Corporate Presentation - Golden Dawn Minerals Inc.

TSX.V: GOM
Frankfurt: 3G8A
Corporate Presentation
June 2015
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Forward Looking Statements
Except for historical information contained herein, this presentation may contain forward‐looking statements including, but not limited to, comments regarding predictions and projections. Forward‐
looking statements address future events and conditions and therefore involve inherent risks and uncertainties. Although Golden Dawn Minerals, Inc. believe that such expectations are reasonable, there can be no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct, and therefore actual results may differ materially from those currently anticipated in such statements. You are cautioned not to place reliance on such forward‐looking statements, whether made in this presentation or in any question and answer period related to this presentation.
This presentation uses the term inferred mineral resources. Inferred Mineral Resources are not Mineral Reserves, have not demonstrated economic viability, and may never be converted into Reserves.
The technical information in this presentation has been reviewed by Michael Dufresne, P. Geologist, of Apex Geoscience Ltd., a qualified person as defined by National Instrument 43‐101. 2
Corporate Overview
 Production oriented, junior resource exploration company  Golden Dawn’s Epithermal Precious Metals project located in the prolific Greenwood mining district
 Golden Dawn is committed to the systematic exploration and development of its properties
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Regional Mining District
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Greenwood Area Deposit Models
Diverse Geology ‐ 6 mineral deposit types ‐ Area is under‐explored
1. Skarn Deposits
‐ Cretaceous‐Jurassic intrusive activity into limestone and limey sediments generally belonging to the Triassic Brooklyn Formation.
‐ Buckhorn Mtn. (Crown Jewel)
‐ Phoenix deposit near Greenwood ‐ produced 27 mt at 0.9% Cu and 1.12 g/t Au
‐ Motherlode ‐ produced 4.2 million tonnes at 0.8% Cu and 1.3 g/t Au deposits are related to Cretaceous‐Jurassic intrusive activity into limestone.
There has been little exploration for mafic volcanic hosted copper (plus gold) skarns (i.e. QR, Ingerbelle type).
2. Mesothermal Quartz Veins with Gold (+Silver, Lead, Zinc)
Gold‐silver mineralization occurs in mesothermal quartz veins related to
Cretaceous‐Jurassic Nelson intrusives. Jewel (Dentonia)
Providence veins
Camp McKinney.‐ 124,452 tonnes at an average grade of 20.39 g/t Au 3. Epithermal Quartz Veins (and Gold along Eocene Structures)
The Republic district has produced almost 2.5 million ounces of gold, at an
average grade of better than 17 g/t Au from Eocene‐aged low sulphidation epithermal
veins (A number of new epithermal deposits have been discovered in
recent years in the Republic and Curlew areas (i.e. Golden Eagle, Kettle, K2, Emanuel Creek, Emanuel North The Emanuel Creek vein near Curlew is an impressive new ‘blind’ vein discovery, under an average 1250 feet of post‐mineral cover, with grades of up to 1.3 oz/t Au over widths in excess of 100 feet (Kinross webcast, April 3, 2003). 5
Greenwood Area Deposit Models
Diverse Geology ‐ 6 mineral deposit types ‐ Area is under‐explored (cont’d)
4. Jurassic Alkalic Intrusives with Copper, Gold, Silver and/or PGE
Mineralization Jurassic‐aged alkalic intrusives host copper‐gold and copper‐silver‐gold‐PGE
mineralization in several areas within the Boundary District. There is a strong spatial association between Jurassic structures (thrust faults) and Jurassic alkalic intrusives. A low‐grade Cu‐Au (+ molybdenum) porphyry system occurs at the Lone Star ‐ Lexington.
31 property, less than 3 kilometers south of the Greenwood Area.
Rossland monzonite. More than 20 veins are recognized in an area of about 1200 by 600 meters, from which over 5.5 million tonnes of ore grading 16 g/t Au was produced . Gold bearing massive sulphide veins on the Golden Crown property near Phoenix and at the Wild Rose zone on the Wild Rose property have similarities to Rossland style veins (Caron, 1998a, b, 1999).
5. Gold Mineralization Associated with Serpentinite
A number of gold deposits within the Boundary District are associated with
massive sulphide and/or quartz/calcite veins within structurally emplaced serpentinite bodies along regional fault zones. Known ore bodies have traditionally been small, but often very high grade. On the Lexington ‐ Lonestar property Merit Mining Corp. announced an updated NI 43‐101 compliant Indicated Resource of 329,000 tonnes grading 8.3 g/t Au and 1.3% Cu or11.3 g/t Au equivalent. The Snowshoe property west of Phoenix, the California mine near Republic, and the Morning Star mine
near Danville are similarly associated with serpentinite.
