LIFT intersects 33 m at 1.09% Li2O at its Echo pegmatite, Yellowknife Lithium Project, NWT

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Li-FT Power Ltd.
Li-FT Power Ltd.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, May 28, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Li-FT Power Ltd. (“LIFT” or the “Company”) (TSXV: LIFT) (OTCQX: LIFFF) (Frankfurt: WS0) is pleased to report assays from 13 drill holes completed at the Shorty, BIG East, Echo, Fi Main, & Ki pegmatites within the Yellowknife Lithium Project (“YLP”) located outside the city of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories (Figure 1). Drilling intersected significant intervals of spodumene mineralization, with the following highlights:

Highlights:

  • YLP-0281: 15 m at 1.19% Li2O, (Echo)
            and: 9 m at 1.02% Li2O
            and: 9 m at 0.98% Li2O

  • YLP-0285: 17 m at 1.05% Li2O, (Echo)
     including: 9 m at 1.28% Li2O

Discussion of Results

This news release provides results for 13 drill holes (2,669 m) from LIFT’s 2024 winter drilling program. Holes are reported from five different pegmatite complexes that include Echo, BIG East, Ki, Fi Main, and Shorty. A table of composite calculations, general comments related to this discussion, and a table of collar headers are provided towards the end of this section.

Dave Smithson, SVP Geology of LIFT comments, “We are excited about the last hole of the Echo winter program which hit 17 m at 1.05% Li2O, at the northwest limit of drilling. The hole intercepted a new lower spodumene-bearing dyke that does not crop out at surface and was never intercepted in the drilling to the southeast. The dyke marks the identification of a total of five spodumene-bearing dykes across the Echo property to date, highlighting the system’s potential for the discovery of additional hidden dykes in future follow-up drill testing.”

Li-FT detailed maps yellowknife with roads March 2024
Li-FT detailed maps yellowknife with roads March 2024

Figure 1 – Location of LIFT’s Yellowknife Lithium Project. Drilling has been thus far mainly focused on the Near Field Group of pegmatites which are located to the east of the city of Yellowknife along a government-maintained paved highway, and advancing to the Echo target, the first drilling in the Further Afield Group.

Echo Pegmatite

The Echo pegmatite complex comprises a steeply dipping, northwest-trending, feeder dyke (“Echo feeder”) that splits into a fanning splay of moderate to gently dipping dykes for 0.5 km to the northwest (“Echo splay”). The dyke complex has a total strike length of over 1.0 km. The feeder dyke is 5-15 m wide whereas the gently dipping dykes in the splay are locally up to 25 m thick. Five of the six holes reported here were drilled on the splay and one was drilled on the feeder. Holes are described from approximately northwest to southeast.

YLP-0281 was drilled on a section located 400 m from where the splay merges with the feeder, testing the Echo splay from 75 to 200 m below the surface and stepped back 100 m from previously released YLP-0212 (1.26% Li2O over 27 m from four intervals spaced a total of 123 m apart). New drilling intersected three pegmatite dykes between 10-15 m in width, two of which are centered around 75-100 m vertical depth and a third centered at 200 m. These three dykes returned composites of 1.0-1.2% Li2O over 9-15 m for a cumulative 1.09% Li2O over 33 m (Table 1 & 2, Figures 2 & 3).