29 October 2024
European Green Transition plc
("European Green Transition", "EGT" or "the Company")
Initial Olserum Drilling Results
Positive initial results at Olserum REE project
European Green Transition (AIM: EGT), a company developing green economy assets in
Highlights
· Significant REE mineralisation confirmed within a shear zone structure at Djupedal validating the structural model and district scale potential of the Olserum REE Project.
· Results represent a major milestone in EGT's strategy to monetise the Project through sale or partnership as EGT continues to direct its focus towards revenue generating opportunities.
· Hole OLS24-01 intersected 1.5m grading 3.48% Total Rare Earth Oxides (TREO) (32% Heavy Rare Earth Oxides (HREO)) including 0.5m grading 7.7% TREO within the target structure.
· Hole OLS24-02 intersected 7.25m grading 0.72% TREO (25% HREO) including 2.0m grading 1.18% TREO across the same structure.
· Hole OLS24-03 intersected 1.6m grading 1.45% TREO (28% HREO) including 0.7m grading 2.3% TREO.
· Remainder of results expected in Q4-2024 subject to laboratory turnaround times.
Aiden Lavelle, Chief Executive Officer of European Green Transition, said:
"The objective of our drill programme at the Olserum REE project was to derisk the Project and support the monetisation of the Project in the near future. The initial results provide strong validation of the Project's district scale REE potential. We look forward to receiving the remainder of the results later this year, which will be crucial as we look to realise value through a sale or partnership of the Project, enabling EGT to direct its focus towards revenue generating opportunities in the green energy transition."
Summary of Drill Results
EGT has received assay results for the first four diamond drill holes drilled as part of a 13-hole scout drill program to test the district scale REE potential at the Olserum REE project in August 2024. The first four holes were collared close to small-scale historic iron workings and dumps and targeted an interpreted REE-mineralised structure beneath the workings. EGT had previously sampled high-grade and coarse REE-phosphate (monazite and xenotime) mineralisation in the surface dumps with sample results of up to 20.45% TREO.
Figure 1: Olserum drill hole map showing recent EGT drill holes and holes with results reported here.
Hole OLS24-01 and OLS24-02 were located at the same drill pad and drilled at -45 and -75 degrees respectively to target the structure with two intersections beneath the northern workings. Both holes intersected altered and sheared granite before intersecting the main target structure which dips 70 degrees to the southwest. Hole OLS24-03 and OLS24-04 were located at a drill pad 30m east-southeast of the first two holes and drilled at -43 and -74 degrees respectively to target the same structure beneath the southerly surface workings.
Hole OLS24-01 intersected 1.5m grading 3.48% TREO from 41.0 to 42.5m including 0.5m grading 7.7% TREO consistent with the main zone of visible coarse monazite and xenotime. The HREO grade is 1.5m grading 1.12% HREO representing 32% HREO/TREO. This intersection occurs within a lower grade broader zone averaging 0.85% TREO over 7.9m. A single sample from a biotite-magnetite vein with visible monazite crystals at 54.1m had a grade of 1.79% TREO (27% HREO) from 54.0 to 54.5m.
Hole OLS24-02 intersected 7.25m grading 0.72% TREO from 63.6 to 70.85m including 2.0m grading 1.18% TREO. The HREO grade is 0.18% HREO representing 25% HREO/TREO. This hole had a wider zone of strong pervasive biotite-magnetite alteration from 57.2m to 76.06m around the core of the mineralised zone. Within the centre of this zone is a vein with visible coarse monazite and xenotime at 67.1m.
Hole OLS24-03 intersected 1.6m grading 1.45% TREO from 32.95m to 34.55m including 0.7m grading 2.3% TREO. The HREO grade is 0.4% HREO representing 28% HREO/TREO. The main mineralised structure consists of a broad alteration zone in sheared biotite-magnetite altered granite and some stronger zones of biotite and magnetite from 20cm to 70cm in core at 32.95m, 33.85m and 35.2m.
