
GoldHaven completed a 2,320-line-km airborne magnetic survey over its 37,000-ha Magno project. The data will be integrated with high-grade surface samples to generate drill targets for 2026.
GoldHaven Resources Corp. (CSE: GOH) (OTCQB: GHVNF) finished a district-scale airborne geophysical survey over its 100%-owned Magno project in northern British Columbia's Cassiar Mining District. The company collected roughly 2,320 line-kilometres of high-resolution magnetic data across the 37,000-plus-hectare land package. That makes it one of the largest modern airborne magnetic datasets ever acquired over the property.
The survey uses Quantitative Magnetic Tensor (QMAGT) technology. It maps structural corridors, intrusive bodies and lithological contacts at higher resolution than conventional magnetic surveys. Those features often control carbonate replacement and skarn systems. Historical exploration at Magno focused on isolated showings. GoldHaven is taking a district-wide approach, treating the whole package as a single mineral system.
Preliminary processed imagery shows an extensive structural framework with multiple magnetic domains and breaks. Some of those features line up with known historical silver-lead-zinc-tungsten occurrences. Others sit in areas that have seen little previous work. The company cautions that interpretation is still underway. No conclusions about individual anomalies should be drawn until final processing and integrated geological interpretation are complete.
The dataset will be combined with geological mapping, historical drilling and recent surface sampling that returned values up to 2,370 g/t silver, 6,550 ppm tungsten and 334 ppm indium. That integration is meant to prioritise drill targets across several mineralised trends, including the Magno, Kuhn and D Zone areas.
GoldHaven also disclosed additional finder's fees tied to a private placement announced June 9. The company paid $22,400 in cash and issued 89,600 finder's warrants. That brings total finder's fees for the placement to $213,465 cash and 991,760 warrants. Those funds help cover exploration costs.
What comes next is the interpretation phase. Final processing, inversion modelling and geological interpretation of the QMAGT data are expected in the near term. The company plans to integrate geophysical and geological datasets to generate high-conviction drill targets. Permitting activities are also underway in preparation for what GoldHaven calls its most systematic drill program to date across the Magno district.
The technical information in the release was reviewed by Raymond Wladichuk, P.Geo., a non-independent qualified person under NI 43-101 and a consultant to the company.
GoldHaven also holds the Three Guardsmen copper-gold project in British Columbia and the Copeçal Gold Project in Mato Grosso, Brazil, along with a portfolio of critical mineral projects in Brazil. The near-term catalyst sits at Magno, where the airborne survey has reduced one layer of geological uncertainty. The next layer – whether the interpreted targets translate into drill-ready zones – will depend on the integration work now underway.
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