MONTREAL, QUEBEC, Apr 7, 2022 - (ACN Newswire via SEAPRWire.com) - St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE:SX)(OTCQB:SXOOF)(FSE:85G1) is pleased to release the additional partial results of its 2021 drilling campaign on its 100% own Manicouagan Project.Table 1 - Assay results for a 2-meter section of 2021-Hole 18Table 2 - Representative samples collected from the 1,070kg bulk sampleMap 1 - Location of hole 21-18 in relation to 2021 bulk sampling and two historical holes nearbyTable 3 - Results for the eight samples submitted for secondary assayThe drill cores sampled return results up to 0.84 g/t of rhodium, 1.3 g/t ruthenium, 0.16 g/t osmium and 0.3 g/t iridium over 0.5 meters.Eight separate samples were selected for re-assay for all Platinum Group Elements (PGE) from hole 21-18. The additional average results over the 2-meter zone previously released on March 25, 2022 (from 47.5 meters to 49.5 meters) include 0.55 g/t rhodium, 1.087 g/t ruthenium, 0.214 g/t iridium and 0.11 g/t osmium. The Company believes these are significant credits to the reported 2-meter section intersected in hole 2021-18. These results coincide with the random samples collected from the bulk sampling and attests to the vertical extent of nickel-copper-cobalt and PGE's present in this system. Therefore, the Company intends to accelerate its metallurgical sampling program to determine the viability of economically separating and recovering the various suites of minerals identified in the Manicouagan massive sulfide discovery.The samples were shipped from Val D'or ALS Laboratories to Bureau Veritas for a complete suite of assays. The eight samples were selected from the better values reported previously from ALS and reported in the Company's last press release on March 24, 2022 (Discovery of High-Grade Nickel & Palladium Corridor Confirmed). Therefore, the samples are not sequential throughout the previous reference to 6.5 meters but are sequential through the 2-meter section previously announced. The Best 2-meter results for platinum and palladium are reported in a side-by-side comparison in Table 1, along with additional results for iridium, osmium, rhodium and ruthenium.Table 1 - Assay results for a 2-meter section of 2021-Hole 18https://www.acnnewswire.com/topimg/Low_StGeorgesEcoMining202204-1.jpgComparatively, assay results for platinum and palladium were similar in nature. Several of the higher-grade samples for platinum and palladium showed decreases from the previous 2-meter results reported in the last press release. This reduced the platinum values by 8% and the palladium values by 18%, as shown in Table 1 above. These variations may be attributable to either or both of the different processes used to establish the assay values and/or the inconsistencies of mineral content in the sample. In fact, the highest iron content (massive sulfides +25% to >50%) is present within this 2-meter zone and may have contributed to any processing issues present.Table 2 is a reminder of the representative samples collected from the 1,070 kg bulk sample. These values confirm the association and relative consistencies of PGE minerals at surface and at depth. Table 2 - Representative samples collected from the 1,070kg bulk samplehttps://www.acnnewswire.com/topimg/Low_StGeorgesEcoMining202204-2.jpgHole 21-18 was drilled to the southeast of the historical Bob Showing, where a 1,070 kg bulk sample was collected this year (See St-Georges Press Release from February 10, 2022: https://bit.ly/3KdbXNIThe map below (Map 1.) shows the location of the hole 21-18 in relation to the bulk sample and two historical holes, 07-17 and 08-02. Two minor faults are reported in the vicinity of these holes.Map 1 - Location of hole 21-18 in relation to 2021 bulk sampling and two historical holes nearby.https://www.acnnewswire.com/topimg/Low_StGeorgesEcoMining202204-3.jpgTable 3 provides the entire results for the eight samples submitted for secondary assay of the suite of PGEs. Table 3 - Results for the eight samples submitted for secondary assayhttps://www.acnnewswire.com/topimg/Low_StGeorgesEcoMining202204-4.jpgThe Company has a large quantity of samples in the process of being assayed by its independent labs. St-Georges' contracted geologists are still hard at work processing the last batch of core that came out of the Manicouagan Project's camp earlier this month. Assays results will be disclosed as they become available.Because of the high-grade assays returned and the identification of a mineralized trend or corridor, the Company expanded its claim position in the area to maintain its competitive advantage. This year, the Company expects to conduct a cursory exploration program on the new land acquisition with some geophysics, geologic mapping, and geochemical sampling of surface outcrops."We believe we are refining our knowledge of structure and mineralization at our Manicouagan project. Previously overlooked and, in some cases, unknown mineralization and trace element geochemistry provide additional targets that both extend the known areas and provide additional targets that remain untested. This particularly involves the distribution of PGEs. Hole 21-18 provided a 2-meter-thick zone that, when you add all of the metals together, gives us 7% nickel equivalent. Historic holes intersected narrow zones (0.22m) that had a combined value of over 12.5% nickel equivalent at today's quoted prices."Palladium, rhodium, ruthenium, and platinum are significantly enriched in areas where higher-grade nickel-cobalt-copper sulfides exist. Historically, these minerals were overlooked or, at best, cursorily sampled for all PGEs. Even so, the results from historic drilling include values to 1.73 g/t rhodium and 2.7 g/t ruthenium. More importantly, for our future exploration programs, we find