OLS24-04 intersected diffuse zones with lower grade including 4.05m grading 0.16% TREO (33% HREO) from 8.25m to 12.3m, 0.5m grading 0.22% TREO (71.45% HREO) on the main structure from 42.0m to 42.55m and a separate sample from 62.9m to 63.4m grading 0.52% TREO (43.9% HREO). Alteration around the main zone was more broad from 31.1m to 42m but lacking a strong or focused vein of high-grade mineralisation. It is to be expected that there will be some variability in widths and grades of veins within the mineralised shear structure and this is a common feature of shear-zone hosted mineral deposits.
All four holes generally intersected a broad zone of biotite-altered and sheared granite in the hanging wall above the structure which included some narrow biotite-magnetite veins. Beneath the main structure, in the footwall, the holes intersected weakly altered to unaltered red Olserum granite consistent with surface mapping.
In summary, the mineralised structure where the workings are located is a bounding structure (on the northeast side) to the strong alteration and shearing at the 1km-long Djupedal prospect. The first drill results here in the eastern part of the prospect give proof of concept for shear zone hosted REE mineralisation which has been tested to a vertical depth of 65m beneath the workings. Results for the deeper hole OLS24-05, once received, are expected to increase the depth extent of mineralisation to >150m on this structure. These results bode well for confirming a district-scale REE system in the wider Olserum project area.
To support the Company's ongoing outreach to potential partners, the results are being reported to JORC standard with the inclusion of further detailed information in the JORC tables at the end of this announcement.
Table 1: Coordinates and relevant information for EGT drill holes at the Olserum REE project.
HOLE ID |
PROSPECT |
EASTING SWEREF 99TM |
NORTHING SWEREF 99TM |
ELEVATION (m) |
AZIMUTH GYRO |
DIP |
TOTAL DEPTH (m) |
ASSAY RESULTS |
OLS24-01 |
Djupedal |
578392 |
6425419 |
75 |
54.7 |
-45 |
66.4 |
This RNS |
OLS24-02 |
Djupedal |
578392.8 |
6425419.8 |
75 |
53.9 |
-75 |
84.1 |
This RNS |
OLS24-03 |
Djupedal |
578423 |
6425407 |
66 |
53.1 |
-43 |
62.5 |
This RNS |
OLS24-04 |
Djupedal |
578422.7 |
6425406.7 |
66 |
53.8 |
-74.4 |
71.95 |
This RNS |
OLS24-05 |
Djupedal |
578261 |
6425317 |
55 |
45 |
-45 |
229.5 |
Pending |
OLS24-06 |
Djupedal |
578287 |
6425332 |
55 |
224.5 |
-44.6 |
101.8 |
Pending |
OLS24-07 |
Djupedal |
577843 |
6425501 |
47 |
35.2 |
-45 |
89.55 |
Pending |
OLS24-08 |
Djupedal |
577821 |
6425486 |
47 |
34.2 |
-44.5 |
111.9 |
Pending |
OLS24-09 |
Djupedal |
578033 |
6425364 |
50 |
217.8 |
-43.8 |
83.7 |
Pending |
OLS24-10 |
Djupedal |
578030 |
6425319 |
50 |
39.96 |
-45.1 |
104.4 |
Pending |
OLS24-11 |
Olserum West |
579730 |
6424040 |
65 |
235 |
-45 |
162.9 |
Pending |
OLS24-12 |
Olserum West |
579730.8 |
6424040.8 |
65 |
234.58 |
-65 |
222.65 |
Pending |
OLS24-13 |
Olserum West |
579694 |
6424069 |
43 |
238.66 |
-44.9 |
111.75 |
Pending |
TOTAL :13 |
1,503.1 |
4/13 |
Table 2: Summary of intersections from the first four EGT drill holes at the Olserum REE project (Djupedal Prospect)
HOLE ID |
From (m) |
To (m) |
Interval (m) |
TREO % |
PMREO % |
NdPr Oxides % |
Dy ppm |
Tb ppm |
OLS24-01 |
41.0 |
42.5 |
1.5 |
3.48 |
0.76 |
0.66 |
816 |
137 |
including |
42.0 |
42.5 |
0.5 |
7.70 |
1.77 |
0.78 |
1,570 |
281 |
(within anomalous zone*) |
37.15 |
45.05 |
7.9 |
0.86 |
0.188 |
0.162 |
194 |
32.8 |
OLS24-02 |
63.6 |
70.85 |
7.25 |
0.72 |
