ELEONORE NORTH
We identified a system and systematically reduced the search space 10:1 to define drill-ready targets.
1,221km2 licence prospective for gold, antimony and tungsten
Noa chip line profile of 40m grading 0.78 g/t Au; and another of 35m grading 0.39 g/t Au and 0.01% Sb
Noa chip line profile of 4m grading 1.93 g/t Au and 0.1.9% Sb; and another 14m grading 0.53 g/t Au and 7.2% Sb
Holmesø (Strindbergland) 100kg bulk sample yielded assay grades of 1.35% Cu and 1.07% Sb.
South and North Margeries Dal tungsten-antimony deposits historically drilled and known to contain very high grades.
PROJECT SUMMARY
The Eleonore North Project is the result of exploring and aerially reducing the size of the Frontier project. Eleonore North is interpreted by Greenfields to represent a drill-ready Reduced Intrusion-Related gold system. Gold-bearing veins are exposed in Noa Valley on Ymer Island, which are thought to emanate from a metalliferous intrusion at depth. The interpreted intrusion has bulk-tonnage potential. Related this intrusive event are antimony(±copper), tungsten prospects that form a geochemical halo. On Strindbergland, an outcropping antimony+copper prospect is interpreted to be formed from a similar intrusion. The Strindbergland outcrop, known as Holmesø, is a stand-alone drill-ready opportunity.
In 2023, our fieldwork at Eleonore North was the subject of a TV miniseries The Arctic: 66.5 Degrees North (or Die Arktis - 66,5 Grad Nord). While there was some creative licence and CGI employed, the series highlights the excellent work and perseverance of our field team, and our novel logistics techniques.
In 2024, the Eleonore North program was sold to GreenX Metals Ltd.