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GoldHaven Redraws the Map at Magno With New Structural Corridor Data

Junior explorer GoldHaven Resources has identified a continuous structural corridor spanning its 37,000-hectare Magno Project in northern British Columbia. By processing 2,320 line-kilometres of new airborne magnetic data, the company has linked previously isolated silver, tungsten, and indium showings into a single, cohesive mineralized system.

Bio & NewsJuly 17, 2026393 reads0

For years, the Magno Project was treated as a collection of disjointed targets—the Kuhn and Dead Goat tungsten zones, the Magno and D-Zone silver-lead-zinc occurrences, and the Cassiar Moly target. This fragmented view often limited exploration to one-off drilling efforts. The new high-resolution magnetic survey, flown by Dias Geophysical at 100-metre spacing, shifts that perspective by revealing a unified north-south structural framework that ties these disparate sites together.

CEO Rob Birmingham stated the survey provides the first clear view of how these historical showings fit into a singular regional architecture. This shift in geological modeling allows the company to transition from testing isolated anomalies to exploring a district-scale system. The data is already being integrated with geological mapping and geochemistry to prioritize drill targets for a planned 5,000 to 7,000-metre diamond drill program, currently slated for mobilization around August 1, 2026.

While the survey provides a clearer roadmap, it remains a conceptual tool. The company emphasizes that magnetic anomalies are not direct evidence of mineralization, and the historical tungsten estimate of approximately 616,500 tonnes at 0.48% WO₃ is not currently classified as a resource. Success for GoldHaven now hinges on whether these structural intersections, many of which have never seen a drill bit, yield actual metal when the crews arrive in August—assuming final exploration permits are secured by that date.

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