Reconnaissance Discovers New Zones of Porphyry Copper Mineralisation at the Cobrasco Project, Colombia

In This Article:

Rugby Resources Ltd.
Rugby Resources Ltd.

Figure 1

Location of copper porphyry float samples and gold soil auger geochemistry.
Location of copper porphyry float samples and gold soil auger geochemistry.

Figure 2

Mineralised porphyry copper float samples located 2km southeast of the drilling area. (Samples located with yellow circled area Figures 1 and 6)
Mineralised porphyry copper float samples located 2km southeast of the drilling area. (Samples located with yellow circled area Figures 1 and 6)

Figure 3

Copper auger geochemistry.
Copper auger geochemistry.

Figure 4

Molybdenum auger geochemistry.
Molybdenum auger geochemistry.

Figure 5

Sample of outcropping malachite/azurite mineralisation in sericite altered rhyodacite porphyry.(Sample 518218: Assay 1.45% Cu red circled area Figure 6)
Sample of outcropping malachite/azurite mineralisation in sericite altered rhyodacite porphyry.(Sample 518218: Assay 1.45% Cu red circled area Figure 6)

Figure 6

RTP Magnetic image showing location of Sample 518218: 1.45% Cu (red circle), the lithocap west of the drill area (green circle) and prominent magnetic low to the north of the area of mineralised copper porphyry float (yellow ellipse).
RTP Magnetic image showing location of Sample 518218: 1.45% Cu (red circle), the lithocap west of the drill area (green circle) and prominent magnetic low to the north of the area of mineralised copper porphyry float (yellow ellipse).

Figure 7

Seedlings purchased in San Francisco de Icho community utilised in ongoing Cobrasco rehabilitation programmes.
Seedlings purchased in San Francisco de Icho community utilised in ongoing Cobrasco rehabilitation programmes.

Figure 8

Rugby’s social and environmental teams conducting training at the Tutunendo Cristo Rey School.
Rugby’s social and environmental teams conducting training at the Tutunendo Cristo Rey School.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, May 01, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Rugby Resources Ltd. (“Rugby” or the “Company”) (TSX-V: RUG) is pleased to report on exploration progress at its Cobrasco Copper Project, Colombia.

Highlights

  • Continued reconnaissance field exploration has been conducted over the northern of the two Cobrasco IHS-08005X tenement blocks. Field evidence indicates the presence of a cluster of mineralised porphyries.

  • Field work has discovered strongly mineralised porphyry float samples approximately 2 kilometres southeast of the drilling area (yellow outlined in Figures 1, photos Figure 2). This is outside and east of the known porphyries demonstrated by Rugby’s 2022 auger sampling program.

  • Auger sampling north of the area drilled has extended the copper-molybdenum geochemical anomaly to the north of that defined previously.

  • Environmental and Community programs have been expanded.

Field work continues on the Cobrasco Project, including geological mapping and reconnaissance soil and rock chip sampling. Environmental work continues and includes both soil and vegetation categorisation work. The focus is to identify and document areas with limited forest cover and relatively good access for future drill sites. This work was conducted by independent environmental experts.

Francisco Montes, Rugby’s Cobrasco Project Manager, who led our geologic team’s latest reconnaissance program stated: “My team has been continually surprised by the sheer extent of porphyry copper mineralisation evident on surface exposures within the northern tenement block. This is exemplified by numerous new mineralised outcrops defined within areas of known geochemical anomalism, as well as new areas in the far north where we extended the auger sampling over the zone with the highest molybdenum values located to date. Molybdenum grades are typically found to be elevated directly overlying or central over a buried porphyry system and this occurrence may represent another porphyry system located north of our recent drilling which produced potential economic grade mineralisation. Mapping has also delineated a strong lithocap alteration in an area some two kilometres west of drilling where we believe older volcanic rocks mask another mineralised porphyry at modest depth, coincident with magnetite depletion evident in our airborne magnetic surveying. Although this area was auger sampled with depressed geochemistry, we would not expect elevated geochemistry at surface within this volcanic sequence. Furthermore, some two kilometres east from our drilling, significant chalcocite/malachite breccia and porphyry float was located over an extent of some 300 metres, totally outside the area originally thought to have potential for hosting porphyry mineralisation. The field evidence collected to date points towards the northern Cobrasco tenement hosting an extensive copper-molybdenum porphyry complex with multiple porphyries, and we will continue to expand our systematic geochemical sampling and geophysical programs to capture this potential.”