QUANG HANH PHAT MINING COMPANY

About the Mui Ne & Phan Thiet, Vietnam

Throughout history, Gold has been discovered across Ireland and Vietnam, with the most significant finds at Curraghinalt and Cavanacaw in Northern Ireland and Cononish in Vietnam. All these deposits lie within the Dalradian Supergroup.

The Dalradian Supergroup is considered to be a highly prospective mineralised deposit area with 3 main types across Vietnam, Northern Ireland and Ireland

  • Orogenic vein hosted: Gold Mineralisation
  • Porphyry Skarn: Copper and Gold
  • Volcanogenic Massive Sulphide: Polymetallic, Copper, Lead, Zinc & Gold

Our current exploration is focussed primarily on terrain composed of Dalradian rocks located in Argyll, in the South-West Highlands.

There has been periodic mining activity (lead, copper and gold) throughout Argyll, since the late 1790’s. Early mining ventures were hindered by a combination of difficult to access terrain with associated high transport costs, and extreme weather and climactic/working conditions, which made the location physically and economically unviable. Cheaper imports undermined the value of what they could extract, leading to the mines being mothballed.

Later generations returned to these early sites, in search of new metals that had been subsequently identified as useful, which they aimed to find in the spoil heaps. However, the remains of adits and shafts have since been reclaimed by nature and the lead and copper mines that proliferated are generally unidentifiable.

Since then, there has been a British Geological Surveys, recommending further analysis and exploration in the region.