(Fremont County, WY) – Broadening Inclusion Knowledge and Experience in Science (BIKES), is a new initiative that aims to take nine CWC students (some who are…
Border families continue demonstrations to draw attention to COVID separations
Brandy Carvey photo
and last updated 2021-04-07 19:43:54-04
EUREKA â Families in Eureka and the Tobacco Valley are continuing their demonstrations, hoping to draw attention to the separation from their Canadian relatives because of the on-going pandemic restrictions at the border.
The families first arrived at the border crossing at the Port of Roosville last month, carrying signs and waving to their grandparents, aunts, uncles and others that they haven t been able to see since the Canadian government closed the border to all but essential travel a year ago. The group is hoping officials in Ottawa and Washington, D.C. will hear their stories and find some ways to modify the restrictions to at least allow some limited reunions and visiting.
Border businesses coping, but missing Canadian traffic
Dennis Bragg photo
Dave Clarke, owner of the First & Last Chance Bar and Duty Free Store says the lack of Canadian traffic has put his business improvements on hold
Posted at 10:57 PM, Mar 31, 2021
and last updated 2021-04-01 00:57:04-04
EUREKA â With the imminent arrival of another travel season, Montana s border communities face more COVID uncertainty. But they re also pulling together to keep business going.
âWe went from being a middle of the road community, to being two end of the road communities.â
Lincoln County Commissioner Josh Letcher says that separation between counties is especially acute in the Tobacco Valley, where the mix of people from Eureka, and the small towns north of the border remains on full stop by Canadian border restrictions. Coupled with local lockdowns, it s been a rough year.
Montana border businesses coping, but missing Canadian traffic
By: Dennis Bragg - MTN News
Posted at 10:20 AM, Apr 01, 2021
and last updated 2021-04-01 12:32:39-04
EUREKA â Montana s border communities face more COVID-19 uncertainty with the imminent arrival of another travel season but they re also pulling together to keep business going.
âWe went from being a middle-of-the-road community to being two end-of-the-road communities.â
Lincoln County Commissioner Josh Letcher says that separation between counties is especially acute in the Tobacco Valley, where the mix of people from Eureka, and the small towns north of the border remains on full stop by Canadian border restrictions. Coupled with local lockdowns, it s been a rough year.
Grizzly Discoveries Inc.: Grizzly Undertakes Geophysical Survey at Its Robocop Cobalt-Copper Property in Southeastern British Columbia, Canada
0.146% Co,
5 m in sediment-hosted sulphide mineralization within middle Proterozoic Purcell Group rocks (Thomson, 1990).
A total of 15 drill holes in the area between 1990 and 2008 have yielded several intersections of near surface Co-Cu-Ag mineralization with grades of up to
0.134% Co,
1.23 m core length in hole R-1990-5 and
0.14% Co,
3.1 m core length in hole R-1990-6 (Thomson, 1990), along with an intersection of
0.18% Co, 0.28% Cu, 4.1 g/t Ag over
1 m core length in hole R-2008-02 (Pighin, 2009).
All but one of the historical drillholes tested a single target in an area about 500 m by 350 m. The Property is approximately 10 km in length and 3.5 km in width and contains at least 4 untested anomalous soil +/- rock geochemical targets (see figure below).