Great Western Ramps up Tungsten Exploration
Why It Matters
The expansion could unlock a near‑term tungsten resource, boosting Great Western’s growth prospects amid rising global demand and high prices.
Key Takeaways
- •Great Western pegs additional ground around Defender‑Pine Crow tungsten project.
- •Detailed mapping and geophysics start in three weeks, before July drilling.
- •Planned 2,000 m of drilling to define drill collars and resource estimate.
- •Gravity survey aims to differentiate scar mineralization from host granite.
- •Strong tungsten prices bolster near‑term production prospects for the project.
Summary
Great Western Mining’s new CEO, Ed Ly, disclosed that the company is expanding its exploration footprint around the Defender‑Pine Crow tungsten project in Nevada. The firm has pegged additional ground to create a buffer zone for upcoming geophysical work and surface mapping.
Mapping will commence in three weeks, covering the corridor between Defender and Pine Crow and extending 3 km toward the M2 copper trend. A gravity survey will differentiate scar‑type mineralization from surrounding granite, and the team plans a 2,000‑metre drill program in July, still weighing RC versus diamond rigs.
Ly emphasized the geological rationale for the buffer, noting the area’s historic open‑pit exposure from 1940s mining and its potential for a near‑term producer. He also highlighted tungsten’s strong price drivers—construction, cutting tools and emerging fusion‑reactor applications.
If assay results confirm the target, Great Western could deliver its first resource estimate and move toward production, capitalising on a bullish tungsten market. Investors should watch for assay releases, mapping updates and drill‑hole news throughout the summer.
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