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    neuester Beitrag 04.09.17 09:58:11 von
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      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.05.17 21:03:42
      Beitrag Nr. 1 ()
      Scheinen kurz vor einer Discovery zu stehen. John Kaiser´s best case KZ ist 18 Dollar. :confused::confused::confused:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lRGO5BH0cY




      http://arizonasilverexploration.com/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.05.17 21:06:09
      Beitrag Nr. 2 ()
      REsource Maven
      SITE VISIT
      This was a recent ste visit by resource maven. Sorry it is missing all of the ip and mag maps
      Site Visit Report: Arizona Silver
      (TSXV: AZS)
      I’m writing this from the Phoenix airport, after a trip to visit the Ramsey Mine project. The trip was organized perhaps a month ago but the timing ended up ideal, putting me on the project just after drills hit what looks like the right stuff in the northern anomaly target.
      The market knew that because AZS press released a visual description of the rocks. The reasonfor the releaseis pretty cool: as the chips were coming out of the ground one of the drillers said, “That’s some of the nicest grey quartz I’ve ever seen.” Greg Hahn, Arizona’s president and chief geologist, heard the comment. Worried the driller might tell others what he’d seen or buy on the visual, Hahn decided then and there to let everyone know what they were seeing.Rocks have to look pretty darn good to spark that kind of scenario.To explain why grey quartz, black iron minerals, and mustard yellow jarocite are all such good things
      to be seeing, let me step back and set the scene.

      For those familiar with the story, apologies for the rehash. Arizona Silver listed in November
      and is focused on the Ramsey Mine project. Ramsey is about 100 miles west of Phoenix.
      Getting there is easy: the project is only a few kilometers off the highway on very workable dirt roads.
      The mine operated a few times, first in the 1920s when it produced 12,000 tons grading 1,370 g/t silver. In the 1950s another operator pulled out another 4,000 tons of similar ore.
      In the late 1960s a new owner focused on drilling, getting into the underground workings
      and completing 41 holes that defined a small resource. Then the property kind of got forgotten.Mining tapped into epithermal veins hosted in a steeply dipping structure. The miners clearly wanted to find more of this rich ore, enough that they drove out sideways from the structure repeatedly in hopes of hitting a parallel vein. The vein strikes northwest-southeast. The exploration drives went out sideways from it. As he was assessing the historic data, Hahn noted that all of the exploration drives headed southwest only went
      so far. Specifically, their ends all lined up. Hahn spent some time with the coordinates, creating a 3D map of the drive terminuses –not only did they line up in two dimensions, but they defined a plane.
      Why is this interesting? Because Hahn guessed that plane was a fault. The old explorers looking for parallel veins wouldn’t have bothered crossing a fault. That was the seed that started Hahn thinking. Ramsey was a great little mine. A continuation of that system would be a nice find. The old timers followed the vein to where it seemed to end, but what if it was cut off by a fault that moved the rest of the system elsewhere?
      This part of the world is covered in gravels, deep cemented gravels that obscure geology. That’s why no one had even thought about a fault before.
      It’s also why Hahn couldn’t test his theory without some geophysical help.
      That’s why a magnetics survey was the first step for Hahn at Ramsey. And the results
      not only indicated a fault just as he predicted but outlined a big, clear target on the other side of the fault. Hahn couldn’t have drawn a better mag map himself.
      The Ramsey system lights up on a magnetics survey because a distinct magnetite zone lies straigraphically above the silver zone. To further validate the theory, Hahn then completed an IP/resistivity survey. The first line went right over the old mine. The mineralization generates an IP response because of the sulphide component; it generates a resistivity high from the silica content. The next two lines stepped north. The survey generated twoimportant
      results. First, the northern offset mag target generated IP and resistivity responses very similar to those from Ramsey. Great. Second, as the surveyers went west they noticed the IP response picking up. Hahn was curious and extended the survey area to the west. The result: a very large new IP target to the west.
      I’ll get back to that in a bit. First, let’s get to the current action. Arizona is drilling
      the northern offset target. The drill holes are aligned along the IP lines, as shown on the map below. The visual descriptions Arizona announced last week came from holes 1 and 2, which were drilled from the same collar on line 3.The first hole was vertical. Hahn did that to test the depthof the gravels and get a feel for how difficult the gravels would be to drill through before attempting angled holes. The second angled off
      Both holes hit exactly the kind of rock Hahn wanted to see. Ramsey is part of the Western Arizona iron oxide district, which hosts numerous silver and gold mines generally tapping into northwest-southeast structures, like at Ramsey. As the name implies, the district also hosts a lot of iron. Most of the mineralized structures are associated with magnetite and hematite. And then there’s Copperstone, the biggest mine in the area.
      Gold wasn’t worth much when the deposit was found, hence it being named Copperstone rather than Goldstone, but this deposit carried several ounces of gold and lots of silver in rock that was predominantly magnetite and hematite. Arizona’s drill program last year (when Hahn tested around the old mine to ensure he understood the geologic setting) was designed to give a good idea of what kind of rocks would mean success at the northern offset target. Silica for sure, since that’s what carries the high grade, and ideally silica with obvious sulphide minerals. But iron too. The magnetite zone that overlies the silver at
      Ramsey explains the magnetic response but the iron also grades, carrying some50 g/t silver. That in itself isn’t an exciting grade, but knowing that magnetite and hematite can grade is
      important in terms of opening up the scale of opportunity. So that’s what Hahn was looking for: silica and iron with signs of sulphide.Hole 1 went through 100 metres of gravels and almost the same distance of unaltered rhyolite before entering a stockworked silica vein
      system with disseminated silver sulphide minerals. Silica veining
      continued below the fault-hosted vein system into the iron-rich footwall rocks.

