
Jaguar Uranium’s team collected 200 rock samples at the Huemul Project, observing visible uranium, copper and vanadium outcrops and a potential 4-kilometre copper trend at the Uryco zone. The project now benefits from U.S.–Argentina Critical Minerals Framework support and a formal Mendoza provincial collaboration, with assays pending.
Jaguar Uranium completed a 200-sample rock sampling programme across its 27,000-hectare Huemul Project in Mendoza Province, observing visible uranium, copper and vanadium mineralization at surface, particularly near former mine outcrops and historical mine dumps that had not been sampled previously.
Historical records document average head grades of 0.21% uranium, 2.0% copper and 0.11% vanadium from approximately 130,000 tonnes of ore processed between 1955 and 1975, and field observations at the Uryco zone suggest a potential 4-kilometre copper trend consistent with these grades.
The Huemul Project is supported by the U.S.–Argentina Critical Minerals Framework and a Collaboration Agreement with Mendoza Province; Jaguar Uranium awaits laboratory assay results to validate visual observations and plans a follow-up exploration phase based on those findings.