UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 6-K

 

REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16

UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

For the Month of May, 2017

 

Commission File Number: 001-35254

 

AVINO SILVER & GOLD MINES LTD.

 

Suite 900, 570 Granville Street, Vancouver, BC V6C 3P1

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F. x Form 20-F   ¨ Form 40-F

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1): ¨

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7): ¨

 

Indicate by check mark whether by furnishing the information contained in this Form, the registrant is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Yes ¨ No x

 

If "Yes" is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b):

 

 
 
 
 

SUBMITTED HEREWITH

 

Exhibit Number

Description of Exhibit

 

99.1

Technical Report

 

 

2

 
 

 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.  

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines, Ltd.

 

Date: May 19, 2017

By:

/s/ Dorothy Chin

Dorothy Chin

Corporate Secretary

 

 

3

 

 

 

Report to:

 

 

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

 

 

 

 

Technical Report on the Avino Property,

 

 

Durango, Mexico

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Document No. 735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
 
i
 
 

    

 

Report to:

 

 

 

 

A VINO S ILVER & G OLD M INES L TD.

 

 

 

 

T ECHNICAL R EPORT ON THE A VINO P ROPERTY ,

D URANGO , M EXICO

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

E FFECTIVE D ATE: A PRIL 11, 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prepared by:

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

 

Michael F. O’Brien, M.Sc., Pr. Sci. Nat., FGSSA, FAusIMM, FSAIMM

 

Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng.

 

Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HG/vc

 

 

 

Suite 1000, 885 Dunsmiur Street, Vancouver, British Columbia V6C 1N5

Phone: 604.408.3788 Fax: 604.684.6241

  

 
ii
 
 

 

  

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

1.0

SUMMARY

1-1

1.1

INTRODUCTION.

1-1

1.2

PROPERTY DESCRIPTION AND LOCATION.

1-1

1.3

GEOLOGY AND MINERALIZATION.

1-3

1.3.1

THE AVINO VEIN.

1-4

1.3.2

THE SAN GONZALO VEIN.

1-4

1.3.3

THE OXIDE TAILINGS.

1-4

1.4

RESOURCE ESTIMATES.

1-5

1.5

MINERAL PROCESSING, METALLURGICAL TESTING AND RECOVERY METHODS.

1-7

1.5.1

AVINO VEIN.

1-7

1.5.2

SAN GONZALO VEIN.

1-7

1.5.3

OXIDE TAILINGS.

1-7

1.5.4

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

1-8

1.6

MINING METHODS.

1-10

1.6.1

AVINO VEIN.

1-10

1.6.2

SAN GONZALO VEIN.

1-10

1.6.3

OXIDE TAILINGS.

1-11

1.7

PROJECT INFRASTRUCTURE.

1-12

1.8

ENVIRONMENTAL.

1-12

1.9

CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS.

1-13

1.9.1

CAPITAL COST ESTIMATES.

1-13

1.9.2

OPERATING COST ESTIMATES.

1-14

1.10

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS.

1-16

1.11

RECOMMENDATIONS.

1-17

2.0

INTRODUCTION.

 

2-1

2.1

EFFECTIVE DATES.

2-1

2.2

QUALIFIED PERSONS.

2-1

2.3

INFORMATION AND DATA SOURCES.

2-2

2.4

UNITS OF MEASUREMENT.

2-3

3.0

RELIANCE ON OTHER EXPERTS.

 

3-1

4.0

PROPERTY DESCRIPTION AND LOCATION.

 

4-1

4.1

LOCATION.

4-1

4.2

PROPERTY OWNERSHIP.

4-2

4.3

MINERAL CONCESSIONS AND AGREEMENTS.

4-3

 

 
iii
 
 

 

   

5.0

ACCESSIBILITY, CLIMATE, LOCAL RESOURCES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND PHYSIOGRAPHY

 

5-1

5.1

TOPOGRAPHY, ELEVATION AND VEGETATION.

5-1

5.2

ACCESSIBILITY AND LOCAL RESOURCES.

5-1

5.3

CLIMATE AND LENGTH OF OPERATING SEASON.

5-1

5.4

INFRASTRUCTURE.

5-2

6.0

HISTORY.

 

6-1

6.1

AVINO MINE, 1555-1968.

6-1

6.1.1

AVINO VEIN SYSTEM DEPOSIT.

6-1

6.2

SAN GONZALO VEIN DEPOSIT.

6-2

7.0

GEOLOGICAL SETTING AND MINERALIZATION.

 

7-1

7.1

REGIONAL GEOLOGY.

7-1

7.2

PROPERTY GEOLOGY AND MINERALIZATION.

7-2

7.2.1

AVINO VEIN.

7-3

7.2.2

SAN GONZALO VEIN.

7-5

7.2.3

OXIDE AND SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

7-5

8.0

DEPOSIT TYPES.

 

8-1

9.0

EXPLORATION.

 

9-1

9.1

EARLY EXPLORATION (PRIOR TO MINE CLOSURE), 1968 TO 2001.

9-1

9.2

RECENT EXPLORATION, 2001 TO PRESENT.

9-2

9.2.1

TAILINGS INVESTIGATIONS (OXIDES), 2003 AND 2004.

9-2

9.2.2

TAILINGS SAMPLING (SULPHIDES), 2005.

9-4

9.2.3

BULK SAMPLE PROGRAM OF SAN GONZALO VEIN, 2011.

9-4

9.2.4

UNDERGROUND CHANNEL SAMPLING OF SAN GONZALO AND ANGELICA VEINS, 2010-PRESENT.

