Labrador Gold Announces 2025 Exploration Programs for the 100% Owned Hopedale and Borden Lake Gold Projects

In This Article:

Labrador Gold Corp.
Labrador Gold Corp.

TORONTO, Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Labrador Gold Corp. (TSX.V:LAB | OTCQX:NKOSF | FNR: 2N6) (“LabGold” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that the board of directors of the Company have approved 2025 exploration programs for the 100% owned Hopedale and Borden Lake gold projects.

Hopedale
The district scale Hopedale property covers a 43km strike length of the Archean-age Florence Lake greenstone belt which has characteristics typical of greenstone belts around the world but has been underexplored by comparison.

Recent exploration by LabGold has resulted in the identification of 11 significant mineral occurrences over the length of the property including five gold occurrences, three nickel occurrences, two copper-silver occurrences and a zinc-copper occurrence (Figure 1).

The 2025 program will mainly focus on the Thurber gold trend, defined by four significant gold occurrences surrounded by anomalous gold in rock and soil samples stretching over a three-kilometre strike length (Figure 2). An induced polarization/resistivity survey is planned to cover the three kilometre trend in order to further refine drill targets for a first stage drill program. In addition, mapping and sampling will be undertaken particularly between Thurber North and Thurber boundary where work during 2024 indicates the potential to extend the Thurber gold trend a further 1.5 kilometres to the northern boundary.

Elsewhere on the property, prospecting and mapping will be carried out over electromagnetic conductors identified during 2024 surveys at the Jasmine Zn-Cu occurrence and the Misery North Ni-Cu occurrence. Anomalous gold in lake sediment samples occurs along a structural lineament between the Fire Ant Au-Ag occurrence and the StoneFly Cu-Au-Ag occurrence three kilometres to the northeast that will also be prospected.

Borden Lake

The Borden Lake project is located near Chapleau, Ontario and lies immediately adjacent to the Borden gold mine, part of the Porcupine Complex, currently being acquired by Discovery Silver Corp. from Newmont Corporation (Figure 3).

LabGold’s past exploration on the property identified two anomalous zones, based on geochemistry, one in the north extending over 1.3km northwest-southeast and another in the south extending over 1km north-south. Results from an IP/resistivity survey over the anomalous areas showed a chargeability anomaly approximately 230 metres up ice of a 48 gold grain in till sample that is open to the northwest and to the southeast. In addition, a second chargeability anomaly was identified 800 metres up ice of the 48 gold grain sample and approximately 450 to 600 metres up ice of a cluster of samples containing from three to seven gold grains.