that the various PGEs do not go hand-in-hand but can exist separately and more widely spread from the highest concentrations of base metals. This means higher grades of rhodium and other PGEs may exist within the 16 historic holes that encountered 0.7-to-7-meter widths of high-grade nickel-copper-cobalt within the Bob and Bob East zones. This is also true for elsewhere on this large property position."We hope to benefit from this knowledge, especially in the case of the platinum-palladium-rhodium (PGE) mineralization which appears to have been under-explored in this region. St-Georges hopes to take this knowledge to the next level by also utilizing the new pathfinder elements developed during the 2021 drill program," commented Herb Duerr, CEO & President of St Georges Eco-Mining.About Rhodium MetalRhodium is one of the rarest and most valuable precious metals in the world, currently valued at US$19,000 per ounce or $610 per gram. It is only found in platinum or nickel ores that tend to run with the other members of the platinum group metals. Currently, South Africa produces roughly 80% of the global supply, while Russia and North America account for the bulk of the remaining 20%.The global market for rhodium is around 1.2 million ounces and with supply running a multi-year deficit, the value of the metal has grown steadily since 2017. The reason for this being that rhodium is only produced as a co- or by-product with average grades of up to .5 g/t. In fact, many producers of rhodium today are operating at much lower grades, making St-Georges' discovery very significant in terms of grades being reported.ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS"Herb Duerr"HERB DUERRPresident & CEOAbout St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp.St-Georges develops new technologies to solve some of the most common environmental problems in the mining sector, including maximizing metal recovery and full circle EV battery recycling. The Company explores for nickel & PGEs on the Julie Nickel Project and the Manicougan Palladium Project on Quebec's North Shore and has multiple exploration projects in Iceland, including the Thor Gold Project. Headquartered in Montreal, St-Georges' stock is listed on the CSE under the symbol SX and trades on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol 85G1 and on the OTCQB Venture Market for early stage and developing U.S. and international companies. Companies are current in their reporting and undergo an annual verification and management certification process. Investors can find Real-Time quotes and market information for the company on www.otcmarkets.com.The Canadian Securities Exchange(CSE) has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or the accuracy of the contents of this release.CONTACT:Regulatory & Medias OnlyFrank Dumas, COO.+1.514.295.9878public@stgeorgesecomining.comSOURCE: St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. Copyright 2022 ACN Newswire. All rights reserved. (via SEAPRWire)
MIAMI (AFP) - World number one Ashleigh Barty advanced to the semi-finals of the Miami Open on Tuesday (March 30), battling past Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus in three sets. Barty progressed to a last four meeting against either Latvia's Anastasija Sevastova or Elina Svitolina of Ukraine with a 6-4, 6-7 (5/7), 6-3 win. Australian star Barty, who had been taken to three sets in the last 16 by Sabalenka's compatriot, Victoria Azarenka, was given another testing challenge in a hard-fought quarter-final battle. After taking a close first set, Barty appeared to be on the brink of victory after grabbing a 3-1 lead in the second set tie-break. Sabalenka staged a superb recovery, however, to snatch the tie-break 7-5 to force a decisive third set. Barty regrouped in the third though and with Sabalenka clearly in pain clutching her stomach, rammed home her advantage to complete a deserved win. In the men's tournament on Tuesday, Roberto Bautista Agut eliminated American hope John Isner in three sets to avenge his 2019 quarter-final loss in Miami. Bautista Agut saved a match point at 5-6 down in the third set tie-break to claim a 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (9/7) win to reach the quarter-finals. "John is a good friend on the Tour. He always makes matches difficult," said Bautista Agut. "He has a very big serve and a lot of power from baseline with the forehand. It makes it always difficult." Bautista Agut will now face either top seed Daniil Medvedev or American Frances Tiafoe in the last eight. Against Isner on Tuesday, Bautista Agut reaped the rewards from attacking Isner's second serve to claim the first set. Isner turned the tables to level in the second set, and appeared to have the momentum after taking a 3-0 lead in the final set tie-break. However Bautista Agut dug in and saved a match point with a blistering forehand. Another forehand then forced an error from Isner at match point to send the Spaniard into the last eight. "I think I played a brilliant set the first set, and then with John you feel always under pressure," Bautista Agut said. "It was a really tough fight until the last point." In other last 16 matches on Tuesday, Italy's 21st-seeded Jannik Sinner downed Finland's Emil Ruusuvuori 6-3, 6-2 to advance to the last eight. It is the first time the 19-year-old has reached the quarter-finals of an ATP Masters event. "For me it means a lot," Sinner said. "The first goal is always trying to improve day after day, going on practice courts and then when you have sometimes good results, it makes you happy." Sinner will play 32nd seed Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan in the quarter-finals. Bublik advanced to the last eight with a 6-7 (5/7), 6-3, 6-4 win over 22nd-seeded Taylor Fritz of the United States.