      So silica and iron –good. Hole 2 was better. The silica was more massive and grey-black
      in colour, which likely means sulphides. More sulphides is better, especially if the grey-
      black sulphide particles are silver sulphide (Ag2S), which is literally 75% silver. It doesn’t take much of that to get serious grade. “In this kind of system, when the quartz turns grey or black –get excited,” said Hahn.

      And before entering the vein system the drill cut through 10 feet of mustard yellow rock, which is jarocite. Jarocite forms when iron sulphides are oxidized, so its presence means any magnetite or hematite nearby is likely
      to be sulphidic –exactly the right stuff. Unfortunately, the hole was only about halfway through the target zone when the hammer fell off the end and the drillers were unable to fish it out. They had to abandon the hole. If you look at that image above, the red band on hole 2 ends halfway through the red-outlined target –that’s not because the good rocks stopped but because that’s where the hole was lost.Hahn is already back at hole 2, this time with a core rig. Hole 3 also hit the right kind of rocks, deeper because the system has been down dropped again. After completing those three holes, Hahn moved the drill rig over to
      line 2. Again, the first hole was vertical and the second angled.

      Hole 4, the vertical hole, hit into the goods again, returning silica and iron minerals over about 400 feet. Note how the hole only cut the edge of the IP target, which is the yellow blob above and left of the Tr on the image. Hole 5 should cut much closer to the center of the target, hopefully pulling even better rocks. That hole was completed the day before we arrived.The sample bags were drying.
      At this point we still don’t know that Arizona has hit an offset extension of the Ramsey vein. We won’t know that until assays return good silver grades. But we do know that the targets have returned exactly the kinds of rocksthat Hahn wants to see, and from depths that align perfectly with the geologic model. Only three further holes are planned in this program and they will not test the northern offset target. Instead, Hahn is returning to the Ramsey mine to test for the vein continuing at depth.

