St George Soil Geochemistry Defines 14km Anomaly
| Stock | Pacgold Ltd (PGO.ASX) |
|---|---|
| Release Time | 16 Dec 2025, 8:18 a.m. |
| Price Sensitive | Yes |
Significant Gold and Antimony Anomaly Defined at St George Project
- 14km long gold and antimony soil anomaly identified
- Strongest anomalies centred on Fence and Ridgeline prospects
- Infill soil sampling underway to refine drill targets
Pacgold has completed a systematic geochemical soil sampling program at its St George Gold-Antimony Project in northeast Queensland, which has defined two linear strike-extensive gold and antimony anomalies associated with the regional Fence and Ridgeline structures. Both anomalies are approximately 7km in length, with the highest gold and antimony values centred on the exposed Fence and Ridgeline gold-antimony bearing quartz vein systems. Pathfinder elements arsenic and mercury are also anomalous on the same structural trends. The combined arsenic and antimony anomalies are interpreted to also map a northwest-trending 'transverse' or cross-structure linking the Fence and Ridgeline structures immediately to the northwest of the Ridgeline Prospect. This northwest structural orientation commonly hosts gold-bearing quartz veins in the Hodgkinson Province, so is a priority target. Assay results are awaited for infill soil samples collected at 200m spacing, which will enable further refinement of drill targets for the upcoming campaign. No modern drilling has been carried out into either the Fence or Ridgeline anomalies, providing multiple new targets to be tested.
Pacgold will focus on target development and selection of drill sites for an extensive drilling campaign in 2026 to test the newly defined 14km gold and antimony anomaly and make multiple significant discoveries in what is fast becoming the premier gold-antimony province in Australia.