9-5

10.0

DRILLING.

 

10-1

10.1

EARLY DRILLING (PRIOR TO MINE CLOSURE), 1968 TO 2001.

10-1

10.1.1

AVINO VEIN.

10-1

10.1.2

OXIDE TAILINGS, 1990 TO 1991.

10-1

10.2

RECENT DRILLING (POST-MINE CLOSURE), 2001 TO PRESENT.

10-1

10.2.1

AVINO VEIN (INCLUDING ET ZONE) AND NEARBY VEINS.

10-2

10.2.2

SAN GONZALO AND NEARBY VEINS.

10-3

10.2.3

OXIDE TAILINGS.

10-6

10.2.4

SPECIFIC GRAVITY RESULTS.

10-9

11.0

SAMPLE PREPARATION, ANALYSES, AND SECURITY.

 

11-1

11.1

DRILLING AND TRENCHING OF OXIDE TAILINGS, 1990 TO 1991.

11-1

11.2

TAILINGS INVESTIGATIONS (TEST PITS IN OXIDE TAILINGS), 2004.

11-1

11.3

DRILLING PROGRAM, SAN GONZALO, 2007 TO PRESENT.

11-2

11.4

DRILLING PROGRAMS, ET ZONE OF THE AVINO VEIN, 2006 TO PRESENT.

11-3

11.5

UNDERGROUND CHANNEL SAMPLING OF SAN GONZALO VEIN, 2010 TO PRESENT.

11-3

11.6

AVINO LABORATORY.

11-4

11.7

SPECIFIC GRAVITY SAMPLES.

11-4

11.7.1

CALIPER VOLUME CALCULATION METHOD.

11-4

11.7.2

WATER DISPLACEMENT METHOD.

11-4

11.8

QP OPINION.

11-5

 

 
iv
 
 

 

   

12.0

DATA VERIFICATION.

 

12-1

12.1

AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEIN DRILLHOLE DATABASE VERIFICATION.

12-1

12.1.1

COLLAR AND ASSAY DATA.

12-1

12.1.2

DOWNHOLE SURVEY DATA.

12-2

12.1.3

GEOLOGY DATA AND INTERPRETATION.

12-3

12.1.4

REVIEW OF DRILLHOLE QUALITY ASSURANCE/QUALITY CONTROL SAMPLES.

12-3

12.2

BULK DENSITY.

12-7

12.2.1

AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEIN BULK DENSITY.

12-7

12.3

OXIDE TAILINGS DRILLHOLE DATABASE.

12-8

12.3.1

ASSAY VERIFICATION OF 1990/1991 DRILLHOLES IN OXIDE TAILINGS.

12-8

12.3.2

OXIDE TAILINGS VERIFICATION SAMPLES.

12-9

12.4

SITE VISIT.

12-9

12.5

ARANZ CONCLUSIONS AND OPINION.

12-10

12.5.1

AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEINS.

12-10

12.5.2

OXIDE TAILINGS.

12-11

12.5.3

QP OPINION.

12-11

13.0

MINERAL PROCESSING AND METALLURGICAL TESTING.

13-1

13.1

AVINO VEIN.

13-1

13.2

SAN GONZALO VEIN.

13-2

13.3

TAILINGS MATERIALS.

13-2

13.3.1

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

13-2

13.3.2

OXIDE TAILINGS.

13-2

13.3.3

RECOMMENDATIONS.

13-21

14.0

MINERAL RESOURCE ESTIMATES.

14-1

14.1

RESOURCE SUMMARY.

14-1

14.2

DATA.

14-3

14.3

AVINO VEIN.

14-3

14.3.1

GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION.

14-3

14.3.2

WIREFRAMING.

14-3

14.4

SAN GONZALO VEIN.

14-6

14.4.1

GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION.

14-6

14.4.2

WIREFRAMING.

14-6

14.5

OXIDE TAILINGS.

14-9

14.5.1

GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION.

14-9

14.5.2

WIREFRAMING.

14-9

14.6

EXPLORATORY DATA ANALYSIS.

14-11

14.6.1

RAW DATA ASSAYS AND STATISTICS.

14-11

14.6.2

OUTLIER MANAGEMENT AND CAPPING STRATEGY.

14-15

14.6.3

DRILLHOLE COMPOSITING.

14-16

 

 
v
 
 

 

  

14.7

DENSITY.

14-16

14.7.1

DENSITY DATA.

14-16

14.8

VARIOGRAPHY AND SPATIAL ANALYSIS.

14-17

14.9

INTERPOLATION PLAN AND KRIGING PARAMETERS.

14-24

14.9.1

AVINO.

14-24

14.9.2

SAN GONZALO.

14-25

14.9.3

OXIDE TAILINGS.

14-25

14.10

RESOURCE BLOCK MODELS.

14-31

14.10.1

BLOCK MODEL CONFIGURATIONS.

14-31

14.10.2

INTERPOLATION.

14-32

14.11

MODEL VALIDATION.

14-32

14.11.1

STATISTICS.

14-32

14.11.2

SECTIONS.

14-33

14.11.3

SWATH PLOTS.

14-37

14.12

MINERAL RESOURCE CLASSIFICATION.

14-49

14.12.1

INTRODUCTION.

14-49

14.13

MINERAL RESOURCE TABULATION.

14-52

14.13.1

CUT-OFFS AND SILVER EQUIVALENT CALCULATIONS.

14-52

14.13.1

GRADE-TONNAGE TABLES.