      This is a cross section from line 1, across the old mine. The first two holes of the last program are on this image. The fans of short drill holes within the structure are from that underground drilling effort in 1968.Hole 2 isthe left-most hole; it cut through the structure and returned 15 metres of 102 g/t silver/ Hole 1 is the vertical hole beside it, but it ran into an open stope just as it reached the structure and so was terminated.The plan now is to return and redo hole1 with a core rig, which can handle open stopes, and actually
      cut through the structure. Then Hahn will do two more holes fanning to the east to test below the deepest intercepts to date. The depth question is interesting for a couple reasons. First, no one really knows why miners stopped at Ramsey, but one reasonable theory is that zinc and lead grades increased too much for processing methods in those days to handle. Zoning into lead and zinc with depth would be interesting and valuable. Second, there
      is a second mineralized structure called the Creosote vein running parallel to Ramsey,
      a few hundred metres away. Creosote was also mined; it wasn’t as rich as Ramsey so the workings are less extensive, but it certainly carried some significant silver. Creosote is basically vertical. Ramsey is steep, but does dip towards Creosote. Hahn is curious what
      happens at depth where the two structures meet. It could be a nice area.These holes won’t get that deep, but by continuing down the Ramsey structure Hahn is edging towards that intersection.
      Lastly, it’s time to discuss that unexpected deep western IP target.Let me repeat the cross section from line 2.The IP target that Hahn is currently testing is the fairly weak yellow blob near the Tr. To the west, you can see a deeper but much stronger anomaly. What is over there? Good question. There is a good chance the IP is detecting sulphides, simply
      because there are no other rock types in the district that respond to IP. So is it a great silver sulphide vein system, like Ramsey but way bigger and better? Perhaps, but the other possibility is that it’s a porphyry. From a size and depth perspective, a porphyry makes sense. It also makes sense in creating a big picture explanation for why Ramsey exists. Epithermal silver veins are usually peripheral to porphyries. Taking that relationship further, the porphyry usually zones out into a gold-silver epithermal system and then a silver-only system. That could be what’s shaping up here. If the iron sulphidesin these holes grades,
      they could carry gold as well as silver. They do so at Copperstone, only 25 miles away, and to do so would fit with this model. This model also explains what the drill hit at the
      very bottom of hole 4: granite, but specifically biotite-rich granite. Biotite can only form when a magma has lot of water. That fits the model too: the granite would be the intrusion that created the entire system, feeding hydrothermal fluids into the porphyry that then zoned out into the epithermal veins. The model is pretty cool, if pretty tenuous. A biotite-
      rich granitic intrusion could have created the porphyry, which would explain the peripheral veins. Of course, take all of this with a large grain of salt, as this model is based on
      assuming an untested IP target is a porphyry.
      The Take Away
      Things are
      looking very promising at Ramsey. Every drill hole of the program so far has intersected exactly the kinds of rocks we want to see, and in exactly the expected places. There is no
      guarantee until we get assays, but I’m very optimistic.AZS shares moved up significantly when Hahn released those drilling descriptions.
      That said, if this is the offset extension of the Ramsey vein and the drills return Ramsey-
      style grades (like 1000 g/t silver), AZS will jump again. That will be especially so if all the
      northern target holes hit and AZS releases all the results at once, suddenly showing a few hundred metres of high-grade silver. After my trip, I would say that those not yet in AZS should consider buying. I know it’s tough to enter after it’s already moved up so much, but this stock could have a good amount of room left to run, especially since the share structure remains very tight.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.05.17 21:08:38
      Beitrag Nr. 3 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.05.17 21:11:19
      Beitrag Nr. 4 ()
      Hier kann man sehen, wie John Kaiser auf sein verrücktes Kursziel von 18 Cad kommt.


      https://secure.kaiserresearch.com/s2/CompanyProfile.asp?Repo…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.06.17 12:27:19
      Beitrag Nr. 5 ()
      Nix gefunden Aktie -75%
      Erstmal nur ein trockenes Bohrloch und kein Silber gefunden. investingnews.com/daily/resource-investing/precious-metals-investing/silver -investing/arizona-silver-exploration-inc-reports-first-assay-results-ramsey-silver-project-la-paz-county-arizona/

      Wer das Placement gekauft hat oder die Chance hatte im März April zu sammeln darf weiter hoffen. Die abgezockten Anleger, die >1 CA$ reingrepresst wurden, müssen erst einmal >50% Kursverlust aufholen.

      Das letzte Wort ist hier bestimmt noch nicht gesprochen, aber zeigt einmal mehr die Gier der Anleger, nach einem Newsletter-Beitrag.

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      Avatar
      schrieb am 10.07.17 21:12:39
      Beitrag Nr. 6 ()
      Top Stock Picks at the International Metal Writers Conference

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgRuzURYGbA&index=11&list=PL…

      Ab 17:15 geht es um Arizona Silver.

      Das Video datiert zwar vor dem Zeitpunkt, als der große Absturz kam, ist aber dennoch interessant.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 31.07.17 20:38:12
      Beitrag Nr. 7 ()
      An 'excellent' time for investors to look at Arizona Silver ahead of September drilling

      http://www.proactiveinvestors.com/companies/stocktube/7856/a…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.08.17 21:52:27
      Beitrag Nr. 8 ()
      Arizona Silver Exploration has opportunity to significantly expand Ramsey mineralisation, says chairman

      http://www.proactiveinvestors.com/companies/news/183045/ariz…
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.09.17 22:10:32
      Beitrag Nr. 9 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 55.614.977 von pmodds am 28.08.17 21:52:27läuft....ich frage mich nur, ob es an dem allgemeinen Aufwärtstrend liegt oder ob John Kaiser ein wenig nachhilft. :confused:

      Egal, läuft...
      Avatar
      schrieb am 04.09.17 09:58:11
      Beitrag Nr. 10 ()
      Auch mal auf die watchlist gepackt


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