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InvestmentPitch Media Video Discusses GGX Gold's Intersect of 235 Meters of Magnetite Encountered Testing a Large, Deep Anomaly at Gold Drop Property in Southern BC - Video Available on Investmentpitch.com
Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - December 9, 2019) - GGX Gold (TSXV: GGX) (OTCQB...

About this update from Ggx Gold Corp.
[{"type":"text","content":"InvestmentPitch Media Video Discusses GGX Gold's Intersect of 235 Meters of Magnetite Encountered Testing a Large, Deep Anomaly at Gold Drop Property in Southern BC - Video Available on Investmentpitch.comVancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - December 9, 2019) - GGX Gold (TSXV: GGX) (OTCQB: GGXXF) (FSE: 3SR2) has provided an update on its last drill hole that tested a large, deep geophysical anomaly at its Gold Drop property, which is located in the Greenwood mining camp in southern British Columbia, one of the most prolific mining camps in Canada.For more information, please view the InvestmentPitch Media \"video\" which provides additional information about this news and the company. If this link is not enabled, please visit www.InvestmentPitch.com and enter \"GGX Gold\" in the search box. Cannot view this video? Visit:http://www.investmentpitch.com/As reported on July 24, an airborne audio magnetotelluric geophysical anomaly was identified on the property by Earth Science Services Corporation of Oshawa, Ontario. The anomaly is interpreted as a pipe-like structure that measures 1834 by 1377 metres in width. On October 21st, the last hole drilled on the Gold Drop property in 2019, Hole AMT19-01, tested this geophysical feature and was competed to a depth of 718.8 meters or 2,358 feet. This hole was one of three holes proposed to test the feature, with the other 2 holes being permitted in 2020. The company has an animation video of the structure of the anomaly on its website.As described in a previous news release, the hole intersected calc-silicate alteration (patches of epidote-calcite-garnet) and disseminated magnetite mineralization starting at 479 meters depth, which continued to 714 meters depth, for a total mineralized interval of over 235 meters. Magnetite varies in abundance, being strongest within greenstone and weakest in cherty host rocks (and absent in rhyolite and porphyry dikes). It was only in the last 4 meters, which passed through cherty argillite and a 1 metre thick porphyry dike, that showed no magnetite. This last 4 meters could be a weakly mineralized interval in which case additional mineralization could lie below the bottom of the hole. Minor visible sulphide mineralization was observed between 699.4 and 714.8 metres depth, consisting of iron sulphides (pyrite and pyrrhotite), possibly indic...