Independent study finds Hardey’s Nelly vanadium mine can be globally competitive

Date: Aug 29, 2018

A report by SRK Consulting has found that the Nelly vanadium mine in Argentina being acquired by Hardey Resources is likely a medium-size, high-grade deposit.

SRK confirmed that historic operators only extracted a minor portion of the mineralised central vein, while the average grade from channel sampling was 0.8 per cent up to 1.9 per cent V2O5 – one of the highest globally.

This compares favourably to mines like Maracas in Brazil, which has an average grade of 1.2 per cent V2O5 and is the largest operating vanadium mine in South America with a resource of 256,000 tonnes.

The Nelly mine could also potentially rank alongside or higher than the Pandora mine in Utah, US, which has an average grade of 0.91 per cent V2O5.

“Confirmation from SRK Consulting there is potentially four untapped, highly mineralised veins at Nelly vanadium mine and 10 historic stockpiles, reflects the project’s significant potential upside,” executive chairman Terence Clee said.

“The board has accepted all SRK Consulting’s recommendations to expedite a high-level exploration program, with re-opening the mine as soon as possible the core priority.”

The Nelly deposit hosts a 1km mineralised trend, possibly longer, with five quartz-rich hydrothermal polymetallic veins, including one partially mined, with relatively high contents of vanadium, lead, zinc and copper.

The dimensions are up to 5.5m wide and from 12m to potentially 40m deep.

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