14-55

14.13.2

GRADE-TONNAGE GRAPHS.

14-58

14.14

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

14-63

15.0

MINERAL RESERVE ESTIMATES.

15-1

16.0

MINING METHODS.

16-1

16.1

AVINO VEIN.

16-1

16.2

SAN GONZALO VEIN. 16-2

16.2.1

BULK SAMPLE PROGRAM..

16-3

16.2.2

PRODUCTION.

16-4

16.2.3

MINE DESIGN.

16-4

16.3

OXIDE TAILINGS.

16-5

16.3.1

SCHEDULE.

16-5

16.3.2

EQUIPMENT.

16-5

16.3.3

MODIFYING SITE CONSIDERATIONS.

16-5

16.4

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

16-6

17.0

RECOVERY METHODS.

17-1

17.1

INTRODUCTION.

17-1

17.2

AVINO VEIN.

17-1

17.3

SAN GONZALO VEIN.

17-4

17.4

TAILINGS RESOURCES.

17-4

17.4.1

OXIDE TAILINGS.

17-5

17.5

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

17-10

 

 
vi
 
 

 

   

18.0

PROJECT INFRASTRUCTURE.

18-1

18.1

INTRODUCTION.

18-1

18.2

ACCESSIBILITY.

18-1

18.3

POWER.

18-1

18.4

WATER SUPPLY.

18-4

18.5

WATER TREATMENT PLANT.

18-4

19.0

MARKET STUDIES AND CONTRACTS.

19-1

19.1

MINED MATERIAL HAULAGE FROM UNDERGROUND.

19-1

19.2

FLOTATION CONCENTRATES.

19-1

19.3

GOLD-SILVER DORÉ.

19-1

20.0

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES, PERMITTING, AND SOCIAL OR COMMUNITY IMPACT.

20-1

20.1

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.

20-1

20.1.1

ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING.

20-1

20.2

ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITTING.

20-3

20.2.1

CURRENT PERMITS FOR THE OXIDE TAILINGS.

20-4

20.2.2

CURRENT PERMITS FOR THE SAN GONZALO MINE (ADJACENT)

20-4

20.2.3

APPLICABLE LEGISLATION.

20-5

20.3

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND REPORTING.

20-7

20.4

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT.

20-7

20.5

WATER MANAGEMENT.

20-7

20.6

SULPHIDE TAILINGS MANAGEMENT.

20-7

20.7

MINE CLOSURE AND RECLAMATION.

20-8

20.8

SOCIO-ECONOMIC AND COMMUNITY CONSIDERATIONS.

20-9

20.8.1

PROJECT LOCATION.

20-9

20.8.2

CONSULTATION WITH COMMUNITIES.

20-9

21.0

CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS.

21-1

21.1

CAPITAL COSTS.

21-1

21.1.1

INTRODUCTION.

21-1

21.1.2

BASIS OF ESTIMATE.

21-1

21.1.3

CAPITAL COST SUMMARY.

21-3

21.2

OPERATING COSTS.

21-5

21.2.1

MINING OPERATING COSTS.

21-5

21.2.2

PROCESS OPERATING COST ESTIMATE.

21-6

21.2.3

G&A COST ESTIMATE.

21-8

21.3

AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEINS.

21-10

21.3.1

CAPITAL COSTS.

21-10

21.3.2

OPERATING COSTS.

21-11

21.4

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

21-11

 

 
vii
 
 

 

  

22.0

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS.

22-1

22.1

INTRODUCTION.

22-1

22.2

PRE-TAX MODEL.

22-2

22.2.1

MINE/METAL PRODUCTION IN FINANCIAL MODEL.

22-2

22.2.2

BASIS OF FINANCIAL EVALUATIONS.

22-2

22.3

SUMMARY OF FINANCIAL RESULTS.

22-3

22.4

SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS.

22-4

22.5

POST-TAX ECONOMIC ANALYSIS.

22-6

22.5.1

MEXICAN INCOME TAX REGIME.

22-6

22.5.2

MEXICAN MINING DUTIES REGIME.

22-8

22.5.3

TAXES AND POST-TAX FINANCIAL RESULTS.

22-8

22.6

ROYALTIES.

22-9

22.7

SMELTER TERMS.

22-9

22.8

TRANSPORTATION LOGISTICS.

22-9

22.8.1

INSURANCE.

22-9

23.0

ADJACENT PROPERTIES.

23-1

24.0

OTHER RELEVANT DATA AND INFORMATION.

24-1

25.0

INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS.

25-1

25.1

GEOLOGY.

25-1

25.2

RESOURCE ESTIMATES.

25-1

25.3

MINERAL PROCESSING.

25-3

25.4

MINING.

25-3

25.5

CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS.

25-3

25.5.1

OXIDE TAILINGS.

25-3

25.5.2

AVINO VEIN AND SAN GONZALO VEIN.

25-5

25.5.3

SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

25-5

25.6

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS.

25-5

26.0

RECOMMENDATIONS.

26-1

26.1

INTRODUCTION.

26-1

26.2

GEOLOGY.

26-1

26.2.1

DATABASE MANAGEMENT.

26-1

26.2.2

UNDERGROUND SAMPLING.

26-1

26.2.3

SURVEY DATA.

26-2

26.2.4

SPECIFIC GRAVITY SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS.

26-2

26.2.5

QA/QC SAMPLING.

26-2

26.2.6

SULPHIDE TAILINGS DRILLING.

26-3

26.2.7

DENSITY MEASUREMENTS.

