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The rubies discovered at the Fiskenaesset Ruby Project are still located within the original bedrock. This means that that they first need to be physically separated from the host rock in which they are contained.



  Progress made toward turning Greenland into major producer of rubies


September 16, 2012


For many, Greenland is but a vast icy expanse viewed from the airplane window as one crosses the Northern Atlantic between Europe and North America. In fact it is North America's third largest territory, after Canada and the United States. Some 81 percent is covered by an ice sheet and it has a total population of about 58,000. Nonetheless Greenland appears poised to become the world's next major producer of rubies.

Leading the project is True North Gems, Vancouver-based public junior exploration company that is dedicated to the exploration and development of colored gemstone deposits in the permafrost areas of North America.

True North's Fiskenaesset Ruby Project is located on the southwest coast of Greenland, about 160 kilometers south of the capital Nuuk. The property covers 823 square kilometers, with True North Gems owning 100 percent of the property licenses.

Both ruby and pink sapphire have been found on the property, with a number of stones weighing more than 400 cts. According to the company the material is of high grade, with valuations of individual rubies climbing higher than $3,200 per ct. Pink sapphires from the site have been valued at $460 per ct.

Rubies typically are extracted from alluvial deposits, but in Greenland they are still located within the original bedrock. This means that that they first need to be physically separated from the host rock in which they are contained.

The process begins with crushing, where machinery compresses and squeezes the material so that it breaks down along natural fractures, rather than aggressively breaking the rock and any rubies that may be contained within it. The ruby and waste material is then sent through a gravity wash plant, where the lighter-weight waste minerals are separated from the denser ruby.

Sorting is done using sophisticated optic systems, in which specialized cameras can detect the specific red color of ruby from the surrounding material. Small air jets then are activated which remove the ruby from the rest of the material. The result is two piles of material, one made up entirely of ruby, and one containing only waste. In recent years optic sorters have become developed enough to separate shades of pink and red from each other and also relative transparency, allowing a rough stone sort to be completed entirely by mechanized processes.

According to True North, the complicated process of obtaining mining permits is in its final phases, and in August the company reported that the formal translation of the Social Impact Assessment report has commenced into both Greenlandic and Danish. While Greenland is formally North American, it is politically and culturally associated with Europe and more specifically Denmark. Greenland has formally been part of the Danish realm since 1953, but in 1979 it was awarded home rule and in 2008 its citizens voted to transfer more power from the Danish royal government to the the local Greenlandic government.

"As we complete the final steps leading to production, the translation into both Greenlandic and Danish will allow all public meeting attendees the opportunity to fully appreciate the steps that have been taken by True North Gems to develop an economically sustainable mining through to production business plan, maximizing the positive benefit to Greenland"," said Nicholas Houghton, president and CEO of True North.

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