6. Gold‐bearing Volcanogenic Magnetite‐Sulphide Deposits (Lamefoot type) Crown Resources and Echo Bay Minerals discovered a new style of
mineralization within the Boundary District in the late 1980’s, described as Au‐bearing, magnetite‐pyrrhotite‐pyrite syngenetic volcanogenic mineralization. Mineralization is hosted within the Triassic Brooklyn Formation, and at least part of the gold is attributed to a late stage epigenetic (Jurassic or Tertiary) event
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May Mac & Amigo Mines
May Mac Mine
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City of Greenwood
Small scale historic production at the May Mac Mine exceeds 3,400 tons at an average grade of 5.16 g/t Au, 236 g/t Ag, 1.5% Pb & 1% Zn
Inactive since the 1980s, the property includes 2 principal veins and at least 10 other veins carrying gold, silver, and base metals
Underground adits and tunnels in place On‐site water & power available
May Mac Mine
Amigo Mine
Amigo Mine & Veins
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Historical records show that 35 tonnes of ore at a grade of 318 g/t Au (9.3 oz/t Au) was mined from this vein in 1903‐04
Hwy #3
Property
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Geophysics
Geophysics shows mines are associated with major structures
Mag First Derivative
Total Mag Inversion
City of Greenwood
May Mac Mine
May Mac Mine
Amigo Mine
Amigo Mine
Hwy #3
Property
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May Mac Mine
Adit 6
Hwy#3
Adit 7
Mill
Tailings Pond (permitted)
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Small scale historic production at the May Mac Mine exceeds 3,400 tons at an average grade of 5.16 g/t Au, 236 g/t Ag, 1.5% Pb & 1% Zn
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May Mac Mine
Mill & Tailings Permitted
2010 Mill Operation
100t/d mill on site owned by Golden Dawn
Permitted Tailings Pond
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May Mac Mine
Moving Forward
Phase I
Drifting up to 100m into A & AA zone
Fan drilling veins while drifting
Underground exploration permits in place. Applying for drifting permitting
Phase II
Extraction of 10,000 tonne
bulk sample
Phase III
Retrofit mill
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May Mac Mine
Moving Forward
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May Mac Mine
Historic Mining
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Amigo Veins
Lower Vein
3 old adits (the No.1, No.2 and No.3 adits). Historical records show that 35 tonnes of ore at a grade of 318 g/t Au (9.3 oz/t Au) was mined from this vein in 1903‐04.
In 1987 a sample of mineralized argillite was collected from the footwall of the vein in the No.2 adit, and returned 2.41 oz/t Au over 0.5 feet.
May Mac Mine
The No. 1 vein A 1978 surface sample over a 2′ width is reported to have returned 0.114 oz/t Au, while sampling of the vein underground returned values to 0.42 oz/t Au over narrow widths. A single drill hole (circa1978) is documented from this vein, which intersected a 5′ interval averaging 0.23 oz/t Au and 17 oz/t Ag.
Glory Hole Vein
Rock sampling from the zone in the same year is reported to have returned values to 0.41 oz/t Au and 0.93 oz/t Ag over 4 feet.
One rock sample collected from the Glory Hole zone during the current program returned 68,979 ppb Au (approx 69 g/t Au), along with 2,335 ppm Pb, 8,341 ppm Zn, 100.6 ppm Ag
Amigo Veins
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Going Forward
MAY MAC & AMIGO MINES (2015)
 Refurbishing adits and underground exploration
 Extend Adits of May Mac mine
 10,000 ton bulk sampling from May Mac underground mine
 10,000 ton bulk sampling from Amigo underground mine
 Rehabilitating flotation mill & tailings pond and prepare for
processing material from mines
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Capital Structure & Financials
Share Price (June 11, 2015)
$0.135
Market Cap
$3.53M
Issued Shares
26,180,840
Outstanding Warrants
8,984,672
(1,134,700 wts @ $.50 will expire June 21/15)
Outstanding Options
2,004,000
Shareholders
+500
Directors/Management Ownership
~12%
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Management
Wolf Wiese ‐ President & CEO
Mr. Wiese has been involved in the conception and implementation of local and international businesses for the past 30 years, as
stock broker and bank owner in Germany. Mr. Wiese has spent the past 16 years in the Mining Exploration Business, primarily as a
consultant and financier to public companies. He was the driving force behind Canadian Metals Explorations Ltd, now Hard Creek Nickel Ltd. from 1995 until 2004. During his tenure as the primary Financier/Consultant to the Company, Canadian Explorations
Ltd. Discovered one of the largest Sulfide Nickel deposits in the World. Mr. Wiese has been involved with Golden Dawn Minerals Inc since the inception of the company in 2004.
Larry Johnson, B.Sc (Geology) ‐ CFO
Mr. Johnson graduated from the University of British Columbia with a B.Sc. in Geology and subsequently became a member of the
Institute of Chartered Accountants of British Columbia. He was a partner of an accounting practice in Kelowna, BC, where one of his clients went on to discover Canada's first diamond mine. He was also actively involved in mineral exploration as a field geologist and project manager across North America for diamonds as well as precious and base metals. He has been providing Chief Financial
Officer and accounting services to various TSX Venture Exchange listed exploration companies for more than 20 years. Brian McClay – Project Manager
Brian McClay is a mining contractor, diamond drill contractor and a mining development specialist who has worked globally for over 50 years in the recognizing and developing of mineral deposits . He has managed projects and mines in Canada, United States, Mexico, Ecuador, Russia and Australia. He was President and CEO of Mosquito Consolidated Gold Mines Ltd. from 19911‐
2012 guiding this Company from a market capitalization of $400,000 to in excess of $100 million culminating in a hostile take‐over. Most recently he has been an active advisor to Discovery Ventures Ltd. in its development of the Willa Deposit in British Columbia.
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Directors & Advisors
Non‐Executive Directors
Dr. Dieter Benz, PhD Mechanical Eng.
Advisory Board
Stewart Jackson, PhD & P. Geo.
Michael Dufresne, M. Sc. & P. Geo.
Frank Wright, P.Eng (Processing Engineer)
George Sookochoff, B.Comm (Database Management)
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#900‐525 Seymour Street
Vancouver, B.C. Canada
V6B 3H7
Tel: 604‐221‐8936
Fax: 604‐336‐1490
allinfo@goldendawnminerals.com
www.goldendawnminerals.com
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