26-3

26.2.8

RESOURCE ESTIMATION.

26-3

26.2.9

STRATEGIC EXPLORATION ASSESSMENT.

26-3

26.3

PROCESS.

26-3

26.3.1

AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEINS

. 26-3

26.3.2

OXIDE AND SULPHIDE TAILINGS.

26-4

26.3.3

REFURBISHED EQUIPMENT.

26-4

26.4

ENVIRONMENTAL.

26-4

26.5

MINING.

26-5

26.6

PROJECT DEVELOPMENT.

26-5

26.7

PROJECT SCHEDULE.

26-5

   
 
viii
 
 

 

  

27.0

REFERENCES

27-1

28.0

CERTIFICATES OF QUALIFIED PERSONS.

28-1

28.1

MICHAEL F. O’BRIEN, P.GEO., M.SC., PR.SCI.NAT., FAUSIMM, FSAIMM..

28-1

28.2

HASSAN GHAFFARI, P.ENG.

28-3

28.3

SABRY ABDEL HAFEZ, PH.D., P.ENG.

28-5

28.4

JIANHUI (JOHN) HUANG PH.D., P.ENG.

28-6

 

APPENDICES

 

 

Appendix A

Legal Title Opinion

 

 

LIST OF TABLES

  

Table 1.1

 

Mineral Resources at the Avino Property.

 

1-6

 

Table 1.2

 

Recent Production from the Avino Vein.

 

1-10

 

Table 1.3

 

Recent Production from the San Gonzalo Vein.

 

1-11

 

Table 1.4

 

Mining Production Schedule.

 

1-12

 

Table 1.5

 

Capital Cost Summary.

 

1-13

 

Table 1.6

 

Capital Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

 

1-14

 

Table 1.7

 

Capital Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

 

1-14

 

Table 1.8

 

LOM Unit Operating Cost Estimate Summary.

 

1-15

 

Table 1.9

 

Operating Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

 

1-15

 

Table 1.10

 

Operating Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

 

1-16

 

Table 2.1

 

Summary of QPs.

 

2-1

 

Table 4.1

 

Summary of Property Ownership.

 

4-3

 

Table 4.2

 

Mineral Concessions - Avino Property.

 

4-4

 

Table 9.1

 

Underground Channel Sampling by Level for the Avino and San Gonzalo Underground Mines, since 2013

 

9-4

 

Table 10.1

 

Drillholes Completed from 2007 to 2016 on the San Gonzalo Vein.

 

10-4

 

Table 10.2

 

Drillholes Completed from 2015 and 2016 on the Oxide Tailings.

 

10-7

 

Table 10.3

 

Avino and San Gonzalo Density Data Summary.

 

10-9

 

Table 12.1

 

Number of Records and Discrepancies for the Avino Drillhole Data.

 

12-1

 

Table 12.2

 

Standards Specifications.

 

12-3

 

Table 13.1

 

Cyanidation Test Results.

 

13-3

 

Table 13.2

 

Flotation Test Results.

 

13-3

 

Table 13.3

 

Test Procedures MMI 2003 Test Program..

 

13-5

 

Table 13.4

 

Test Procedures - MMI 2004 Test Program..

 

13-6

 

Table 13.5

 

Moisture Content of Samples.

 

13-7

 

Table 13.6

 

Head Assays.

 

13-9

 

 

 
ix
 
 

 

   

Table 13.7

 

Bulk Density and Specific Gravity.

 

13-11

 

Table 13.8

 

Summary of Results of Gravity Concentration Tests.

 

13-12

 

Table 13.9

 

Summary of Results of Flotation Tests.

 

13-14

 

Table 13.10

 

Summary of Results of PRA Cyanidation Tests.

 

13-15

 

Table 13.11

 

Summary of Cyanidation Test Results Used by the MMI Reports.

 

13-16

 

Table 13.12

 

Summary of Results of Column Leach Tests.

 

13-17

 

Table 13.13

 

Cyanide Leaching Parameters.

 

13-20

 

Table 14.1

 

Avino Mine - Mineral Resources.

 

14-2

 

Table 14.2

 

Metal Grade Statistics for Sampling of the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein Systems.

 

14-12

 

Table 14.3

 

Oxide Tailings Samples by Sampling Campaign.

 

14-14

 

Table 14.4

 

Oxide Tailings Assays by Unit

 

14-15

 

Table 14.5

 

Avino Vein System Density Data Summary.

 

14-16

 

Table 14.6

 

San Gonzalo Vein System Density Data Summary.

 

14-16

 

Table 14.7

 

Avino Vein System: Variogram and Search Parameters.

 

14-26

 

Table 14.8

 

San Gonzalo Vein System: Variogram and Search Parameters.

 

14-28

 

Table 14.9

 

Oxide Tailings Deposit: Variogram and Search Parameters.

 

14-30

 

Table 14.10

 

Estimation Block Model Specifications.

 

14-31

 

Table 14.11

 

Explanation of Table 14-10.

 

14-31

 

Table 14.12

 

Avino Vein: Block Estimates and Composite Sample Grades.

 

14-32

 

Table 14.13

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Block Estimates and Composite Sample Grades.

 

14-32

 

Table 14.14

 

Oxide Tailings: Block Estimates and Composite Sample Grades.

 

14-33

 

Table 14.15

 

Criteria for Classification of Underground Mineral Resources.

 

14-52

 

Table 14.16

 

Silver Equivalent Based Metal Prices and Operational Recovery Parameters.

 

14-53

 

Table 14.17

 

Mineral Statement for the Avino Property.

