Quebec Projects

Quebec is a world-class mining jurisdiction that combines the most diverse mineral resource base in Canada with a competitive fiscal regime—featuring refundable exploration tax credits up to 45%—all supported by a low-cost hydroelectric grid and a century of high-quality geoscientific data.

Dragon Lake (Lac Irony) - Iron (Fe)

​Location: Quebec, Canada; approximately 175 km North-Northwest of Kuujjuaq
Asset Size: 138 Hectares


​The GESTIM Interactive Map lists Lac Irony as a "worked deposit" (indice travaillé). Historic records indicate an occurrence of 101,800,000 tonnes. Report GM 26883 (1970) classifies this value (pre-NI 43-101) as "probable" and lists maximum historical grades of 39.60% soluble Fe and 26.40% magnetic Fe
Additionally, the Government of Quebec's Special Study 12, FER EN QUEBEC / IRON IN QUEBEC (1971, page 119), lists a non-43-101 mineral presence of 87,768,760 tons. Host geology is identified as the Lake Superior Formation

 

Lebel-sur-Quévillon - Antimony (Sb)

​Location: Quebec; approximately 30 km from Lebel-sur-Quévillon via secondary road

Asset Size: 112 Hectares


​A historic rock grab sample assayed greater than 200 ppm antimony

9000 ppm - Neodymium, Dysprosium, Gallium (Nd,Dy,Ga)

Location: Quebec; highway accessible

Asset Size: 118 Hectares


Historical exploration for Uranium identified significant Rare Earth Element (REE) mineralization. Over a 700-meter range, 44 samples returned Neodymium values ​​between 800 ppm and 9,600 ppm.
Notable Assays (via Géologie Québec):
9,600 ppm Nd
9,200 ppm Nd
4,100 ppm Nd
3,400 ppm Nd
3,100 ppm Nd

Kipawa - Neodymium, Dysprosium, Gadolinium(Nd,Dy,Gd)

​Location: Eastern Quebec; Southwest of the Kipawa Rare Earth/Niobium deposit

Asset Size: 59 Hectares


A historic grab sample from this rare-earth-related occurrence returned:
1,600 ppm Neodymium
1,000 ppm Dysprosium
1,100 ppm Gadolinium