0.153 |
0.134 |
135 |
23.6 |
including |
64.85 |
66.85 |
2.0 |
1.18 |
0.26 |
0.23 |
178 |
33.3 |
OLS24-03 |
32.95 |
34.55 |
1.6 |
1.45 |
0.38 |
0.33 |
333 |
58.2 |
including |
33.85 |
34.55 |
0.7 |
2.3 |
0.58 |
0.51 |
548 |
66.3 |
OLS24-04 |
8.25 |
12.30 |
4.05 |
0.16 |
0.033 |
0.028 |
40 |
26.9 |
and |
62.9 |
63.4 |
0.5 |
0.52 |
0.095 |
0.075 |
148 |
22 |
*includes internal dilution >2m with <0.4% TREO
Figure 1 Section showing drillholes OLS24-01 and OLS24-02 beneath the historic workings at Djupedal. BMR - Biotite-magnetite rock +/-REEs (intense alteration), BMRW - Biotite-magnetite wall rock alteration.
Figure 2 Section showing drillholes OLS24-03 and OLS24-04 beneath the historic workings at Djupedal. BMR - Biotite-magnetite rock +/-REEs (intense alteration), BMRW - Biotite-magnetite wallrock alteration.
Competent Person
All scientific and technical information in this announcement has been prepared under the supervision of and reviewed and approved by EurGeol Aiden Lavelle, M.Sc., P.Geo., EGT's Chief Executive Officer. Mr Lavelle has sufficient experience relevant to the style of mineralisation and type of deposit under consideration, and to the activity which he is undertaking to qualify as a Competent Person in accordance with the guidance note for Mining, Oil & Gas Companies issued by the London Stock Exchange in respect of AIM Companies, which outlines standards of disclosure for mineral projects. Mr Lavelle consents to the inclusion in this announcement of the matters based on his information in the form and context in which it appears.
APPENDIX 1 JORC TABLE 1 - JORC CODE, 2012 EDITION - TABLE 1
Section 1 Sampling Techniques and Data (Criteria in this section apply to all succeeding sections.)
Criteria |
Explanation |
Explanation |
|
Sampling techniques |
Nature and quality of sampling (e.g. cut channels, random chips, or specific specialised industry standard measurement tools appropriate to the minerals under investigation, such as down hole gamma sondes, or handheld XRF instruments, etc). These examples should not be taken as limiting the broad meaning of sampling. |
Samples from the first 4 diamond drill holes at the Djupedal prospect are reported here. The four holes totalling 284.95m had 121 samples incl. QAQC samples. 13 holes were drilled by EGT for a total of 1510.2m. Core was NQ2 (50.6mm diameter). All diamond drill core samples analysed were of half core cut by automated core saw. Approximately 1:30 samples were 1/4 core duplicates. The remaining half of the core was returned to the core box as a permanent record of the drill hole and will be stored at ALS or SGU archive facilities in Mala, north |
|
Drilling techniques |
Drill type (e.g. core, reverse circulation, open-hole hammer, rotary air blast, auger, Bangka, sonic, etc) and details (e.g. core diameter, triple or standard tube, depth of diamond tails, face-sampling bit or other type, whether core is oriented and if so, by what method, etc). |
Diamond drilling retrieved full core of NQ2 (50.6mm) diameter using standard wireline drilling with a diamond bit and core barrel. The rig used was a DBC ESD9 MACHINA owned and operated by Norse Diamond Drilling AS. Core was orientated where possible and surveying was done with a Veracio TruGyro, a non-magnetic true north-seeking instrument due to the magnetic nature of the mineralisation. Downhole surveys measurements collected between 3 and 20m intervals. Downhole gamma surveys were conducted on hole OLS24-04 and all subsequent holes. |
|
Drill sample recovery |
