHB4) drilled by MMAJ on Maruyama ridge intersected silicified
mudstone-sandstone-volcanic breccia to 140
m depth containing minor narrow quartz veins assaying up to
2.3 g/t Au1. This is a useful stratigraphic hole but a
poor test of the gold target.
Ikutahara Project Overview
The Ikutahara Project comprises 56 prospecting rights
application blocks covering an area of 19,114 hectares underlain by
prospective Miocene-Pliocene age volcano-sedimentary rocks and
older meta-sedimentary basement rocks.
Multiple gold-silver and mercury prospects, including 17
documented historic mines and workings, are located within the
project area and the majority comprise epithermal veins, with other
hot spring related features such as hydrothermal breccias and
silica sinters.
The prospects were discovered and intermittently mined between
1910 and 1943. Gold mining in Japan was suspended 1943 under a government
regulation aimed at focusing resources to more strategic
commodities during World War II. Many of the historic workings that
were active in the area stopped in ore and never reopened. The
project area has seen only minor exploration since that time.
References
1 Metal Mining Agency of
Japan, March 1990, Geological
Survey Report for Fiscal Year 1989, Northern Hokkaido
Area B - Metalliferous Deposits Overview.
2 Watanabe, M (1940). Showa – Kitano-oh type
gold deposits, J. Japan, Assoc.
Min. Petr. Econ. Geol. 23: pp. 28-39 (in Japanese).
3 Maeda, H. (1996). Relationship between
volcanic activity and epithermal gold-silver mineralization:
Example from Kitano-oh mine area and vicinity in Kitami
metallogenic province, Hokkaido,
Japan, Resource Geology 46 (5): pp. 279-285.
4 Austpac Gold NL company reports 1992-1993
5 Watanabe, Y (1996). Genesis of Vein-hosting
Fractures in the Kitami Region, Hokkaido,
Japan, Resource Geology, 46(3), pp 151-166.
6 Gold Mines in Japan, The Mining & Materials Processing
Institute of Japan, 1990.
7 Garwin, Hall, Watanabe, 2005. Tectonic Setting,
Geology, and Gold and Copper Mineralization in Cenozoic Magmatic
Arcs of Southeast Asia and the
West Pacific, Economic Geology 100th Anniversary Volume, pp.
891–930.
Qualified Person
The technical information in this news release has been reviewed
by Japan Gold's President & Chief Operating Officer, Dr.
Mike Andrews, PhD, FAusIMM, who is a
Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101.
Sampling
The samples reported herewith represent selected grab samples
collected from historic mine dumps or selected chip samples
collected from rock exposures found in historic mine adits and rock
outcrops found in creeks. The selected grab samples reported in
this announcement are believed to originate from the underlying
bedrock. Grab samples are selected samples and are not necessarily
representative of the mineralization hosted on the property. Rock
sample preparation and assaying were done by ALS Chemex,
Guangzhou, China. Gold was
analyzed by 50-charge Fire Assay and AAS finish. 48 multielement
analysis including silver were done by four-acid digest and
ICP-AES/MS determination.
The laboratory inserts its own blank, standards & sub-split
pulp duplicates for Quality Control and reports these results
accordingly. Results fall within acceptable levels of accuracy and
precision.
Twelve pulps from a selection of high-grade and low-grade gold
results were sent to ALS Chemex, Townsville, Australia for external gold check analyses.
The external gold results repeat well and show a strong correlation
(>0.9) with the original gold results.
On behalf of the Board of Japan Gold Corp.
"John Proust"
Chairman & CEO
About Japan Gold Corp.
Japan Gold Corp. is a Canadian mineral exploration company
focused solely on gold and copper-gold exploration in Japan. The Company holds 32 prospecting rights
and 178 prospecting rights applications accepted in Japan for a combined area of 69,505 hectares
(695 square-kilometres) over 17 separate projects. These
prospecting rights and applications cover areas with known gold
occurrences and a history of mining, and are prospective for both
high-grade epithermal gold mineralization and gold-bearing
lithocaps, which could indicate the presence of porphyry
mineralization. Japan Gold's leadership team has decades of
resource industry and business experience, and the Company has
recruited geologists and technical advisors with experience
exploring and operating in Japan.
