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Colombia, Ecuador & Peru Snapshot: Companies with properties to watch
While Colombia, Ecuador and some parts of Peru are less explored than some more established mining jurisdictions, the three countries feature a rich mining history and prospective geology. Below, we showcase eight companies active in South America.
Aris Gold
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Aris Gold’s Marmato project in Colombia. Credit: Aris Gold.
Aris Gold (TSX: ARIS; US-OTC: ALLXF) was formed this year from predecessor company Caldas Gold. In November, Caldas announced the upcoming name change, along with an C$85 million subscription receipt offering and a new board and management team.
The new management with Neil Woodyer as CEO includes team members that played key roles with both Leagold Mining (the company merged with Equinox Gold (TSX: EQX; NYSE: EQX) in March 2020) and Endeavour Mining (TSX: EDV; US-OTC: EDVMF).
Prospect Generator Starts Phase 3 Drill Program at Colombia Silver Property
News Update
Streetwise Reports (3/15/21) This third campaign at Outcrop Gold s Santa Ana calls for 12,000 meters of drilling.
With the planned 12,000 meters of drilling, the explorer stated that it aims to delineate five known shoots along strike and at depth. They are La Ivana, Megapozo, Roberto Tovar, El Dorado and San Juan. Outcrop also noted that it hopes to discover five to seven new, high-grade shoots by systematically drill testing multiple greenfield targets. Outcrop is proud of our dedicated team advancing the Santa Ana project in Colombia. The team is working tirelessly to build on the knowledge gained from the five high-grade shoots discovered to build better system and exploration models, CEO Joe Hebert said in the release. Target ranking through the compilation of multiple datasets brings clarity to the companys strategic plan to establish Santa Ana as a world-class silver d
Crazy money and sneakerheads: Steve Duin column
Updated Mar 13, 2021;
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In the dog days of the pandemic, a 19-year-old University of Oregon dropout named Joe Hebert gave a Bloomberg Business reporter the inside scoop on his sneaker-resale adventures, a decision that cost his mother, Ann, her elite job at Nike.
Marketing is an essential part of sneakerhead culture, and “West Coast Joe” apparently decided his brand would be well-served by a Bloomberg cover story. Along the way, he told reporter Joshua Hunt that growing up in Portland gave him quite an edge in the insatiable quest for the product, or “kicks,” he could flip: