logo
Strickland beefs up management as Serbian gold mine looms

Strickland beefs up management as Serbian gold mine looms

West Australian14-05-2025

Strickland Metals is picking up the pace at its south Serbian Rogozna gold and base metals project which includes a further 20,000m of drilling at its Gradina target and a slew of new middle managers that are capable of guiding it all the way into production.
The company's pre-development programs have now been expanded to include environmental baseline surveys, the opening of a local office, well-advanced metallurgical studies and ongoing drilling by six rigs across three targets as a decision to go mining looms at the 7.4m ounce gold equivalent project.
The new key new management appointments will advance the company's mining and environmental studies and complement its 40 local Serbian staff.
Three new management appointments include Sarai Tautari as Community Relations Manager who spent 19 years in similar roles at Twiggy Forrest's Fortescue, one of Australia's biggest mining companies.
Her appointment is supported by Strickland's recent opening of a community relations office in the town of Novi Pazar, about 10km from the Rogozna project.
As a first pass in the community relations stakes, Strickland says it has already undertaken a 2000 tree-planting program at Rogozna, with another program planned for mid-year.
A second appointment to the expanding management crew is Mark Mantle, an engineer with more than 30 years of experience across multiple continents with groups such as Minproc Engineers, Ausenco, DRA, St Barbara, Newmont and Mineral Resources.
Mantle has been involved with early-stage scoping through to construction delivery and operations management.
Ben Pearson has also been tapped to fill the role of Environmental and Permitting Manager as Strickland gets ready to tick the ESG box along the pathway to production.
The company recently engaged Serbian environmental consulting company Envico to continue baseline studies across the project area which will expand on previous baseline surveys undertaken between 2020 and 2023 that assessed biodiversity, surface water, geomorphology, soil chemistry and land use.
Strickland says its updated metallurgical testwork for the Shanac deposit is about 50% complete, while recently updated testwork on the Medenovac deposit is about 30% complete.
Previous metallurgical studies and tests at each of the Rogozna deposits show positive results with clear pathways for high metal recoveries from processing, while additional bulk sample material from the Gradina deposit has arrived at ALS' Laboratory in Perth, with metallurgical test work to begin next week.
The Rogozna project comprises four exploration licences which embrace an area of about 184 square kilometres. Strickland says the project has the potential to become one of the biggest undeveloped gold deposits in the world.
The project hosts a giant magmatic hydrothermal system which is characterised by extensive skarn-based gold-copper mineralisation with varying levels of associated silver, lead and zinc.
The overall geological system also supports attendant epithermal and porphyry-intrusive mineralisation styles.
The area has been explored since the extensive era of the Roman empire, including a number of significant episodes of drilling between 1957 and 2022 which comprise more than 100,000m of diamond drilling and assorted geochemistry and geophysics.
Previous work identified more than 20 exploration targets. Strickland's current key projects include its flagship 5.3 million ounce gold equivalent Shanac inferred resource, its 1.28 million ounce gold equivalent Medenovac resource and the 0.81 million ounce gold equivalent Copper Canyon deposit.
It's Gradina deposit makes up the current complement of still-evolving deposits with a resource estimate based on its multiple gold lodes pending finalisation in this year's final quarter.
Strickland's near-term exploration strategy includes ongoing resource growth through increasing and upgrading the existing inferred resources at Shanac and Copper Canyon, refining its mineral resources at the Medenovac and Gradina deposits and following up known mineralisation at Copper Canyon South and Cesme.
The company is also about to assault new drill-ready targets, including testing high-priority targets at its new Jezerska Reka discovery and at Kotlovi, Veleiki and Red Creek.
It also plans to follow-up new but earlier-stage targets at Obradov Potok, Leca, Wolf Pond and Kaluder.
The company plans to undertake about 35,000m of resource definition and 15,000m of discovery drilling at the Rogozna project this year and remains well-funded to deliver the largest-ever exploration program at Rogozna in 2025.
Six diamond drilling rigs are currently operating at Rogozna, with four rigs focused on Gradina, one at Shanac and one following up the late-2024 Kotlovi discovery.
Notably, the company was sitting on about $34.8 million in cash and liquid assets as of the end of March, topped up by a handy additional $5 million strategic private placement by big Chinese player Zijin Mining in mid-April.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect
Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect

