VANCOUVER, Feb. 9 /PRNewswire/ - CanAlaska Uranium Ltd.
(TSX.V - CVV) ("CanAlaska" or the "Company") is pleased
to announce that new NI 43-101-compliant technical reports have
recently been completed and published for its Hodgson, NW
Manitoba (previously named NE Wollaston), Grease River and
Lake Athabasca uranium exploration projects.
To view map and photo click here:
http://www.canalaska.com/s/News.asp?ReportID=441709
Hodgson:
The Hodgson
project is detailed in the current 43-101 report by Peter Daubeny, M.Sc., P.Geo. of Vancouver, British Columbia. The project
located in the east-central part of the Athabasca Basin, totals 249.4 km2
and covers portions of the Athabasca overlying basement rocks of the
Mudjatik and Wollaston domains. The depth to Athabasca Basin unconformity on the property
varies from 700 to 800 metres. The property has been intermittently
explored for unconformity type uranium deposits since at least
1978, and this work culminated during the years 2006 and 2007 when
CanAlaska completed VTEM and airborne magnetometer surveys, an
audio-frequency magneto telluric survey, and boulder and lake
sediment sampling programs.
The report recommends further airborne and
detailed ground geophysics in preparation for a 30-hole diamond
drill program. Total expenditures are estimated to be Cdn$15.9 million. Similar comprehensive
exploration on ground to the northeast, east and south of the
project area has resulted in the discovery of a uranium deposit and
three Saskatchewan Mineral Deposit
Inventory showings located within a 13 km radius of the Hodgson
Project.
NW
Manitoba:
The NW Manitoba
project is detailed in the current 43-101 report by Mr.
R. W. Avery, P. Geo. of Saskatchewan. This report provides a technical
review of the geology and exploration results undertaken by the
Company on its wholly owned Northwest
Manitoba property.
The NW Manitoba
project lies primarily within the Wollaston Domain adjacent to the
southeast margin of the Hearne Craton. The northwest corner of the
project area straddles the adjacent Mudjatik Domain. CanAlaska's
land holdings in Manitoba consist
of three contiguous mineral exploration licenses which encompass an
area of 1,436 km2.
Uranium mineralization in the NW Manitoba property area is present in at
least four distinct settings. There are prospects where
mineralization is associated with calc-silicate and leucocratic
tonalitic and monzonitic rocks with limited alteration. Other
targets include mineralization that is associated with pegmatitic
tonalite and pelite, uranium mineralization associated with arkosic
gneiss and targets associated with amphibolite, pelite and
leucocratic granites. A strong correlation is also noted
between uranium mineralization and Aphebian age leucocratic
granites (monzanite/tonalite) characterized by moderate to high
U/Th ratios of 3 or greater.
Exploration conducted by CanAlaska Uranium Ltd.
has outlined ten target areas where significant uranium
mineralization has been discovered to-date. Four targets in the
project area are presently sufficiently far advanced to warrant
diamond-drill hole testing following the conduct of local ground
geophysics.. Six additional targets require follow-up
investigations involving detailed prospecting, soil sampling,
geological mapping, and/or ground geophysical surveys as needed.
Continued prospecting and geological mapping is also recommended in
areas characterized by high uranium values in lake sediments as
well as areas where targets occupy favorable structural settings
such as crosscutting or intersecting structural elements.
Additional airborne EM and gravity gradient surveys are
recommended, especially along strike of the highly prospective
Maguire Structural Zone.
Of the 1,837 rock samples submitted for assay
from the NW Manitoba property
to-date, 30% returned values greater than 0.20%
U308, with individual assays of up to 66.5%
U308 from uraninite pebbles in overburden,
6.49% U308 from boulders, and 0.93%
U308 in outcrop. C horizon and MMI soil
sampling on the property in several target areas (1,783 and 1,410
samples respectively) returned highly anomalous values of up to 118
ppm uranium and demonstrate a close correlation with Rare Earth
elements, Y and Th.
The program of extensive future work recommended
for the property details Phase 1 exploration of Cdn$8.75M, including initial pass drilling on 10
targets with 50 drill holes, followed by Phase 2 (Cdn$12.82M) on the existing targets and a
probable 12 new targets and phase 3 programs (Cdn$7.2M) on the best of the developed
targets.