The Company completed an initial scout diamond drilling program on
a high-grade epithermal gold vein target at Akebono Prospect in
late November 2017. More information
is available at www.japangold.com or by email at
info@japangold.com.
Cautionary Note
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services
Provider (as such term is defined in the policies of the TSX
Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or
accuracy of this release.
This news release contains forward-looking statements
relating to expected or anticipated future events and anticipated
results that are forward-looking in nature and, as a result, are
subject to certain risks and uncertainties, such as general
economic, market and business conditions, competition for qualified
staff, the regulatory process and actions, technical issues, new
legislation, uncertainties resulting from potential delays or
changes in plans, uncertainties resulting from working in a new
political jurisdiction, uncertainties regarding the results of
exploration, uncertainties regarding the timing and granting of
prospecting rights, uncertainties regarding the Company's ability
to execute and implement future plans, and the occurrence of
unexpected events. Actual results achieved may vary from the
information provided herein as a result of numerous known and
unknown risks and uncertainties and other factors.
Table 1: Ikutahara Project: Kitano-o Gold District
Significant Rock Chip Results (>1 g/t Au)
Prospect
|
Sample
No.
|
Sample
Type
|
Au
g/t
|
Ag
g/t
|
Hg
ppm
|
As
ppm
|
Sb
ppm
|
Se
ppm
|
Te
ppm
|
Tl
ppm
|
Cu
ppm
|
Pb
ppm
|
Zn
ppm
|
Mo
ppm
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01893
|
Dump
|
37.3
|
35.5
|
2.82
|
28.9
|
16.6
|
2
|
0.26
|
2.99
|
3.6
|
7.2
|
4
|
3.11
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM02216
|
Dump
|
35.3
|
26.3
|
4.37
|
74.2
|
23.9
|
2
|
0.41
|
3.3
|
6.5
|
6.5
|
6
|
1.4
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01889
|
Dump
|
9.03
|
24.4
|
8.41
|
30
|
40.1
|
4
|
0.11
|
0.44
|
2.5
|
5.7
|
3
|
4.83
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01888
|
Dump
|
7.47
|
3.87
|
2.76
|
60.2
|
37.3
|
1
|
0.19
|
0.32
|
3
|
7.5
|
4
|
2.87
|
Ikutahara
|
JG0011
|
Outcrop/Adit
|
6.08
|
6.67
|
tba
|
48.7
|
13.75
|
<1
|
0.12
|
0.41
|
4
|
14.5
|
7
|
4.68
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01897
|
Dump
|
3.99
|
7.41
|
8.39
|
855
|
27.4
|
5
|
<0.05
|
0.31
|
23.4
|
56.9
|
35
|
5.07
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01886
|
Dump
|
2.59
|
