Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Chile sets quarterly record in environmental permitting with mining projects totaling US$17.3bn
    • Peru election highlights lack of plans to tackle illegal mining despite growing environmental crisis
    • How China’s Sulphuric Acid Ban Impacts Mining Operations
    • Over 300 acres of Arkansas national forest eyed for quartz mining
    • Pogo at 20: Looks ahead to golden future
    • Indonesia’s Reefs Face Increased Threat From Mining
    • Venezuela hopes to lure back international miners, but it’s a risky business
    • Namibia Critical Metals hires veteran rare earths specialist for Lofdal development
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Mining»Mining company says drilling confirms ‘significant’ copper, gold in northern Wisconsin

    Mining company says drilling confirms ‘significant’ copper, gold in northern Wisconsin

    Mining 4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Mining company says drilling confirms ‘significant’ copper, gold in northern Wisconsin
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Green Light Wisconsin says early results are encouraging, but environmental group says they’re very preliminary.

    Canadian mining company GreenLight Metals announced Monday that early drilling results confirm the presence of significant copper and gold at the Bend deposit in northern Wisconsin.

    The company, which does business in the state as Green Light Wisconsin, drilled six holes this summer on less than an acre of the deposit in Taylor County within the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest. The Bend deposit is believed to contain about 4.2 million tons of ore that has primarily copper-bearing sulfides and gold.

    Green Light is leasing mineral rights from the Soo Line Railroad to explore a 40-acre parcel on land owned by the U.S. Forest Service. The company said early results confirm high-grade copper with significant gold and tellurium, a rare metalloid used in electronics and the manufacture of solar panels.

    The company has completed testing cores from three holes, and results are expected within the next three to four weeks on cores from the remaining three drillholes. The cores are crushed up and analyzed for its copper, gold and tellurium content.

    Steve Donohue, a director on the mining company’s board, said early results are exciting and encouraging. He said the company has been testing areas that haven’t been previously drilled.

    “We’re seeing evidence of extended mineralization in these areas,” Donohue said. “We’re not at the point where we can say we’ve got an economic deposit that could be developed. We’ll still have to go through more rounds of drilling to get there.”

    The findings are very preliminary, said Dave Blouin, mining committee chair for Sierra Club Wisconsin.

    “This drilling and future drilling might make the deposit bigger, or it might confirm that it’s actually a very small and uneconomic deposit,” Blouin said.

    Blouin noted that Green Light is the third company to explore the deposit. Until this summer, the site hadn’t been explored since 2012 when Aquila Resources conducted drilling. Prior to that, Jump River Joint Venture drilled the deposit in the early 1990s.

    Mining hasn’t advanced previously because the Bend site hasn’t been considered economically viable for mining, Blouin said.

    “They make it sound like they hit one slightly bigger zone of mineralization, but the key thing to remember about all of these boreholes is that they’re a very small fraction of the total deposit,” Blouin said. “There can be wide variability in the metal content in these deposits.”

    Green Light would determine whether the deposit may be economically mined through future drilling that seeks to increase estimates of the tonnage and grade of metal within the deposit.

    “That’ll probably include drilling beyond what we’ve currently got planned for the initial part of next year,” Donohue said. “Once we get to the point where we’ve increased the tonnage and the grade, then we’ll start doing engineering and economic analysis. That’s going to depend on how we decided to develop it (and) process it.”

    Green Light plans to drill another 15 holes as early as this winter. The company has applied for a prospecting permit from the Bureau of Land Management. The Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest is reviewing the permit because drilling would occur on Forest Service lands.

    Federal agencies have been directed to speed up permitting under the National Environmental Policy Act, but environmental groups have called for an environmental assessment. The Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management have previously said they would decide the appropriate level of review under federal environmental law.

    Donohue said he expects federal agencies to wrap up their review yet this year, and the company plans to submit a notice of intent to drill with the state Department of Natural Resources in the coming months.

    Neither the DNR nor the Forest Service immediately responded to requests for comment Monday.

    The company spent just short of $1 million on its first phase of drilling, Donohue said. More than $8 million has been invested in exploration of the site to date, which has included drilling of 59 holes.

    The Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa had sued the DNR to bar the agency’s decision to grant a general construction site permit for drilling. A Taylor County judge denied the tribe’s request that the company obtain an industrial permit due to concerns that drilling would damage the environment and cultural resources. The case is still ongoing, and the Ho-Chunk Nation has sought to intervene.

    A spokesperson for the Lac du Flambeau tribe didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Monday. Ojibwe tribes want regulators to require future drilling in frozen conditions to minimize harm to wetlands on the site.

    The company will offer a presentation on its drill program and future plans at the P-Town Saloon and Grill in Medford at 6 p.m. Oct. 3.

    Mining company says drilling confirms ‘significant’ copper, gold in northern Wisconsin

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Namibia Critical Metals hires veteran rare earths specialist for Lofdal development

    Fears of recession, demand destruction in industrial metals loom as US-Iran war drags on

    Second Black Hills mining proposal selected for federal fast-track permitting

    Don't Miss

    Chile sets quarterly record in environmental permitting with mining projects totaling US$17.3bn

    Global Policy 3 Mins Read

    Three mining projects worth US$17.32 billion (bn) entered Chile’s environmental evaluation system during the first…

    Pogo at 20: Looks ahead to golden future

    Water crisis in Capirona due to illegal mining in the Ecuadorian Amazon

    From digging coal to selling noodles? China’s mining workers face change

    Top Stories

    As Zambia Pushes New Mining, a Legacy of Pollution Looms

    Fluorspar mining put Crittenden County on the map 100 years ago. Its importance to AI tech is driving interest in the area again

    Copper price resumes losses as Iran war continues to batter metals

    One of Alaska’s flagship mines soon could draw energy from the sun

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Zambia dismisses US health warning after toxic spill in copper mining area

    Don't Miss

    From slow creep to sudden failure: How AI helps mine stay ahead of disaster

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Coal Mining Leases Open Next to Utah’s National Parks

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.