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Kellogg, Idaho. New Jersey Mining Company (OTCBB:NJMC) is
pleased to announce that assays from recent sampling of the
Niagara copper-silver deposit near Murray, Idaho reveal up
to 0.671 grams per tonne (gpt) gold. Chip sampling was completed
in the historical Cliff adit which is located near the center
of the known copper-silver deposit. The presence of gold in
the Niagara deposit would significantly improve the economics
of a mining operation.
Two chip samples were taken by the Company’s geologist in
the Cliff adit and are summarized in the table below:
| Sample |
Chip
Length
(meters)
|
Gold
(gpt)
|
Silver
(gpt)
|
Copper
(%)
|
| NA07R-10 |
0.5
|
0.671
|
107
|
0.96%
|
| NA07R-11 |
1.4
|
0.521
|
52.2
|
0.78%
|
Samples were assayed by ALS Chemex of Sparks, NV. Also, research
of historical records found that a chip sample in the same
adit was taken by ASARCO in 1956 and assayed 3.4 gpt gold.
Other historical assays also indicate that gold is present
in the deposit.
In January of 2007, the New Jersey Mining Company completed
a resource estimate of the Niagara deposit resulting in an
indicated and inferred resource total of 14.2 million tonnes
grading 20 gpt silver and 0.46% copper. This estimate was
based on eight diamond drillholes and seven outcrop trenches
completed by Earth Resources Company in the 1970’s. The historical
diamond drillhole logs of Earth Resources indicate analysis
was completed for copper and silver, but not for gold. To
date, the Company has been unable to determine if the core
from this earlier drilling was saved.
Clearly more drilling will be necessary to determine the
gold distribution in the Niagara deposit. A plan of operations
has been submitted to the U.S. Forest Service for drilling
more holes in the Niagara deposit and approval of the plan
is expected to occur late this summer. Preliminary pit design,
now being done as part of a feasibility study of building
a new flotation mill in the Murray district, indicates that
more drilling of the Niagara deposit is needed and that parts
of the deposit are amenable to open pit mining. Additional
revenue from gold would significantly increase the size of
the potential open pit.
The Murray Peak fault, which bounds the Niagara deposit on
the west, is viewed as a feeder of mineralizing solutions
for both copper-silver and gold, but the gold event may have
occurred at a later time. Ground magnetic surveys have been
completed over and around the Niagara deposit and a very strong
magnetic anomaly has been detected near the Murray Peak fault.
Favorable stratigraphy intersecting the Murray Peak fault
has been mineralized. It is expected that favorable host rocks
lying beneath the Niagara deposit may also be mineralized,
a condition which is common in the Montana Revett-type copper-silver
deposits.
Company President Fred Brackebusch commented: “The economic
potential of the Niagara deposit could be greatly enhanced
by the presence of gold mineralization in the known mineralized
beds. Additional resources could be located in lower favorable
beds and also in the Murray Peak fault zone.”
New Jersey Mining Company is involved in exploring for and
developing gold, silver and base metal ore resources in the
Coeur d'Alene Mining District of northern Idaho. The Company
has a portfolio of mineral properties in the Coeur d'Alene
Mining District including the Niagara copper-silver deposit,
the Golden Chest mine, the New Jersey mine, the Silver Strand
mine, and several other exciting exploration prospects.
Cautionary Note to Investors - The U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission permits mining companies, in their filings with
the SEC, to disclose only those mineral deposits that the
company can economically and legally extract. We use certain
terms in this news release, such as “resource” and “reserve”,
that the SEC guidelines strictly prohibit us from including
in our filings with the SEC. Investors are urged to consider
the disclosure in our Form 10-KSB and Form 10-QSB. Copies
of these filings can viewed at the SEC’s website www.sec.gov.
This release contains certain forward-looking statements
within the meaning of the Federal Securities Laws. Such statements
are based on assumptions that the Company believes are reasonable
but which are subject to a wide range of uncertainties and
business risks. Factors that could cause actual results to
differ from those anticipated are discussed in the Company's
periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
including its annual report on Form 10-KSB for the year ended
December 31, 2006.
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