• Method of recording and assessing core and chip sample recoveries and results assessed. |
Core recovery was excellent (>95% up to 100%) due to the hard crystalline nature of the rock in all holes. Only localised minor fracturing and core loss was noted with late faults which did not usually coincide with mineralised intersections. |
|
Logging |
|
All core was logged for recovery, RQD, solid core %, lithology and alteration with structural measurements taken on oriented core where practical and useful. The logging was followed by markup for sampling and photography of core, both wet and dry. General coding was used for lithological logging and was kept simple as the host lithology seldom differs and it is mainly the degree of alteration and foliation of the granite that varies due to later cross-cutting mineralised shears. These exploration holes are not intended to be used as part of a mineral resource estimate at this stage but data was recorded to the standard to allow for future use in a resource estimate. |
|
Sub-sampling techniques and sample preparation |
• If core, whether cut or sawn and whether quarter, half or all core taken. |
All diamond drill core samples were of half core cut by trained operators using an automated diamond core saw at the ALS Pitea sample prep facility in |
|
Quality of assay data and laboratory tests |
• The nature, quality and appropriateness of the assaying and laboratory procedures used and whether the technique is considered partial or total. |
The assay technique is considered near total and has consistently been used for all samples at Olserum. |
|
Verification of sampling and assaying |
• The verification of significant intersections by either independent or alternative company personnel. |
Mrs Emer Blackwell, PGeo, consultant GIS and Database manager to the Company has also verified the intersections reported here. |
|
Location of data points |
• Accuracy and quality of surveys used to locate drill holes (collar and down-hole surveys), trenches, mine workings and other locations used in Mineral Resource estimation. |
Drill hole coordinates were recorded with a Garmin GPS Map 64 and also checked with iPhone and Swedish MyMap Lidar topography app on smart phone. |
|
Data spacing and distribution |
• Data spacing for reporting of Exploration Results. |
The scout drill program was not intended to define a resource. The spacing has shown that mineralisation is hosted in structures which are expected to extend beyond the area of drilling based on surface mapping albeit it is expected that grade will be variable within the structure. Further results are pending from other drillholes located up to 600m away from the holes reported here. |
|
Orientation of data in relation to geological structure |
• Whether the orientation of sampling achieves unbiased sampling of possible structures and the extent to which this is known, considering the deposit type. |
Assays reported here are from holes drilled near perpendicular to the mineralised structures and carried out to normal industry standards. |
|
Sample security |
The measures taken to ensure sample security |
Core was kept in a locked facility and securely strapped to pallets for transport direct to ALS Pitea for cutting and assay. |
|
Audits or reviews |
• The results of any audits or reviews of sampling techniques and data. |
Not applicable, these are initial results of a scout drilling program. |
Section 2 Reporting of Exploration Results
(Criteria listed in the preceding section also apply to this section.)