West Australian

time27-05-2025

  • West Australian

Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect

Strickland Metals has nailed more high-grade gold with hits of 4 metres at 10.1 grams per tonne (g/t) from 339.5m and 16.7m going 4.3g/t, including 8m at 6g/t from 391.5m from a first hole in the company's recent drilling program at its Gradina prospect in Serbia. Gradina is part of its huge 7.4 million-ounce gold-equivalent Rogozna project in southern Serbia. Unlike the project's Shanac, Medenovac and Copper Canyon deposits, which include valuable silver, copper, zinc and lead, Gradina appears to be a gold-only prospect. The strong results came from the deposit's northern end and extend the known high-grade mineralisation across 1 kilometre of strike and vertically down to 900m. The company is now on a path to revealing a much-anticipated mineral resource before the end of the year. The initial diamond drill hole in the recent drilling program, which started in March, was hammered into the northern section of what appears to be a mineralised corridor, defined by previous drilling at the prospect. Previous impressive drill intervals at Gradina, in the project's southeast section, include gold hits of 32m running 6.8g/t from 595m, 27.5m at 5g/t from 439.8m and 14.3m going 8g/t from 516.9m. Gradina's mineralisation remains open in all directions, including down-dip and up-dip towards surface. Four drill rigs are feverishly working to grow the resource for the maiden reveal later this year, testing for up-dip extensions and infill drilling to support the anticipated maiden resource. An additional two rigs are working at the project's premier deposit Shanac and at Kotlovi. A seventh rig is expected to motor towards the project in the coming weeks, as the company continues ratcheting up exploration. It plans to run a whopping 50,000m diamond drill campaign this year at the fully-owned project. The company still has a stash of cash in its kitty and liquid assets totalling $34.8 million at the end of March, along with a head-turning $5M strategic investment received in April from US$60 billion Chinese mining firm Zijin Mining. The company has completed 14 drill holes since beginning its program. It expects to receive the outstanding assays in the coming weeks. Rogozna consists of four exploration licences within an area of about 184 square kilometres. Strickland believes the project has the potential to become one of the biggest undeveloped gold deposits globally. The project hosts a giant magmatic hydrothermal system characterised by extensive skarn-based gold-copper mineralisation with varying levels of associated silver, copper, lead and zinc. Strickland's current key deposits within the project include its flagship 5.3M-ounce gold equivalent Shanac inferred resource, its 1.28M-ounce gold equivalent Medenovac resource and the 0.81M-ounce gold equivalent resource at Copper Canyon. Gradina makes up the company's current complement of still-evolving deposits. The company is also looking to plunge the drill bit into high-priority targets at its new Jezerska Reka discovery and at its Kotlovi, Veleiki and Red Creek targets, and to follow up new but earlier-stage targets at Obradov Potok, Leca, Wolf Pond and Kaluder. Strickland recently revealed its 2025 Serbian exploration campaign got off to a flying start, jagging a pair of thick, high-grade hits including a standout 66.8m section grading 2.7g/t gold equivalent at Shanac. A massive gold equivalent intercept was returned of 251.6m at 1.3g/t from 341.9m, including a stellar 58.1m section at 2.3g/t gold equivalent. Zijin Mining's recent leaping onto Strickland's share register makes for an interesting move. Having a powerful player on your side is usually a big positive, especially in Serbia, where Zijin already has a large presence with its Čukaru Peki and Bor copper-gold operations. The two mines pumped out 300,000t of copper and 250,000 ounces of gold last year, which offers evidence of Zijin's prowess in the Balkans country. The growing Rogozna project might one day stand on the global podium as one of the world's biggest undeveloped gold projects - giving Strickland a real leg-up in the eyes of the market's gold pundits. Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:

Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect
Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect

