GLENDALE, Ariz.--(BUSINESS
WIRE)--Sept. 21, 2004--Azco Mining Inc. (OTC:AZMN
- News),
a US based mining and exploration enterprise with an emphasis on
gold, copper and industrial minerals, and owner of a large high
quality mica deposit, announced today it had entered into an
option and lease agreement with Ortiz Mines, Inc. covering
57,267 acres (approximately 90 square miles) of mineral estate
on the Ortiz Mine Grant, Santa Fe County, New Mexico. Under
terms of the lease, the Company is required to make annual lease
payments and to pay a royalty on production. Previous
exploration and development work on the property by other
companies identified 2 million ounces of gold resources in
several deposits.

A preliminary feasibility
study in 1990 on two of the deposits, the Carache Canyon and
Lucas Canyon deposits, concluded that at a gold price of $385
per ounce or higher, it would be economically feasible to
develop two open pit mines containing 1.03 million ounces of
gold. Those two deposits have yet to be mined.
Historically, mines on the
leased property have yielded some 350,000 ounces of gold,
including 250,000 ounces from the Ortiz Gold Mine (Cunningham
Hill deposit) operated by Gold Fields Mining from 1980-1986.
Dr. Pierce Carson, CEO,
stated: "The Ortiz lease fits the Company's strategic
agenda of acquiring significant precious and base metal assets.
It represents an excellent opportunity to acquire, under
favorable terms and in the United States, substantial gold
resources with demonstrated potential for production.
Furthermore, the geology of the unusually large area under lease
is highly prospective for several styles of gold deposits and
offers superb exploration potential for discovering additional
major deposits."
From 1972 through the
early 1990's, several companies carried out exploration and
pre-development activities on the Ortiz property. These
companies included Conoco, Inc., LAC Minerals (USA), Inc. and
the LAC -- Pegasus Joint Venture (1989-1992). Expenditures by
these groups exceeded $40 million. At the Carache Canyon and
Lucas Canyon gold deposits, approximately 386,000 feet of core
and reverse-circulation drilling was completed. In 1989 the LAC
-- Pegasus Joint Venture started a decline adit into the Carache
Canyon deposit for the purpose of bulk sampling and to provide
drilling access for shallow and deep targets. However, after
advancing 1719 feet the decline was halted due to a temporary
water inflow coupled with regulatory and permitting problems. In
the face of a declining gold price, the project ultimately was
cancelled.
The Carache Canyon gold
deposit was estimated to contain an open-pit minable reserve of
11.8 million tons grading 0.06 ounces of gold per ton at a
waste-ore ratio of 8.3:1. The Lukas Canyon gold-copper deposit
was estimated to contain an open-pit minable reserve of 7.6
million tons grading 0.043 ounces of gold per ton and 0.22%
copper, at a waste-ore ratio of 2.2:1. These estimates were
based on a gold price of $385.00 per ounce. The Carache Canyon
deposit occurs in andesitic sills and sandstone around the
margins of a collapsed breccia pipe. The Lucas Canyon deposit is
developed in a garnet skarn.
A 1990 pre-feasibility
study carried out by the LAC -- Pegasus Joint Venture concluded
that economics would be positive for open-pit, heap-leach mining
of the Carache Canyon and Lucas Canyon deposits at gold prices
over $325 per ounce, assuming a discount rate of 10%. Production
was projected to average 83,500 ounces of gold and 103,444
ounces of silver annually over a nine-year period. Operating
costs for one mining scenario averaged $222 dollars per ounce of
gold produced. Capital costs (1990 dollars) ranged from $59
million to $75 million depending on whether contract mining
would be employed. The study concluded that the numbers quoted
were conservative and that significant improvements in capital
and operating costs would be possible. The study also considered
the project to have excellent upside potential to increase both
the minable ore reserves and grades. However, the study listed
several areas of concern that must be addressed before a
production decision could be made, chief among them permitting
difficulties to be overcome, water rights to be obtained and
bulk sampling to be completed.
Dr. Carson said that in
addition to the potential for open pit mining, the Company also
would be looking carefully at the possibility of underground
mining. He noted that the drilling data for Carache Canyon
showed areas of high-grade gold intersections that had not been
evaluated for their underground mining potential. He noted also
that metallurgical studies of Carache Canyon ore indicated that,
after grinding, a gold recovery of 90% plus could be achieved in
a gravity circuit. If additional work can define discretely
minable high-grade gold ore bodies, then the approach of
underground mining and gravity recovery would offer significant
advantages in dealing with permitting issues and would
facilitate the project moving more quickly towards production.
Such an underground operation would involve minimal surface
disturbance, clean processing of ore and utilization of
relatively small amounts of water.
The 90 square-mile Ortiz
property is underlain by mid-Tertiary monzonite and latite
porphyry stocks, plugs, dikes and sills that have intruded
Paleozoic to early-Tertiary sedimentary rocks. Late-stage
volcanism resulted in the formation of breccia pipes and
fracture zones that provided access for hydrothermal fluids
carrying gold, silver, tungsten, molybdenum and base metals.
This terrane holds excellent potential for additional
discoveries, and several partially tested prospects have been
identified, three of which have been shown by limited drilling
to contain insitu geologic resources respectively of 60,000,
60,000 and 105,000 ounces of gold. About half the Ortiz property
is covered by Quaternary gravels derived from the outwash of
adjacent mountains. Several promising exploration targets
beneath the gravel cover also have been identified.
The Company currently is
beginning an assessment of the large amount of technical data
available. This review will focus on the production potential of
the Carache Canyon and Lucas Canyon deposits, and on other
targets that could have the size, grade and other
characteristics sufficiently attractive to justify further
exploration and development. The review also will include all
factors important for successful development and mining,
including regulatory, permitting and site access issues. After
evaluating the technical information and assessing the major
risk factors, the Company expects to be in a sound position to
formulate a plan and budget for additional exploration and
development.
Azco Mining Inc. is owner
and operator of the Black Canyon mica deposit near Phoenix,
Arizona, a large mica resource containing a drilled reserve of
422 million pounds of recoverable mica and 3.7 million tons of
by-product feldspathic sand. In 2003 and 2004 the Company sold
limited quantities of mica and of its engineered mica-filled
plastic pellet product to a major company that is an important
producer of plastics for the automotive industry. Mica is
increasingly used as an additive in plastics for its reinforcing
properties and for its ultra-violet and heat resistant
characteristics. The Company also has supplied mica to a leading
global cosmetics manufacturer.
The information contained
herein regarding risks and uncertainties, which may differ
materially from those set forth in these statements, in addition
to the economic, competitive, governmental, technological and
other factors, constitutes a "forward-looking
statement" within the meaning of Section 27A of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and is subject to the
safe harbors created thereby. While the company believes that
the assumptions underlying such forward-looking information are
reasonable, any of the assumptions could prove inaccurate and,
therefore, there can be no assurance that the forward-looking
information will prove to be accurate. Accordingly, there may be
differences between the actual results and the predicted
results, and actual results may be materially higher or lower
than those indicated in the forward-looking information
contained herein.
Contact:
Azco Mining Inc.
Pierce Carson, 623-935-0774
website: www.azco.com