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Title: Year 2 Annual report for EL 24810 Plenty Highway, 2 August 2007 to 1 August 2008
Title Holder / Company: Hale Energy
Report id: CR2008-0265
Tenure: EL24810
Year: 2008
Abstract: The Plenty Highway Project is located in the Plenty River area about 125km northeast of Alice Springs. The project is part of two contiguous tenements that cover about 1,200km2 of the Tertiary Waite and Huckitta Basins within the Proterozoic Arunta Block, which are prospective for palaeo drainage hosted uranium mineralisation. The Plenty Highway passes through the south of the Plenty Highway project area. The prospective areas within the tenement are topographically flat and are covered by scrubland and grassland. The project area covers part of the Tertiary Waite and Huckitta Basins which are relatively shallow sedimentary basins; the central portions of which were probably lakes during most of the time of deposition of their sediments. The basins were fed from both the Harts Range metamorphic rocks in the south and by various channels that drain areas of Proterozoic granitic and metamorphic rocks to the north. The sedimentary sequence within the basin is dominated by clays and sandy clays, with lesser amounts of sands. Lignite and evaporite horizons are also present. The sediments were subject to slight uplift during the late Pliocene and the upper parts of the sequence have been eroded in part. The sequence is poorly known, with the approximate 1,200km2 of basin within the project areas having been tested by only about 15 drill-holes. Within the Plenty Highway tenement basement was reached in only one hole and the basin is known to be in excess of 200m vertical depth at it's deepest point. Early stratigraphic information was obtained by the BMR, which drilled two holes into the basin during the 1960s. Alcoa explored the basins for uranium during 1979 and 1980. Alcoa drilled 71 holes to maximum depths of 200m for a total of 6,260 metres. Of these holes, six were drilled within the area of EL24810 and a further six within that the adjacent tenement EL25378. Significant uranium intersections were only achieved in four holes, drilled outside Hale Energy's project areas. The best intersection, at a depth of 104m, was of 45ppm U3O8 within a reducing horizon of pyritic carbonaceous silt. A drill program of 16 holes for 1579m was completed in late August to early September 2007. Of these holes approximately half failed to reach the bedrock target with the remaining holes ending in clays. Water was intersected in 3 holes 07PHAC002, 07PHAC003 and 07PHAC011. Of these the latter 07PHAC011 had the best water flow and could sustain a bore if water quality was suitable. The general stratigraphy in the area is a thin sandy/soil layer at surface overlying a calcrete horizon with sand. Underneath this zone is characterised by calcareous clay with traces of gypsum and calcrete. The most prospective area encountered is along the fence line between holes 07PHAC010 and 07PHAC012. Drill hole 07PHAC011 intersected a zone of quartz sand 8m thick (hole ended before the end of intersection) which exhibited some anomalous readings from the scintillometer. Compilation and review of all open file data was completed during the reporting period.
Date Added: 24-Oct-2013
Appears in Collections:Minerals Exploration Reports (MEX)

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