Re: Rennie
in response to
by
posted on
Jul 08, 2016 11:00AM
Hydrothermal Graphite Deposit Ammenable for Commercial Graphene Applications
Unfortunately Sri Lanka graphite is much tougher to mine Fluff. Veins are a few millimetres to over a metre thick in places, although usually less that 0.3 meter thick. Individual veins display a variety of forms, inlcuding saddle-, pd-or lens-shaped, tabular or irregular bodies: frequently forming anastomosing or stockwork patterns. The mines in Sri Lanka are from 30 metres to 400 metres deep; individual veins rarely extend more than ten metres. Much he work has to be completed by hand rather than machine. Germany takes most of the few thousand tons processed per year.
Zenyatta has the largest and very rare ultra high-purity graphite deposit in Northern Ontario and possibly the world. The Albany Graphite Deposit contains the largest and only high purity hydrothermal (volcanic in nature) graphite mineralization being developed in the world. This unique ultra-pure graphite can be upgraded with very good crystallinity without the use of aggressive acids and high temperature thermal treatment. (This information is public knowledge and posted for the public to read. (If this information was libelous then it would have been removed from public domain). All the graphite is in two pits which gives the miner many options for mining this rare precious resource.
Fluff, for new investors out there would you say it’s to their benefit to read verified information posted rather than reading unverified presumptions and assumptions?