Grease River:
The Grease River project is detailed in the
current 43-101 report by Peter
Daubeny, M.Sc., P.Geo. of Vancouver, British Columbia. The project is
centered approximately 50 kilometres north-northeast of the
settlement of Fond du Lac in
north-central Saskatchewan and
covers 70.8 km2. The claims cover regional
radiometric anomalies and extremely high concentrations of uranium
in lake sediments. Exploration undertaken by CanAlaska during
the 2007 and 2008 field seasons included prospecting, geologic
mapping, rock and lake sediment sampling and airborne
magnetic-radiometric-VLF surveying. Highlights of the work
completed to date include the detection of very high uranium values
in muskeg and values of between 0.2 to 3.53 %
U3O8 from outcrop and boulders dispersed
throughout the property. Discrete zones containing some of
this mineralization are located in close proximity to radiometric
anomalies and/or other structurally complex regions.
Three styles of uranium mineralization have been
identified. These include structurally-hosted mineralization
spatially associated with the Grease River Shear Zone, potentially
significant zones of low-grade bulk tonnage intrusion-related
mineralization and zones of uranium-bearing hydrothermally-altered
granite.
The two most advanced prospects on the Grease
River property are recommended for drilling, and geophysics
followed by drilling, respectively. This will be in conjunction
with additional prospecting, sampling and mapping designed to
advance other prospects on the property towards the drill
stage. At Shearika Ridge, the best exposed portion of the
prospect has been mapped and sampled and the scope of
mineralization on surface is well defined. Drilling will
determine the extent of this mineralization at depth. At the
Bradley Zone, an EM survey designed to define the extent of the
uranium bearing structure that hosts the Zone should be undertaken
and anomalies developed from this programme drill-tested.
This programme is budgeted at Cdn$995,495.
Lake Athabasca:
The Lake Athabasca project is detailed in the
current 43-101 report by Peter
Daubeny, M.Sc., P.Geo. of Vancouver, British Columbia. The project is
centered approximately 30 kilometres southwest of the community of
Uranium City in north-western
Saskatchewan and covers 41.1
km2. Exploration undertaken by CanAlaska during
the period 2006 to 2009 included VTEM and MEGATEM surveying,
prospecting, grid rock and soil sampling, geologic mapping, lake
sediment sampling, IP-resistivity, Max-Min surveying,
lake-bathymetry, seismic profiling, and two drill programs totaling
15 diamond drill holes. This work confirms and expands historically
know lake sediment anomalies on the claim block and identified by
outcrop sampling and diamond-drilling. There are zones of
clay alteration consistent with a property-scale hydrothermal
alteration event. The report recommends exploration in eight
specific target areas and a first year program of detailed lake
sediment sampling and geophysics followed by a program of 21 drill
holes budgeted at Cdn$2.2M.
The aforementioned technical reports can be
accessed on the Company's website at www.canalaska.com or
downloaded from the Canadian public filings database at
www.sedar.com. Earlier NI 43-101-compliant technical
reports completed for the Company's Carswell, Waterbury,
Fond Du Lac and West McArthur
uranium exploration projects, as published on Nov. 16, 2010, Nov. 10,
2010, Oct. 29, 2010, and
Aug. 29, 2005 respectively, can also
be downloaded from the same locations. Peter G. Dasler. P. Geo. is the Qualified Person
for this news release.
About CanAlaska Uranium
CANALASKA URANIUM LTD. (CVV -- TSX.V, CVVUD
-- OTCBB, DH7F -- Frankfurt)
is undertaking uranium exploration in twenty one uranium projects
in Canada's Athabasca Basin -- the "Saudi Arabia of Uranium". Since
September 2004, the Company has
aggressively acquired one of the largest land positions in the
region, comprising over 2,500,000 acres (10,117 sq. km or 3,906 sq.
miles). To-date, CanAlaska has expended over Cdn$75 million exploring its properties and has
delineated multiple uranium targets.
For more information visit www.canalaska.com
On behalf of the Board of Directors
(signed)
Peter Dasler,
M.Sc., P.Geo.
President & CEO, CanAlaska Uranium Ltd.
The TSX Venture has not reviewed and does not
accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release:
CUSIP# 13708P 10 2. This news release contains certain
"Forward-Looking Statements" within the meaning of Section 21E of
the United States Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All
statements, other than statements of historical fact, included
herein are forward-looking statements that involve various risks
and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that such statements
will prove to be accurate, and actual results and future events
could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements.
Important factors that could cause actual results to differ
materially from the Company's expectations are disclosed in the
Company's documents filed from time to time with the British Columbia Securities Commission and the
United States Securities & Exchange Commission.
SOURCE CanAlaska Uranium Ltd.
Copyright b. 9 PR Newswire