 

14-54

 

Table 14.18

 

Avino Vein - High Confidence/Measured.

 

14-55

 

Table 14.19

 

Avino Vein - Medium Confidence/Indicated.

 

14-55

 

Table 14.20

 

Avino Vein - Low Confidence/Inferred.

 

14-56

 

Table 14.21

 

San Gonzalo Vein - High Confidence/Measured.

 

14-56

 

Table 14.22

 

San Gonzalo - Medium Confidence/Indicated.

 

14-57

 

Table 14.23

 

San Gonzalo - Low Confidence/Inferred.

 

14-57

 

Table 14.24

 

Oxide Tailings - Medium Confidence/Indicated.

 

14-58

 

Table 14.25

 

Oxide Tailings - Low Confidence/Inferred.

 

14-58

 

Table 16.1

 

Recent Production from the Avino Vein.

 

16-2

 

Table 16.2

 

Recent Production from the San Gonzalo Vein.

 

16-3

 

Table 16.3

 

Mining Production Schedule.

 

16-5

 

Table 17.1

 

Avino Vein Mill Production.

 

17-2

 

Table 17.2

 

San Gonzalo Vein Mill Production.

 

17-4

 

Table 17.3

 

Major Design Criteria.

 

17-7

 

Table 20.1

 

Mammal Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine.

 

20-2

 

Table 20.2

 

Bird Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine.

 

20-2

 

Table 20.3

 

Reptile Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine.

 

20-3

 

Table 20.4

 

Amphibian Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine.

 

20-3

 

Table 21.1

 

Currency Exchange Rate.

 

21-2

 

Table 21.2

 

Inflation Rates in Mexico.

 

21-2

 

Table 21.3

 

Contingency by Area.

 

21-3

 

Table 21.4

 

Capital Cost Summary.

 

21-3

 

Table 21.5

 

LOM Unit Operating Cost Estimate Summary.

 

21-5

 

 

 
x
 
 

 

   

Table 21.6

 

Mining Cost Summary.

 

21-5

 

Table 21.7

 

LOM Process Operating Cost

 

21-6

 

Table 21.8

 

Process Plant Manpower Requirements.

 

21-7

 

Table 21.9

 

Process Power Supply.

 

21-7

 

Table 21.10

 

Process Maintenance Supplies.

 

21-8

 

Table 21.11

 

Plant Operating Supplies.

 

21-8

 

Table 21.12

 

G&A Manpower Requirements.

 

21-9

 

Table 21.13

 

G&A Expenses.

 

21-9

 

Table 21.14

 

Capital Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

 

21-10

 

Table 21.15

 

Capital Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

 

21-10

 

Table 21.16

 

Operating Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

 

21-11

 

Table 21.17

 

Operating Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

 

21-11

 

Table 22.1

 

Metal Production from the Avino Mine Tailings Retreatment

 

22-2

 

Table 22.2

 

Summary of Pre-tax Financial Results.

 

22-4

 

Table 22.3

 

Components of the Various Taxes Applicable.

 

22-8

 

Table 22.4

 

Summary of Post-tax Financial Results.

 

22-9

 

Table 25.1

 

Mineral Resources at the Avino Mine Property.

 

25-2

 

Table 25.2

 

Capital Cost Summary.

 

 25-4

 

Table 25.3

 

LOM Unit Operating Cost Estimate Summary.

 

25-4

 

 

LIST OF FIGURES

 

Figure 1.1

 

General Location of the Property.

 

1-2

 

Figure 1.2

 

Perspective View of the Property Looking North and Showing the Three Deposits.

 

1-4

 

Figure 1.3

 

Simplified Process Flowsheet

 

1-9

 

Figure 4.1

 

General Location of the Property.

 

4-1

 

Figure 4.2

 

Local Property Location.

 

4-2

 

Figure 4.3

 

Map of Avino Property Concessions.

 

4-5

 

Figure 6.1

 

Avino Mine: Vertical Section View Showing Development and Stoping.

 

6-2

 

Figure 6.2

 

San Gonzalo Mine: Vertical Section View Showing Development and Stoping.

 

6-3

 

Figure 7.1

 

General Map of Property Geology.

 

7-2

 

Figure 7.2

 

Orthogonal View of the Oxide Tailings Deposit and Drillholes.

 

7-6

 

Figure 9.1

 

Channel and Drillhole Samples, Colour Coded by Silver Grade, within the Avino System.

 

9-5

 

Figure 9.2

 

Channel Samples, Colour Coded by Silver Grade, within the San Gonzalo Vein System..

 

9-5

 

Figure 10.1

 

Drillholes Completed from 2006 to 2016 on the Avino Vein.

 

10-2

 

Figure 10.2

 

Location of Drillholes Completed from 2006 to 2016 on the San Gonzalo Vein.

 

10-3

 

Figure 10.3

 

Location of Drillholes Completed from 2015 to 2016 on the Oxide Tailings.

 

10-8

 

Figure 12.1

 

Standard 1303 - Silver Performance.

 

12-4

 

Figure 12.2

 

Standard 1303 - Gold Performance.

 

12-5

 

Figure 12.3

 

Standard 1305 - Silver Performance.

 

12-5

 

Figure 12.4

 

Standard 1305 - Gold Performance.

 

12-6

 

Figure 12.5

 

Standard 1307 - Silver Performance.

 

12-6

 

Figure 12.6

 

Standard 1307 - Gold Performance.