2.71
|
2.04
|
24.5
|
7
|
1
|
0.12
|
0.88
|
3
|
8.6
|
7
|
1.62
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01891
|
Float
|
2.46
|
7.24
|
3.4
|
71.3
|
20.4
|
2
|
0.07
|
0.31
|
2.9
|
4.6
|
5
|
4.1
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM02006
|
Float
|
2.45
|
5.52
|
0.584
|
14.6
|
13.9
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
0.29
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
2
|
3.73
|
Ikutahara
|
SAM01892
|
Float
|
2.21
|
5.97
|
4.77
|
40.6
|
14.5
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
2.97
|
7.5
|
8.6
|
8
|
2.28
|
Ikutahara
|
JG0017
|
Outcrop
|
1.04
|
2.61
|
4.16
|
593
|
21
|
2
|
<0.05
|
0.08
|
17.2
|
25.1
|
20
|
3.7
|
Showa
|
SAM01867
|
Dump
|
93.3
|
17.4
|
5.74
|
2
|
21.4
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
<0.02
|
0.5
|
9.7
|
<2
|
2.75
|
Showa
|
SAM01866
|
Dump
|
36.4
|
11.6
|
4.75
|
1.2
|
12.45
|
1
|
<0.05
|
<0.02
|
0.5
|
18.4
|
<2
|
2.35
|
Showa
|
SAM01894
|
Dump
|
19.35
|
8.49
|
3.57
|
1.7
|
11.05
|
1
|
<0.05
|
<0.02
|
0.9
|
10.9
|
2
|
2.12
|
Showa
|
SAM01858
|
Dump
|
18.2
|
19.3
|
7.14
|
1.1
|
21.4
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
0.02
|
0.5
|
5.4
|
<2
|
1.7
|
Showa
|
SAM01842
|
Dump
|
17.6
|
22.9
|
15.43
|
<0.2
|
16.35
|
1
|
<0.05
|
0.02
|
0.9
|
3.2
|
<2
|
4.04
|
Showa
|
SAM01857
|
Dump
|
6.39
|
11.1
|
13.07
|
<0.2
|
16.65
|
4
|
<0.05
|
0.02
|
0.6
|
12.9
|
<2
|
2.94
|
Showa
|
JG0081
|
Outcrop/Adit
|
5.26
|
3.32
|
tba
|
7.7
|
18
|
3
|
0.12
|
0.04
|
0.6
|
21.4
|
2
|
2.03
|
Showa
|
SAM02210
|
Outcrop/Adit
|
4.43
|
1.99
|
2.11
|
1.7
|
11.95
|
0.5
|
0.05
|
0.03
|
0.3
|
19.3
|
1
|
2.1
|
Showa
|
SAM02211
|
Outcrop/Adit
|
3.05
|
1.6
|
2.17
|
1.9
|
12.4
|
0.5
|
0.05
|
0.03
|
0.7
|
15.7
|
1
|
0.98
|
Showa
|
SAM01856
|
Dump
|
2.74
|
6.13
|
14.24
|
<0.2
|
9.58
|
1
|
<0.05
|
0.03
|
0.7
|
13.4
|
<2
|
2.92
|
Showa
|
SAM01865
|
Outcrop
|
2.7
|
7.11
|
12.41
|
2.1
|
14.8
|
1
|
<0.05
|
<0.02
|
0.7
|
14
|
<2
|
3.47
|
Showa
|
SAM01861
|
Float
|
1.76
|
2.37
|
0.883
|
0.5
|
7.79
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
0.02
|
0.5
|
6.8
|
<2
|
0.76
|
Showa
|
SAM01860
|
Float
|
1.63
|
11.4
|
61.2
|
<0.2
|
12.35
|
17
|
<0.05
|
0.02
|
0.6
|
5.3
|
<2
|
1.51
|
Showa
|
SAM02209
|
Outcrop/Adit
|
1.47
|
1.73
|
22.7
|
8.6
|
24.4
|
3
|
0.2
|
0.04
|
3.8
|
33.2
|
2
|
3.56
|
Showa
|
JG0080
|
Outcrop
|
1.39
|
0.41
|
2.31
|
0.8
|
8.51
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
<0.02
|
0.2
|
54.2
|
<2
|
1.4
|
Showa
|
SAM02189
|
Dump
|
1.31
|
13.8
|
11.1
|
73.1
|
27.6
|
2
|
0.23
|
0.17
|
8.7
|