Criteria |
Explanation |
Explanation |
Mineral tenement and land tenure status |
Type, reference name/number, location and ownership including agreements or material issues with third parties such as joint ventures, partnerships, overriding royalties, native title interests, historical sites, wilderness or national park and environmental settings. |
All permits relating to the Olserum project are 100%-owned by European Mineral Exploration AB (registered in |
Exploration done |
Acknowledgment and appraisal of exploration by other parties. |
Minimal fieldwork has been conducted by other operators in the past and the focus was on the Olserum resource area 2.3km southwest of Djupedal where a historic resource estimate was defined by IGE and Tasman Metals (2013). The first three holes drilled at the Olserum project was at Djupedal in 2003 but all 3 holes were drilled to the south, near parallel to the mineralised structures which they failed to intersect. The area has since been deforested with more exposure and a new deposit model. |
Geology |
Deposit type, geological setting and style of mineralisation. |
REE mineralisation is hosted in biotite-magnetite altered shear zones crosscutting the red hematised Olserum granite, a peraluminous alkali-feldspar granite. The Olserum-Djupedal granite is interpreted to be an anatectic granite that was produced by partial melting at ~1.80 Ga. Major crustal scale structures, part of the Loftahammar-Linköping Deformation Zone occur within 10km. |
Drill hole Information |
A summary of all information material to the understanding of the exploration results including a tabulation of the following information for all Material drill holes: |
Table included in the RNS above. |
Data aggregation methods |
In reporting Exploration Results, weighting averaging techniques, maximum and/or minimum grade truncations (e.g. cutting of high grades) and cut-off grades are usually Material and should be stated. |
Length weighted grades are reported for samples above a cut-off of 0.4% TREO and with no greater than 2m of internal dilution. |
Relationship between mineralisation widths and intercept lengths |
• These relationships are particularly important in the reporting of Exploration Results. |
True width is estimated at 90% of the down hole length for -45 degree holes and 64% for - 70 degree holes assuming a 70 degree dip for the structure. Mineralised structures dip steeply 70-80 degrees to the southwest. |
Diagrams |
Appropriate maps and sections (with scales) and tabulations of intercepts should be included for any significant discovery being reported These should include, but not be limited to a plan view of drill hole collar locations and appropriate sectional views. |
Drill hole location map and sections included in the RNS above. |
Balanced reporting |
Where comprehensive reporting of all Exploration Results is not practicable, representative |
Samples are reported over the target structures of significant width and grade. Other samples away from these structures are not expected to have economic mineralisation and may be sampled to improve the understanding of the mineralisation/geochemistry etc. |
Other |
Other exploration data, if meaningful and material, should be reported including (but not limited to): geological observations; geophysical survey results; geochemical survey results; bulk samples - size and method of treatment; metallurgical test results; bulk density, groundwater, geotechnical and rock characteristics; potential deleterious or contaminating substances. |
Previous metallurgical testwork on a composite sample from the Olserum resource has shown that monazite and xenotime can be concentrated with standard flotation after magnetite is removed using wet low-intensity magnetic separation. Deleterious elements are considered low. The highest-grade intersection reported here has 69ppm weighted average U and 127ppm weighted average Th over the 1.5m intersection grading 3.48% TREO. |
Further work |
• The nature and scale of planned further work (e.g. tests for lateral extensions or depth |
The mineralisation is open along strike and at depth and is expected to be variable in thickness and grade along the shear zone structure. Further drilling along strike and downdip of these holes is warranted to expand the scale of the mineralisation and potentially locate higher grade shoots within the shear system. |
-ENDS-
Enquiries
European Green Transition plc
Aiden Lavelle, CEO |
+44 (0) 208 058 6129 |
Jack Kelly, CFO |
|
|
|
Panmure Liberum - Nominated Adviser and Broker
James Sinclair-Ford / Dougie McLeod / Mark Murphy / Kieron Hodgson / Rauf Munir
|
+ 44 (0) 20 7886 2500 |
Camarco - Financial PR
Billy Clegg, Elfie Kent, Poppy Hawkins |
europeangreentransition@camarco.co.uk + 44 (0) 20 3757 4980
|
Notes to Editors
European Green Transition plc (quoted on the AIM market of the London Stock Exchange under the ticker "EGT") is a business operating in the green transition space in
For more information, please go to www.europeangreentransition.com or follow us on X (formerly Twitter ) and LinkedIn.
RNS may use your IP address to confirm compliance with the terms and conditions, to analyse how you engage with the information contained in this communication, and to share such analysis on an anonymised basis with others as part of our commercial services. For further information about how RNS and the London Stock Exchange use the personal data you provide us, please see our Privacy Policy.