Queenston Mining has been focused the
last few years on making the transition from an exploration company
to a mining one.
Its flagship project – Upper Beaver –
and surrounding properties are located east of Kirkland Lake near the
small community of Dobie.
President and CEO Charles Page, one of the
founding members of the company that was established 20 years ago,
said he always knew “they had something valuable.”
“We have had this property a long
time but when we first put it together, gold was $400 an ounce and
then it went down to about $260. It didn't make sense at those gold
prices so we kept adding more ground and doing some exploration along
the way.”
The company plans to sink a shaft at
Upper Beaver next year and expects its first gold pour in 2016. In
2007, Queenston raised sufficient capital to allow it to move Upper
Beaver to the next stage and to further explore the surrounding
deposits.
“This capital allowed us to do a lot
of drilling on these and the geological ideas and notions came true
and we found a much larger resource sitting there,” Page said.
The nearby 100-per-cent-owned deposits
include Upper Canada, Anoki- McBean and Bidgood.
The Upper Beaver is a former mine and
produced 140,000 ounces of gold between 1912 and 1972.
“We drilled beneath the old workings
and found a new deposit,” said Bill McGuinty, vice-president of
exploration. “The mine closed because when they got down to a
certain level, they encountered a troubling ore body and they could
not figure out what was going on. What we have found is that the
geology further down is much more predictable.”
Six drills are working on Upper Beaver
and seven others are advancing the other deposits, which all have the
potential for near surface development.
“These could be open pit or maybe a
ramp but none of them require a shaft at this time,” McGuinty said.
Upper Beaver could initially produce
120,000 ounces of gold along with more than five million pounds of
copper. The other deposits could provide additional feed.
“We can see the vision of our
production increasing from 120,000 ounces to 200,000 ounces. We are
starting with one project but there is a long-term plan here,” Page
said.
Having more than one deposit in the
area provides an advantage for the company.
“We secured a large land package here
and we were able to do that when no one else was looking in the
area,” Page said. “They were wandering into other jurisdictions
like South America, Asia or Africa and we stayed home and did our
thing and put this package together.”
The Upper Beaver also has a substantial
copper component which will generate a good deal of revenue and cash
flow from its sale.
“It means a different process but it
is valuable to get that copper out of it since it will pay for a
large portion of our mining costs here,” he said.
Plans, at this time, indicate a
stand-alone mill at the Upper Beaver site will be built and it will
be expandable to allow for additional circuits to facilitate the
other deposits. The mill will extract both gold and copper.
Exploration will remain a focus for the
company and is an important part of its success.
“We are venturing off into a
different status here by moving from an exploration company towards
more of a development and production scenario but we still haven't
forgot our exploration roots. That is what got us here,” Page said.
“As a geologist, the dream is always
to make a discovery and ultimately be involved in moving that
discovery towards a mine. Not many people get that opportunity, so
what we have put together in Queenston, obviously that opportunity
exists.”
www.queenston.ca