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Sunshine Mine kicks-off drilling exploration program

by CHANSE WATSON
Hagadone News Network | September 13, 2022 1:07 AM

OSBURN — For the last decade, operations at the historic Sunshine Mine in Big Creek have been limited. A skeleton crew of approximately 15 employees has largely been responsible for slowly updating the mine since a 2012 rehabilitation and drilling project was terminated.

Safety & Environmental Manager Tyson Clyne described this time as “care and maintenance mode.”

With the approval in August of a substantial exploration program by the mine’s owners, Sunshine Silver Mining and Refining, this calmer time could be a thing of the past.

Mine General Manager Tom Henderson explained that this nearly two-year-long operation has already begun with the arrival of personnel and equipment from Boart Longyear Drilling, based in Salt Lake City.

The main objectives of this program are to expand known mineral resources and discover new veins in not just the Sunshine Mine — but adjacent owned properties as well. These other properties include the Sterling Tunnel, Silver Summit, ConSil, and Polaris.

“We’re really getting excited to be doing exploration drilling in areas that are either under-explored or completely unexplored,” Henderson said. “Geologically, there’s reason to believe that there is undiscovered mineralization out there.”

One of the two drills that are planned to be used for the operation has already arrived on-site and has been responsible for providing several thousand feet of rock cores.

Currently drilling near the Daylight Switch inside the ConSil Tunnel near Osburn, this LM110 drill (with a second LM90 drill expected to arrive in October) has the capability of boring holes from 800 to 3,000 feet deep into solid rock.

The rock cores that come from this and future drilling efforts are then packaged up and sent to the Sunshine Mine complex for logging and analysis by geologists — such as Geology Manager Greg Nickel.

Nickel explained that when a box comes in, each containing 10 feet of rock core, they are laid out sequentially and inspected with a variety of factors in mind.

“They first go through geotech review where we look at intervals, recovery and do a rock quality determination," Nickel said. "We then take a deeper dive into what structure we’re seeing with it, what kind of alterations we’re seeing with it and what kind of lithology we’re seeing. Just pull it all apart.”

While the standard money minerals of silver, copper and zinc haven’t appeared yet in the early rocks collected, other interesting geologic minerals such as pyrite and garnets can be seen in numerous samples.

Nickel is not concerned with the lack of the silver, copper and zinc in these early cores, as this first stage of drilling at the Daylight Switch will require drilling through unknown ground for new discoveries.

Done in conjunction with the exploration component of the operation, the data collected from the ongoing drilling operations will be combined with previous historical records to create a 3D geological model of all the veins at the Sunshine and adjacent properties.

The previous information that the new drilling information will be added to includes roughly 130 years of documentation.

“There’s over 100,000 data points of discrete items that have been identified, sampled and described, but they are on hard copy/old maps from the '20s and '30s.” Henderson said. “It’s a project. We’re pouring all of that into a single 3D model.”

This model will be used for future technical studies to upgrade the mine and mill for commercial production, in addition to developing a mine plan to restart mining operations with a minimum of 10 years of mine life.

With so many years in “care and maintenance mode,” Henderson and the rest of the Sunshine team are excited to be making the kind of moves that restart a facility such as this back into production.

“The team here at the Sunshine were ‘on it’ when we first announced the approval of the project,” he said. “That drill showed up, everybody had their roles to play, and within three days, we were churning and burning underground.”

With the addition of 15 Boart Longyear personnel, the Sunshine Exploration program is slated to run until March of 2024. Drills will run seven days a week with crews pulling double shifts.

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Chanse Watson

Sunshine Mine General Foreman Justin Wilbur operates a mine cart toward the exit of the Con-Sil Tunnel.

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Photo by CHANSE WATSON

The LM110 drill in the Con-Sil Tunnel's Daylight Switch bores into a wall of the tunnel.

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Photo by CHANSE WATSON

Geology Manager Greg Nickel and Mine General Manager Tom Henderson observe Boart driller Andrew Minner prepare a new drill tube for the LM110.

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Photo by CHANSE WATSON

Boxes of drilling cores are laid out for inspection at the Sunshine Mine.