 

12-7

 

Figure 14.1

 

Oblique View, Looking North, of the Avino Vein System Model

 

14-4

 

Figure 14.2

 

Grade Profiles Across the Avino Vein System Contacts.

 

14-5

 

Figure 14.3

 

Number of Samples per Slice Across the Avino Vein System Contacts.

 

14-6

 

 

 
xi
 
 

 

   

Figure 14.4

 

Oblique View, Looking North, of the San Gonzalo Vein System Model

 

14-7

 

Figure 14.5

 

Grade Profiles Across the San Gonzalo Vein System Contacts.

 

14-8

 

Figure 14.6

 

Perspective View of Oxide Tailings Drilling and Silver Assays.

 

14-9

 

Figure 14.7

 

Section View, Looking Northeast, Showing Silver Grades in Oxide Tailings Benches.

 

14-10

 

Figure 14.8

 

Avino Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms.

 

14-18

 

Figure 14.9

 

Avino Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Gold Variograms.

 

14-19

 

Figure 14.10

 

Avino Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Copper Variograms.

 

14-20

 

Figure 14.11

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms.

 

14-21

 

Figure 14.12

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Gold Variograms.

 

14-22

 

Figure 14.13

 

Oxide Tailings: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms.

 

14-23

 

Figure 14.14

 

Oxide Tailings: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms.

 

14-24

 

Figure 14.15

 

Avino Vein: Typical Transverse Section, Looking East through Drillhole ET07-10, Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade.

 

 14-33

 

Figure 14.16

 

Avino Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade.

 

 14-34

 

Figure 14.17

 

Avino Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Gold Grade.

 

 14-34

 

Figure 14.18

 

Avino Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Coper Grade.

 

 14-35

 

Figure 14.19

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Typical Transverse Section, Looking East Aligned Along Drillhole SG1115 Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade.

 

 14-36

 

Figure 14.20

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade.

 

14-36

 

Figure 14.21

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Color Coded by Gold Grade.

 

14-37

 

Figure 14.22

 

San Gonzalo Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Copper Grade.

 

14-37

 

Figure 14.23

 

Avino Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Eastings.

 

14-38

 

Figure 14.24

 

Avino Vein, Swathplot for Gold Eastings.

 

14-39

 

Figure 14.25

 

Avin Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Eastings.

 

14-39

 

Figure 14.26

 

Avino Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Elevation.

 

14-40

 

Figure 14.27

 

Avino Vein, Swathplot for Gold, Elevation.

 

14-40

 

Figure 14.28

 

Avino Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Elevation.

 

14-41

 

Figure 14.29

 

San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Eastings.

 

14-41

 

Figure 14.30

 

San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Gold, Eastings.

 

14-42

 

Figure 14.31

 

San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Eastings.

 

14-42

 

Figure 14.32

 

San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Elevation.

 

14-43

 

Figure 14.33

 

San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Gold, Elevation.

 

14-43

 

Figure 14.34

 

San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Elevation.

 

 14-44

 

Figure 14.35

 

Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Silver, Easting.

 

14-45

 

Figure 14.36

 

Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Gold, Easting.

 

14-46

 

Figure 14.37

 

Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Silver, Northing.

 

14-47

 

Figure 14.38

 

Oxide Tailings Deposits, Swathplot for Gold, Northing.

 

14-47

 

Figure 14.39

 

Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Silver, Elevation.

 

14-48

 

Figure 14.40

 

Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Gold, Elevation.

 

14-48

 

Figure 14.41

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of Avino Vein Material at Measured Confidence Level

 

14-59

 

Figure 14.42

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of Avino Vein Material at Indicated Confidence Level

 

14-59

 

Figure 14.43

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of Avino Vein Material at Inferred Confidence Level

 

14-60

 

Figure 14.44

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of San Gonzalo Vein Material at Measured Confidence Level

 

14-60

 

 

 
xii
 
 

 

   

Figure 14.45

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of San Gonzalo Vein Material at Indicated Confidence Level

 

14-61

 

Figure 14.46

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of San Gonzalo Vein Material at Inferred Confidence Level

 

14-61

 

Figure 14.47

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of Oxide Tailings Material at Indicated Confidence Level

 

14-62

 

Figure 14.48

 

Grade Tonnage Graph of Oxide Tailings Material at Inferred Confidence Level

 

14-62

 

Figure 17.1

 

Simplified Flowsheet - Avino and San Gonzalo Veins.

 

17-3

 

Figure 17.2

 

Simplified Process Flowsheet

 

17-6

 

Figure 18.1

 

Overall Tailings Heap Leach Facility Layout

 

18-3

 

Figure 22.1

 

Undiscounted Annual and Cumulative Net Cash Flow.

 

22-3

 

Figure 22.2

 

NPV Sensitivity Analysis.

 

22-5

 

Figure 22.3

 

IRR Sensitivity Analysis.

 

22-5

 

Figure 22.4

 

Payback Period Sensitivity Analysis.

 

22-6

 

Figure 26.1

 

Tailings Retreatment Project Suggested High-level Schedule.

