DELORES ANTICLINE HIGHLIGHTS

• Property consists of 932 claims covering 19,250 acres
• Southwest extension of the Lisbon Valley Anticline
• Denison Mine Corp’s White Mesa Mill approximately only 30 miles away
• Highly favorable area for uranium mineralization based on historical and records of past mine production
• Recent NI 43-101report indicates potential to host large uranium deposit
• Fifteen fully permitted holes, ready for Drilling
Please click here to review the Delores Anticline 43-101 technical report
Read More
About Uranium
Uranium is a member of the actinide series in the periodic table. The atomic number of uranium is 92.
Uranium was discovered in 1789 in pitchblende by the German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth, who named it after the planet Uranus. It was first isolated in the metallic state in 1841. The radioactive properties of uranium were first demonstrated in 1896 when the French physicist Antoine Henri Becquerel produced, by the action of the fluorescent salt potassium uranyl sulfate, an image on a photographic plate covered with a light-absorbing substance. The investigations of radioactivity that followed Becquerel's experiment led to the discovery of radium and to new concepts of atomic organization. Read More
About Precious Minerals
pre·cious - Show Spelled Pronunciation [ presh -uh s ] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation –adjective 1. of high price or great value; very valuable or costly: precious metals.
min·er·al - Show Spelled Pronunciation [ min -er-uh l, min-ruh l ] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation –noun 1. any of a class of substances occurring in nature, usually comprising inorganic substances, as quartz or feldspar, of definite chemical composition and usually of definite crystal structure, but sometimes also including rocks formed by these substances as well as certain natural products of organic origin, as asphalt or coal.
2. a substance obtained by mining, as ore. Minerals are natural compounds formed through geological processes. The term "mineral" encompasses not only the material's chemical composition, but also the mineral's structure. Minerals range in composition from pure elements and simple salts to very complex silicates with thousands of known forms (organic compounds are excluded). The study of minerals is called mineralogy.
Read More
|
 |
|