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Property History:
Late 2007: A helicopter airborne magnetic survey outlined new targets for the next phase of drilling.
2007: An additional 19 diamond drill holes totaling 2,686 m (8,812 feet) were completed by Logan to test coincident IP, magnetic and gold geochemical anomalies. Results included 1.51 g/t Au and 14.3 g/t Ag over 3 m in HDI 07-07. The combined 2006 and 2007drilling intersected gold-silver mineralization in 16 of 21 holes covering a 1 km strike extent, with anomalous arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), and bismuth (Bi).
2006: Two diamond drill holes totaling 425 m (1,394 feet) completed by Logan. Hole HDI-06-02 intersected a 26 m mineralized zone containing 2.09 g/t Au and 9.5 g/t Ag over 4 m, including 4.04 g/t Au and 18 g/t Ag over 2 m in HDI 06-02.
2005: Review of 2003 geophysics data by a geophysical consultant and property evaluation by an independent geologist, funded by Logan. Additional IP geophysics and a 1,600 m diamond drill program was recommended, to be followed by a 7,600 m drill program.
2004: A due diligence site examination was completed by Logan. Sampling confirmed the previous trench results and grab samples assayed up to 19.9 g/t gold.
2003: Acquisition by Logan who funded a geophysical program consisting of magnetic, IP and test HLEM across an area of coincident gold and arsenic soil geochemical anomalies.
2002-2003: Acquisition by staking by Mr. Shawn Ryan (a prominent Dawson City, Yukon prospector).
1996: Homestake completed prospecting, geological mapping, soil sampling (defining significant gold-arsenic-antimony anomalies) and trench re-sampling (yielding 1 to 7 g/t Au values over 1 m widths). A 2,000 to 3,000 m diamond drill program was recommended, but Homestake carried out only minor mapping and geochemical sampling in 1998, allowing the property to lapse in October 2001.
1995: The Heidi property was staked by Homestake Canada Limited, to cover a new gold showing discovered while investigating a magnetic anomaly. The anomaly was inferred to be caused by a blind Tombstone intrusive plug with a strong, coincident gold-arsenic-antimony stream silt anomaly. The showing consists of pyrite, arsenopyrite and stibnite/jamesonite replacing limestone. Values up to 2.93 g/t gold over 1 m were obtained from the small scale trenching program that year.
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