Kodiak Gold, Base Metals, or Energy?
posted on
Feb 07, 2009 05:13PM
Creating shareholder wealth by advancing gold projects through the exploration and mine development cycle.
Energy managers make up a large portion of management at present. Makes you wonder what's up.
Keith Metcalfe, B.Sc. Adv., P.Eng, P. Geo., Chief Exploration Geologist, Energy Division
Paul S. Ogryzlo, B.Sc., P.Geo, Special Consultant, Energy Division
Rodney R. Koch, .Sc., P.Geo., Special Consultant, Energy Division
Also need to question why Walter is still listed as a Consulting Geologist when he is really a Base Metal nickel guy since they haven't looked in Caribou direction in a few years.
Dr. Walter Peredery, P.Geo., Consulting Geologist
Dr. Walter Peredery has over 42 years of experience in the exploration and study of mineral deposits, specializing in nickel. From 1965-1997, Dr. Peredery worked for Inco, mainly in the Sudbury Basin, the Duluth Complex in Minnesota, and the Thompson Nickel Belt. Dr. Peredery contributed personally to the discovery of the Ospwagan Lake Deposit (65Mt), the Bay Deposit (25Mt), and the Thompson Deep Deposit (10Mt), all in the Thompson Nickel Belt in Manitoba. While with Inco, Walter participated in nickel exploration in Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan, the Yukon, Greenland, Turkey, and Botswana. Dr. Peredery has also examined and studied various deposits worldwide, including Voisey’s Bay, the Udokan sedimentary copper deposit and the Sukhoy Log deposit in Siberia, the Norilsk and Pechanga mining camps in Russia, and nickel deposits in Finland, Norway, Sweden, and Brazil. Since retiring from Inco in 1997, Walter has worked as an independent consulting geologist, studying the Taiga sedimentary Ni-Cu-Co-Zn-Pb-Ba-Mo-Li-PGE deposit in the Yukon, one of the world’s largest Proterozoic ultramafic intrusions in Paraguay, and the Mouchalagane Ni-Cu-PGE deposit near the Manicouagan structure in Quebec.
Dr. Peredery was educated in Canada, receiving his B.Sc. (1964) and M.Sc. (1966) from McGill University, and his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto (1972). He has compiled a compendium on various mineral deposits in Kazakhstan, participated in a classification of the world’s nickel deposits that was published in Canadian Mineralogist, acted as the secretary of studies on the world’s nickel deposits headed up by Dr. A.J. Naldrett, and has published a number of research papers on the geology of Sudbury and the Thompson Belt.