6.8
|
2
|
9.45
|
Showa
|
JG0079
|
Outcrop
|
1.21
|
3.09
|
2.76
|
2
|
14.8
|
1
|
<0.05
|
0.02
|
0.4
|
15.6
|
3
|
0.96
|
Kitano-o
|
JG0069
|
Dump
|
54.4
|
6.99
|
tba
|
694
|
52
|
3
|
10.3
|
0.02
|
15
|
26.4
|
7
|
5.33
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02155
|
Dump
|
8.59
|
3.45
|
0.393
|
314
|
14.35
|
1
|
0.05
|
1.21
|
8.4
|
2.8
|
4
|
2.67
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02115
|
Outcrop/Bench
|
5.78
|
13.2
|
0.096
|
78.5
|
9.12
|
1
|
<0.05
|
1.29
|
2.3
|
19.8
|
3
|
1.69
|
Kitano-o
|
JG0077
|
Dump
|
3.09
|
28.7
|
0.992
|
51.9
|
15.95
|
1
|
0.08
|
1.63
|
5.8
|
12.5
|
7
|
2.6
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02175
|
Dump
|
3.02
|
3.13
|
2.91
|
890
|
60.5
|
5
|
5.06
|
0.04
|
12.4
|
24
|
7
|
4.56
|
Kitano-o
|
JG0078
|
Outcrop
|
1.74
|
4.15
|
2.05
|
47.2
|
20.3
|
<1
|
3.26
|
3.45
|
1.8
|
5.2
|
4
|
1.37
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02117
|
Dump
|
1.6
|
4.78
|
10.5
|
3
|
15.5
|
1
|
<0.05
|
0.07
|
0.9
|
12.1
|
7
|
1.52
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02120
|
Dump
|
1.29
|
1.16
|
2.57
|
29.7
|
35
|
<1
|
<0.05
|
0.04
|
1.3
|
4.9
|
3
|
1.92
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02156
|
Dump
|
1.27
|
0.62
|
0.292
|
97.6
|
8.91
|
1
|
0.05
|
0.55
|
2.5
|
2.2
|
2
|
2.54
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02171
|
Outcrop/Adit
|
1.22
|
1.96
|
0.574
|
88.7
|
15.55
|
2
|
<0.05
|
1.79
|
3.3
|
11.4
|
6
|
2.86
|
Kitano-o
|
JG0018
|
Outcrop
|
1.17
|
1.27
|
0.191
|
60.4
|
17.15
|
1
|
0.1
|
2.57
|
4.7
|
12.9
|
3
|
1.9
|
Kitano-o
|
JG0064
|
Outcrop
|
1.03
|
8.21
|
5.19
|
347
|
36.3
|
2
|
<0.05
|
1.7
|
6.5
|
34.4
|
23
|
6.51
|
Kitano-o
|
SAM02149
|
Dump
|
1.01
|
7.86
|
2.89
|
139.5
|
43.2
|
2
|
3.33
|
0.16
|
4.9
|
17
|
11
|
6.47
|
Sakinzawa
|
50004
|
Outcrop
|
43.8
|
27.2
|
0
|
282
|
19
|
0
|
0
|
10
|
3
|
7
|
6
|
6
|
Sakinzawa
|
SAM02069
|
Outcrop/Creek
|
17.2
|
15.9
|
0.231
|
452
|
20
|
3
|
<0.05
|
7.84
|
7.4
|
9.5
|
5
|
5.77
|
Sakinzawa
|
SAM02058
|
Outcrop/Creek
|
4.34
|
2.56
|
0.067
|
43.7
|
136
|
1
|
<0.05
|
2.72
|
2.8
|
7.4
|
20
|
2.99
|
Sakinzawa
|
50001
|
Outcrop
|
1.53
|
6.7
|
0
|
356
|
35
|
0
|
0
|
10
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
7
|
Sakinzawa
|
SAM02071
|
Outcrop/Creek
|
1.34
|
3.24
|
0.049
|
116.5
|
17
|
2
|
<0.05
|
7.82
|
2
|
3.7
|
2
|
3.91
|
Sakinzawa
|
50007
|
Outcrop
|
1.22
|
2.8
|
0
|
258
|
24
|
0
|
0
|
10
|
3
|
7
|
4
|
8
|
Sakinzawa
|
50003
|
Outcrop
|
1.09
|
3.1
|
0
|
278
|
17
|
0
|
0
|
10
|
3
|
7
|
3
|
6
|
SOURCE Japan Gold Corp.