ALX Resources Corp. Completes Geochemical and Magnetic Surveys at the Gibbons Creek Uranium Project, Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan

In This Article:

Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - November 28, 2023) - ALX Resources Corp. (TSXV: AL) (FSE: 6LLN) (OTC: ALXEF) ("ALX" or the "Company") is pleased to announce the completion of a soil geochemistry survey and a high-resolution ground magnetic survey at the Gibbons Creek Uranium Project ("Gibbons Creek", or the "Project") located in the northern Athabasca Basin near the town of Stony Rapids, Saskatchewan. The surveys were designed to provide detailed magnetic and geochemical signatures over fault structures and surface expression of uranium where the Company previously intersected basement-hosted uranium mineralization grading 0.13% U3O8 over 0.23 metres from 107.67 to 107.90 metres in drill hole GC15-03, and over a strong radon anomaly that was detected on surface by a predecessor company in 2013.

Geochemical Sampling

ALX carried out a Spatiotemporal Geochemical Hydrocarbons ("SGH") soil geochemistry survey over an approximate 3.4 square kilometres area within the 2023 Gibbons Creek ground magnetic grid to help determine the most prospective areas for drill targets in previously untested areas (see Figure 1 below). SGH is an analytical method developed by Actlabs of Ancaster, Ontario that is designed to detect subtle geochemical anomalies emanating from a buried source.



Figure 1: Gibbons Creek Grid with SGH sample locations and 2023 high-resolution magnetic response

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/3046/188885_17c73f56e420d9c6_001full.jpg

High-Resolution Magnetic Survey

ALX carried out approximately 105 line kilometres of "walking mag", which is an efficient method of collecting ground magnetic data using personnel carrying light-weight magnetic sensing instruments (Photo 1). The 2023 survey lines were spaced 50-metres apart (Figure 1), which provided superior resolution of the magnetic character of the basement rocks and greatly assists in the interpretation of fault structures in the survey area. The results of ALX's walking mag survey have clearly defined fault structures that were simply not visible in the wide-spaced (200 to 400 metres) airborne magnetic data available in the public domain from historical exploration (Figure 1).



Photo 1: ALX's Walking Mag Survey in progress at Gibbons Creek, November 2023

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/3046/188885_17c73f56e420d9c6_002full.jpg

The 2023 Gibbons Creek grid covers the area of ALX's 2015 mineralized drill hole GC15-03 and a second mineralized hole (GC-15) drilled in 1979 by Eldorado Nuclear Limited ("Eldorado", a predecessor company of Cameco Corporation), which intersected 0.152% U3O8 over 0.13 metres from 134.11 to 134.24 metres. Based on the results of its follow-up drilling to the west of hole GC-15, Eldorado interpreted the presence of an "…east-west trending reverse fault dipping steeply to the north…" and described "…highly altered, soft and unconsolidated and fractured sections two to four metres in extent, indicative of the fault structure…"1. Reverse faults can form structural traps, which can provide a favourable setting for uranium mineralization.