Tasca Resources Provides Operational Update on Exploration Projects

VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESSWIRE / October 17, 2018 / Tasca Resources Ltd. ("Tasca" or the "Company") (TSX-V: TAC, FSE: 3TA) is pleased to provide an update on operations on its projects in British Columbia and Newfoundland.

Management and the geological team wish to provide operational highlights on the following projects:

  • Drill permitting in the final stages for the Poplar Copper Project near Houston, British Columbia

  • Currently executing a trenching programme in preparation for drilling at its Princeton Gold Project, south of the Copper Mountain Copper Mine near Princeton, British Columbia.

  • Princeton Drill permit issued.

  • The Company has recently acquired two gold projects, Handcamp Project and Pistol Lake Project, which was previously announced in September in the burgeoning central Newfoundland gold belt.

Tasca is focusing in established mining friendly jurisdictions with security of mineral tenure. The Company is currently fully funded and permitted to drill at Princeton and is in the final stages of drilling permit approval at the Poplar Copper Project. Permitting will commence forthwith to drill at Handcamp and geophysical surveys in advance of drilling are in final planning stages at Pistol Lake.

Poplar Project

Tasca's most advanced project is the 62,000 hectare Poplar porphyry copper molybdenum deposit. Poplar has a long past of historical exploration including the drilling of 147 holes. This drilling identified an historic indicated mineral resource of 131 million tonnes grading 0.31% Cu, 0.009 % Mo, 0.09 g/t Au and 2.39 g/t Ag and an historic inferred mineral resource of 132 million tonnes grading 0.27 % Cu, 0.005 % Mo, 0.07 g/t Au and 3.75 g/t Ag. These historic indicated and inferred resources were disclosed by Lions Gate Metals Inc. in its technical report dated March 30, 2012 prepared by Gary Giroux, P.Eng. To determine the historic resource, a three-dimensional solid was constructed to constrain the mineralized area, using a 0.1 % Cu grade shell as a guide. Large internal waste zones were modelled as were some larger post mineral dykes. Of the total data base, 129 drill holes totalling 37,205 m were within the mineralized zone and were used to estimate the resource. Drill holes were compared to the mineralized solid and assays were tagged if inside. Copper, molybdenum, gold and silver assays within the mineralized solid were capped at 1.4 % Cu, 0.14 % Mo, 0.34 g/t Au and 41 g/t Ag respectively. Five metre composites were formed and used for variography.

For this estimate and to aid with some preliminary planning, the blocks were reduced to 5 x 5 x 10 m in dimension and were estimated for Cu, Mo, Au and Ag by ordinary kriging. The historic resource is classified as Indicated and Inferred based on each block's proximity to data and the grade continuity. The historic indicated and historic inferred resource uses the categories set out in Section 1.2 of NI43-101.