 

26-6

 

 

GLOSSARY

 

UNITS OF MEASURE

 

above mean sea level

 

amsl

acre

 

ac

ampere

 

A

annum (year)

 

a

billion

 

B

billion tonnes

 

Bt

billion years ago

 

Ga

British thermal unit

 

BTU

centimetre

 

cm

cubic centimetre

 

cm3

cubic feet per minute

 

cfm

cubic feet per second

 

ft3/s

cubic foot

 

ft3

cubic inch

 

in3

cubic metre

 

m3

cubic yard

 

yd3

Coefficients of Variation

 

CVs

day

 

d

days per week

 

d/wk

days per year (annum)

 

d/a

dead weight tonnes

 

DWT

decibel adjusted

 

dBa

 

 
xiii
 
 

 

  

decibel

 

dB

degree

 

°

degrees Celsius

 

°C

diameter

 

ø

dollar (American)

 

US$

dollar (Canadian)

 

Cdn$

dry metric ton

 

dmt

foot

 

ft

gallon

 

gal

gallons per minute (US)

 

gpm

Gigajoule

 

GJ

gigapascal

 

GPa

gigawatt

 

GW

gram

 

g

grams per litre

 

g/L

grams per tonne

 

g/t

greater than

 

>

hectare (10,000 m2)

 

ha

hertz

 

Hz

horsepower

 

hp

hour

 

h

hours per day

 

h/d

hours per week

 

h/wk

hours per year

 

h/a

inch

 

in

kilo (thousand)

 

k

kilogram

 

kg

kilograms per cubic metre

 

kg/m3

kilograms per hour

 

kg/h

kilograms per square metre

 

kg/m2

kilometre

 

km

kilometres per hour

 

km/h

kilopascal

 

kPa

kilotonne

 

kt

kilovolt

 

kV

kilovolt-ampere

 

kVA

kilovolts

 

kV

kilowatt

 

kW

kilowatt hour

 

kWh

kilowatt hours per tonne

 

kWh/t

kilowatt hours per year

 

kWh/a

less than

 

<

litre

 

L

litres per minute

 

L/m

megabytes per second

 

Mb/s

 

 
xiv
 
 

 

  

megapascal

 

MPa

megavolt-ampere

 

MVA

megawatt

 

MW

metre

 

m

metres above sea level

 

masl

metres Baltic sea level

 

mbsl

metres per minute

 

m/min

metres per second

 

m/s

microns

 

µm

milligram

 

mg

milligrams per litre

 

mg/L

millilitre

 

mL

millimetre

 

mm

million

 

M

million bank cubic metres

 

Mbm3

million bank cubic metres per annum

 

Mbm3/a

million tonnes

 

Mt

minute (plane angle)

 

'

minute (time)

 

min

month

 

mo

ounce

 

oz

pascal

 

Pa

centipoise

 

mPa∙s

parts per million

 

ppm

parts per billion

 

ppb

percent

 

%

pound(s)

 

lb

pounds per square inch

 

psi

pounds per square inch (gauge)

 

psig

revolutions per minute

 

rpm

second (plane angle)

 

"

second (time)

 

s

short ton (2,000 lb)

 

st

short tons per day

 

st/d

short tons per year

 

st/y

specific gravity

 

SG

square centimetre

 

cm2

square foot

 

ft2

square inch

 

in2

square kilometre

 

km2

square metre

 

m2

three-dimensional

 

3D

tonne (1,000 kg) (metric ton)

 

t

 

 
xv
 
 

 

   

tonnes per day

 

t/d

tonnes per hour

 

t/h

tonnes per year

 

t/a

tonnes seconds per hour metre cubed

 

ts/hm3

volt

 

V

week

 

wk

weight/weight

 

w/w

wet metric ton

 

wmt

yard

 

yd

 

ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS

 

acid-base accounting

ABA

Aranz Geo Expert Services

Aranz

atomic absorption

AA

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd

Avino

caliper volume

CV

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metalurgy, and Petroleum

CIM

Cannon-Hicks & Associates Ltd

Cannon-Hicks

certified reference material

CRM

Compañía Minera Mexicana de Avino

CMMA

Compañía Minera Mexicana de Avino, S.A. de C.V

Avino Mexico

Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora

CITES

copper sulphate

CuS04

copper

Cu

dissolved oxygen

dO2

east

E

Electrometals Electrowinning

EMEW

Elena Toloso Zone

ET Zone

Environmental Impact Assessment Matter Regulation/Reglamento en Materia de Evaluacion del Impacto Ambiental

REIA

Environmental Impact Assessment/Evaluación de Impacto Ambiental

EIA

Environmental Impact Statement/Manifestación de Impacto Ambiental

EIS/MIA

Environmental Quality Monitoring Program/Programa de Seguimiento de la Calidad Ambiental

EQMP

Federal Attorney for Environmental Protection/ Procuraduría Federal de Proteccíon al Ambiente

PROFEPA

general and administrative

G&A

General Law for the Prevention and Comprehensive Management of Waste/Ley General Para la Prevención y Gestión Integral de Residuos

LGPyGIR

General Law for the Prevention and Management of Waste/Ley General Para la Prevención y Gestión Integral de los Residuos

LGPGIR

General Law of Ecological Equilibrium and Environmental Protection/Ley General del Equilibrio Ecológico y la Protección al Ambiente

LGEEPA

global positioning system

GPS

gold

Au

induced polarization

IP

inductively coupled plasma

ICP

inductively coupled plasma-method spectroscopy

ICP-MS

 

 
xvi
 
 

 

   

internal rate of return

IRR

International Organization for Standardization

ISO

inverse distance squared

ID2

kriging neighbourhood analysis

KRN

lead

Pb

life-of-mine

LOM

Minerales de Avino, Sociedad Anonima de Capital Variable

Minerales

MineStart Management Inc

MMI

Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources/ Secretaría de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales

