The Tindal project covers 11,720km2 covering a portion of the highly prospective Beetaloo sub-basin within the greater McArthur Basin in the Northern Territory, which hosts major metal systems containing copper, gold, uranium. The project has geological/structural settings with significant similarities to McArthur River, Redbank, Teena, and Century mineral deposits, the diamondiferous Merlin Intrusive pipes, and REE±Th±Nb rich overseas carbonatite occurrences.
Northern Territory,
Australia
World class mineralised basin located over major crustal scale structures.
Two standout historic drillholes containing Cu and Zn sulphides – NDW12-01, Sever 1.
Regional ionic geochemistry has clearly identified buried base metal mineralization from Sever 1 and NDW12-01 drill holes.
Ionic geochemistry reports anomalous element responses in precious, base, REE and other critical pathfinder elements, elsewhere associated with large mineral systems.
Ionic soils report base metal, U and REE responses above a prospective IOCG target area.
The project is located over prospective areas of the Greater McArthur Basin within the Beetaloo Sub-basin which hosts organic siltstones and shales over a deep crustal structural setting similar to those identified at McArthur River, Tena, Century and Sullivan mines.
The inception of the Tindal project began in 2017 and as an ‘early mover’, the project has consolidated a 11,720km2 contiguous package of tenements. The prospectivity of the Greater McArthur Basin has seen numerous majors and minor explorers significantly increase their exposure in the Basin in recent years.