granite creek
underground
The Granite Creek Project is located at the intersection of the Getchell and Battle Mountain Trends proximal to Nevada Gold Mines’ Twin Creeks and Turquoise Ridge mining operations. The project hosts both high grade open pit and underground mineral resources that remain open for expansion. The underground mine at Granite Creek is permitted and is in production with the goal of ramping up mining throughout 2024 and early 2025.
i-80 is executing an extensive exploration and delineation drilling program targeting the underground mineralization.
QUICK FACTS
OWNERSHIP
100% i-80 Gold Corp
LOCATION
Getchell Trend – Northern Nevada
STATUS
Development
M&I MINERAL RESOURCES
1,008 kt @ 10.40 g/t Au for 337 koz
INFERRED MINERAL RESOURCES
741 kt @ 13.41 g/t Au for 319 koz
MINING STYLE
Underground (cut-and-fill)
NEXT UPDATE
Q1-2025 – Preliminary Economic Assessment (2021 Granite Creek PEA updated for metal prices & costs)
Q4-2025 – Feasibility Study
TECHNICAL REPORTS
Granite Creek PEA, Humboldt County, Nevada (November 8, 2021)
GEOLOGY
The Granite Creek Project is in the Potosi mining district, approximately 43km northwest of Winnemucca, NV. The property sits on the eastern flank of the Osgood Mountains near the intersection of the northeast-trending Getchell trend and the northwest-trending Battle Mountain trend.
Mineralization at Granite Creek is carlin-style, similar to nearby deposits at Turquoise Ridge and Twin Creeks. Since 1980, the property has produced nearly one million ounces of gold, primarily from the CX, Mag, and Range Front Zones that are all located in the hanging wall of the east-dipping Range Front fault of the Osgood Mountains.
The primary host rocks are interbedded shale, siltstone, and limestone rock units of the Ordovician Comus Formation with lesser mineralization in shales and limestones of the underlying Cambrian Preble Formation. Mineralization controls include inverted reverse faults, Cretaceous dikes, and favorable host rocks. Relatively high-grade, underground, mineralization in the CX and Range Front Zones are found at intersections between fault zones and receptive portions of the lower Comus Formation. Mineralization is primarily sooty, fine-grained pyrite with gold hosted in arsenic-rich rims. Altered rocks are commonly decarbonatized, argillized, and silicified.
Title | Address | Description |
---|---|---|
GRANITE CREEK | Unnamed Road, Golconda, NV 89414, USA |