SOFIA (AFP) - Italy kept their World Cup qualifying campaign on track with a 2-0 Group C win over Bulgaria who fell to their second consecutive defeat on Sunday (March 28). Andrea Belotti got the first goal from the penalty spot just before the break with Manuel Locatelli sealing the win with his first 'Azzurri' goal with eight minutes to go. Roberto Mancini's side had won their opener 2-0 against Northern Ireland in Parma on Thursday with Bulgaria losing 3-1 at home against Switzerland. The four-time world champions missed out on the finals in 2018, but under Mancini extended their unbeaten run to 24 games, after their perfect Euro 2020 qualifying campaign. Italy were without defender Giorgio Chiellini with forwards Domenico Berardi and Francesco Caputo also ruled out. Torino captain Belotti started up front alongside Juventus forward Federico Chiesa. Despite Italy dominating early against the 1994 World Cup semi-finalists, the visitors were pegged back by the Bulgarians. Yasen Petrov's home side provided tougher opposition than the one that conceded three goals in the first quarter of an hour against the Swiss. Chiesa and Belotti were both unable to connect with crosses from Leonardo Spinazzola and Alessandro Florenzi to finish off. But the breakthrough came when Belotti went down under a Daniel Dimov challenge as he ran to connect with Lorenzo Insigne's through ball. Belotti made no mistake for his 11th goal in 32 international appearances. More on this topic Related Story Football: Dembele scores, Mbappe misses penalty as France beat Kazakhstan Related Story Football: Mitrovic sets record as Serbia earn 2-2 draw with Portugal The Torino forward missed a chance for a second midway through the second half with a lob hitting the post and sending the rebound over. Locatelli came on for Stefano Sensi after 68 minutes, with Ciro Immobile replacing Belotti and Federico Bernardeschi in for Chiesa for the final quarter of an hour. Insigne teed up Locatelli to curl in the second with eight minutes to go with Immobile missing chances to add to his tally late in the game. Italy claimed their first win in Bulgaria on their seventh attempt. More on this topic Related Story Football: Kane leads England to 2-0 win in Albania Related Story Football: Spain scrape win over Georgia with late Olmo strike Mancini extended his unbeaten run with Italy to 24 consecutive games, just behind former World Cup winning coaches Marcello Lippi (25) and Vittorio Pozzo (30). Italy next play against Lithuania in Vilnius on Wednesday. Bulgaria, who have not qualified for the World Cup since 1998, travel to Northern Ireland.
Weekend warriors can now look forward to having more participants - from five to eight - in team sports such as basketball and football when Singapore moves to phase three of its reopening on Monday. In a Facebook post yesterday, Mr Edwin Tong, Minister for Culture, Community and Youth, wrote: "In line with Phase 3 of reopening, the cap on group sizes for sporting activities will increase to eight from next Monday. "This means team sports like basketball, football, hockey and volleyball can now resume with a 4v4 format. Larger facilities can have more than one zone. Not quite time for a 4-3-3 or 4-3-1-2 formation (for football) yet, but this gives sports fans some additional options." Dragon boaters can also take to the water in groups of eight, while fitness enthusiasts can participate in studio classes comprising groups of eight as long as they adhere to the revised safe management requirements, said the minister. He added: "Sport is vital to our physical and mental well-being, and as an enjoyable recreational activity. We want to ensure that more Singaporeans can play and enjoy sport, safely." Tutor Jeremy Ong, 34, welcomed the news and is looking forward to having a kick about on New Year's Day. He said: "While we understood the multi-ministry task force must have its reasons to come up with the numbers it did to curb the spread of the coronavirus, five was a bit pointless when it comes to street soccer. "Four-v-four is a lot more competitive and I think it is the right move as we seem to have the virus situation under control for now, and this will encourage people to exercise more, within the safe measures, of course." National agency Sport Singapore (SportSG) also issued an advisory yesterday for the resumption of sport, physical exercise and activity for phase three of the economy's reopening. Aside from the changes to group sizes for team sports and activities, the maximum number of persons allowed at all sports and recreational facilities shall be limited according to its gross floor area based on 8 sq m per person - down from 10 sq m per person - or 50 people, whichever is lower. Requests to admit more than 50 people may be made to SportSG for large venues that can be organised into separate facilities. Individuals must still maintain a 2m distance while exercising, while groups sharing a space must not interact and must be 3m apart. Masks should be worn as a default but can be taken off while performing strenuous exercise.
VIENNA (AFP) - Russia's Andrey Rublev needed just eight minutes to reach the Vienna ATP quarter-finals on Thursday (Oct 29) when Italian teenage opponent Jannik Sinner was forced to quit. Fifth-seeded Rublev was ahead 2-1 in the first set when the 19-year-old world number 43 retired with a right foot injury. Rublev, now in his ninth quarter-final of this truncated season, will face second seed and defending champion Dominic Thiem for a spot in the last-four. US Open winner Thiem eased past Chile's Christian Garin 6-3, 6-2. Italian lucky loser Lorenzo Sonego defeated Poland's Hubert Hurkacz 7-6 (8/6), 7-6 (7/2) and next plays world number one Novak Djokovic.