Sydney Morning Herald

time27-05-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect

Strickland Metals has nailed more high-grade gold with hits of 4 metres at 10.1 grams per tonne (g/t) from 339.5m and 16.7m going 4.3g/t, including 8m at 6g/t from 391.5m from a first hole in the company's recent drilling program at its Gradina prospect in Serbia. Gradina is part of its huge 7.4 million-ounce gold-equivalent Rogozna project in southern Serbia. Unlike the project's Shanac, Medenovac and Copper Canyon deposits, which include valuable silver, copper, zinc and lead, Gradina appears to be a gold-only prospect. The strong results came from the deposit's northern end and extend the known high-grade mineralisation across 1 kilometre of strike and vertically down to 900m. The company is now on a path to revealing a much-anticipated mineral resource before the end of the year. The initial diamond drill hole in the recent drilling program, which started in March, was hammered into the northern section of what appears to be a mineralised corridor, defined by previous drilling at the prospect. Previous impressive drill intervals at Gradina, in the project's southeast section, include gold hits of 32m running 6.8g/t from 595m, 27.5m at 5g/t from 439.8m and 14.3m going 8g/t from 516.9m. Gradina's mineralisation remains open in all directions, including down-dip and up-dip towards surface. Four drill rigs are feverishly working to grow the resource for the maiden reveal later this year, testing for up-dip extensions and infill drilling to support the anticipated maiden resource. An additional two rigs are working at the project's premier deposit Shanac and at Kotlovi. 'Our expectation is that Gradina will deliver considerable high-grade ounces to the Rogozna resource inventory by late-2025.' Strickland Metals managing director Paul L'Herpiniere A seventh rig is expected to motor towards the project in the coming weeks, as the company continues ratcheting up exploration. It plans to run a whopping 50,000m diamond drill campaign this year at the fully owned project. The company still has a stash of cash in its kitty and liquid assets totalling $34.8 million at the end of March, along with a head-turning $5M strategic investment received in April from US$60 billion Chinese mining firm Zijin Mining.

Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect
Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect

The Age

time27-05-2025

  • The Age

Strickland nails more Serbian gold with 10g/t hit at Gradina prospect

Strickland Metals has nailed more high-grade gold with hits of 4 metres at 10.1 grams per tonne (g/t) from 339.5m and 16.7m going 4.3g/t, including 8m at 6g/t from 391.5m from a first hole in the company's recent drilling program at its Gradina prospect in Serbia. Gradina is part of its huge 7.4 million-ounce gold-equivalent Rogozna project in southern Serbia. Unlike the project's Shanac, Medenovac and Copper Canyon deposits, which include valuable silver, copper, zinc and lead, Gradina appears to be a gold-only prospect. The strong results came from the deposit's northern end and extend the known high-grade mineralisation across 1 kilometre of strike and vertically down to 900m. The company is now on a path to revealing a much-anticipated mineral resource before the end of the year. The initial diamond drill hole in the recent drilling program, which started in March, was hammered into the northern section of what appears to be a mineralised corridor, defined by previous drilling at the prospect. Previous impressive drill intervals at Gradina, in the project's southeast section, include gold hits of 32m running 6.8g/t from 595m, 27.5m at 5g/t from 439.8m and 14.3m going 8g/t from 516.9m. Gradina's mineralisation remains open in all directions, including down-dip and up-dip towards surface. Four drill rigs are feverishly working to grow the resource for the maiden reveal later this year, testing for up-dip extensions and infill drilling to support the anticipated maiden resource. An additional two rigs are working at the project's premier deposit Shanac and at Kotlovi. 'Our expectation is that Gradina will deliver considerable high-grade ounces to the Rogozna resource inventory by late-2025.' Strickland Metals managing director Paul L'Herpiniere A seventh rig is expected to motor towards the project in the coming weeks, as the company continues ratcheting up exploration. It plans to run a whopping 50,000m diamond drill campaign this year at the fully owned project. The company still has a stash of cash in its kitty and liquid assets totalling $34.8 million at the end of March, along with a head-turning $5M strategic investment received in April from US$60 billion Chinese mining firm Zijin Mining.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store