Shipshaw: In the Heart of the world's top Niobium District

Executive Overview

The Shipshaw Project is an early-stage rare earth element (REE) and niobium exploration property located in the Saguenay region of Québec, Canada, one of the most mining-friendly jurisdictions globally. The property lies only ~5 km south of the Niobec Mine, one of the world’s few operating niobium mines.  

Historical drilling and geophysics indicate that the property hosts carbonatite-related mineralization, the same deposit type responsible for many of the world’s major rare earth and niobium deposits. Several drill holes from prior exploration campaigns intersected REE mineralization up to 3.7% TREE (Total Rare Earth Oxides) in carbonatite units, along with anomalous niobium values.  

The project currently has no defined mineral resource, but existing drilling and geophysical anomalies suggest a potentially significant mineralized system that remains largely underexplored.

Project Location

The Shipshaw Property comprises 9 contiguous mining claims covering approximately 513 hectares located west of Saguenay (Chicoutimi Nord sector).

Key advantages of the location include:

  • Direct road access via Route 172
  • Proximity to major mining infrastructure
  • Access to skilled labor from the Saguenay mining district
  • Nearby port at La Baie for mineral shipping
  • Extensive hydroelectric power in the region  

These factors significantly reduce development risk compared with remote exploration projects.

Strategic Geological Setting

The project lies within the Grenville Province of the Canadian Shield, an area known for alkaline intrusive complexes and carbonatite-hosted mineralization.

Key geological features include:

  • Proximity to the Saint-Honoré Alkaline Complex
  • A regional structure known as the Saguenay Graben
  • Presence of carbonatite and lamprophyre dykes
  • Host rocks including anorthosite, monzonite, and limestone

Carbonatites are globally important because they host many of the world’s:

  • Rare earth deposits
  • Niobium deposits
  • Phosphate deposits
Exploration History

Exploration of the area dates back to the discovery of the Niobec deposit in 1967 during airborne geophysical surveys conducted by SOQUEM.  

The Shipshaw anomaly itself was later identified during reinterpretation of regional magnetic surveys in 2010.

Key exploration milestones:

2010
  • Heliborne magnetic survey identified a large low magnetic anomaly
  • Anomaly comparable to the Niobec carbonatite signature
2010–2011
  • 23 diamond drill holes
  • 4,340 meters of drilling completed

All drill holes intersected portions of the carbonatite intrusive complex.

Mineralization

Mineralization occurs primarily in carbonatite and syenite intrusive rocks.

Main metals of interest:

  • Rare Earth Elements (REE)
  • Niobium (Nb)
  • Tantalum (Ta)
  • Phosphate (P₂O₅)

Carbonatite systems often host minerals such as:

  • Pyrochlore (niobium)
  • Bastnäsite (rare earths)
  • Monazite (rare earths)
Drill Results Highlights

Historic drilling at the Terres Rompues zone returned several encouraging results.

Notable intercepts include:

Rare Earth Oxides (TREE)
  • 3.7% TREE over 0.24 m
  • 1.1% TREE over 0.8 m
  • 0.70% REE over 1.7 m
  • 0.49% REE over 3.3 m
Wider Mineralized Intervals
  • 0.24% REE over 33.5 m
  • 0.25% REE over 12.65 m
  • 0.35% REE over 10 m  

These grades confirm the presence of rare earth enrichment within the carbonatite system, although additional drilling is required to define continuity.

Geophysical Target

The main exploration target is a low magnetic anomaly identified through airborne magnetic surveys.

Low magnetic anomalies often indicate:

  • Carbonatite cores
  • Altered intrusive systems
  • Rare earth enriched zones

The anomaly at Shipshaw has not yet been fully drilled.

Comparison to Nearby Deposits
Niobec Mine (5 km north)
  • One of the largest niobium mines outside Brazil
  • Produces niobium pentoxide concentrate
  • Discovered using similar geophysical signatures  
Crevier Project
  • Located ~70 km away
  • Resource estimate:

Indicated: 25.8 Mt @ 0.186% Nb₂O₅

Inferred: 16.9 Mt @ 0.162% Nb₂O₅  

These nearby deposits confirm that the Saguenay region hosts economically viable carbonatite systems.

Current Project Status

Important limitations of the project today:

  • No NI 43-101 mineral resource estimate
  • Limited drilling
  • Historical drill core needs re-analysis
  • No metallurgical testing completed  

However, these factors also represent the primary exploration upside.

Investment Thesis

Prime Mining Jurisdiction

  • Québec ranked among top global mining jurisdictions

Tier-1 Geological Setting

  • Located next to the Niobec carbonatite complex

Underexplored Carbonatite System

  • Carbonatites are the primary host for REE and niobium deposits globally

Historic High-Grade REE Intercepts

  • Up to 3.7% TREE

Excellent Infrastructure

  • Roads, power, labor, and port access nearby
Key Catalysts & Key Risks

Key Catalysts

  • Re-assaying historical drill core
  • Updated geological modeling
  • Identification of new drill targets
  • New drilling campaign
  • Potential maiden resource estimate

Key Risks:

  • Early exploration stage
  • No defined resource
  • Limited drilling coverage
  • REE market volatility
Conclusion

The Shipshaw Project represents a high-potential carbonatite exploration target located in a prolific mining district in Québec. Historical drilling has confirmed the presence of rare earth and niobium mineralization within a large geophysical anomaly that remains insufficiently tested.

Given its proximity to the Niobec Mine, similar geological setting, and historical rare earth intercepts, the project warrants further exploration to determine whether the carbonatite system hosts an economically significant mineral deposit.

Securing the World’s Critical Niobium