MENR/SEMARNAT

National Instrument 43-101

NI 43-101

nearest neighbour

NN

net present value

NPV

net smelter return

NSR

north

N

ordinary kriging

OK

potassium amyl xanthate

PAX

preliminary economic assessment

PEA

PricewaterhouseCoopers

PwC

Process Research Associates Ltd

PRA

QG Australia (Pty) Ltd

QG Consulting

Qualified Person

QP

quality assurance

QA

quality assurance

QA

quality control

QC

quality control

QC

silver equivalent

Ag_Eq

silver

Ag

sodium carbonate

Na2CO3

sodium cyanide

NaCN

south

S

special mining duty

SMD

standard reference material

SRM

tailings storage facility

TSF

the Avino Mine

the Property or the Project

TSX Venture Exchange

TSXV

Universal Transverse Mercator

UTM

water displacement

WD

west

W

zinc

Zn

 

 
xvii
 
 

 

 

1.0 SUMMARY

 

 

1.1 INTRODUCTION

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. (Avino) is a Canadian-based mining and exploration company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange (TSXV) and the NYSE-MKT with precious metal properties in Mexico and Canada.

 

The Avino Mine (the Property or the Project), near Durango, Mexico, is Avino’s principal asset. This Preliminary Economic Assessment (PEA) Update Technical Report focuses on the technical and economical assessments of the oxide tailings, including the Mineral Resource estimates on the oxide tailings, as well as the Avino and San Gonzalo veins (QG Australia (Pty) Ltd. (QG Consulting) 2016). Avino holds a 99.67% interest in the Property through its subsidiary companies called Compañía Minera Mexicana de Avino, S.A. de C.V. (CMMA) and Promotora Avino, S.A. de C.V. Avino commenced development, including drilling and bulk sampling, on the San Gonzalo Vein in 2010 and this work is ongoing. This marks the resumption of activity on the Property since 2001, when low metal prices and the closure of a key smelter caused the mine to close after having been in operation continuously for 27 years. Between 1976 and 2001, the mine produced approximately 497 t of silver, 3 t of gold, and 11,000 t of copper (Slim 2005a) as well as an apparently undocumented amount of lead.

 

This PEA update mainly focuses on the recovery of the silver and gold from the oxide tailings. This report includes a summary of material information concerning a PEA conducted on part of the Property by Tetra Tech Canada Inc. (Tetra Tech) (formerly Tetra Tech WEI Inc.) and filed in 2013 and the Mineral Resource estimates from Aranz Geo Expert Services (Aranz) (formerly QG Consulting) (QG Consulting 2016). This PEA update is preliminary in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves. Furthermore, there is no certainty that the Mineral Resource estimate will be realized.

 

The majority of the information has been sourced from the data provided by Avino, Avino internal reports, Aranz (QG Consulting 2016), Tetra Tech (2013), Slim (2005d), and Gunning (2009). The majority of the information was provided in English, but some information was written in Spanish and subsequently translated into English.

 

1.2 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION AND LOCATION

 

The Property is located in Durango State in North Central Mexico, within the Sierra Madre Silver Belt, 82 km northeast of Durango City (Figure 1.1). The current Property is comprised of 23 mineral concessions, totalling 1,103.934 ha. Of these, 22 mineral concessions, totalling 1,005.104 ha, are held by CMMA (Avino’s Mexican subsidiary company), by Promotora Avino SA de CV, and by Susesion de la Sra. Elena del Hoyo Algara de Ysita.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

1-1

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Figure 1.1 General Location of the Property

 

 

Through its subsidiary company, Avino entered into an agreement (the Agreement) on February 18, 2012 with Minerales de Avino, Sociedad Anonima de Capital Variable (Minerales), whereby Minerales has indirectly granted to Avino the exclusive mining and occupation rights to the La Platosa concession. The La Platosa concession covers 98.83 ha and hosts the Avino Vein and Elena Toloso Zone (ET Zone).

 

Pursuant to the Agreement, Avino has the exclusive right to explore and mine the concession for an initial period of 15 years, with the option to extend the agreement for another 5 years. In consideration of the grant of these rights, Avino has paid to Minerales the sum of US$250,000 by the issuance of 135,189 common shares of Avino. Avino has also agreed to pay to Minerales a royalty equal to 3.5% of net smelter returns (NSRs), at the commencement of commercial production from the concession.

 

All concessions are current and up to date based on information received. Mineral concessions in Mexico do not include surface rights and Avino has entered into agreements with communal landowners (Ejidos) of San Jose de Avino, Panuco de Coronado and Zaragoza for the temporary occupation and surface rights of the concessions.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

1-2

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

  

1.3 GEOLOGY AND MINERALIZATION

 

The Property is located within the Sierra de Gamon, on the east flank of the Sierra Madre Occidental. The area is a geological window into the Lower Volcanic series and consists of volcanic rocks of mainly Andesitic affiliation with other rock types occurring more sparsely to the north (Slim 2005d).

 

A large monzonitic intrusion is observed in the region in the form of dykes and small stocks, which may be related to the Avino Vein mineralization. A number of younger thin mafic sills are also found in various parts of the region.

 

The Avino concession is situated within a 12 km north-south by 8.5 km caldera, which hosts numerous low sulphidation epithermal veins, breccias, stockwork and silicified zones. These zones grade into a “near porphyry” environment in the general vicinity of the Avino property. The caldera has been uplifted by regional north trending block faulting (a graben structure), exposing a window of andesitic pyroclastic rocks of the lower volcanic sequence which is a favourable host rock. The upper volcanic sequence consists of rhyolite to trachytes with extensive ignimbrite and is intruded by monzonite bodies. The basal andesite-bearing conglomerate and underlying Paleozoic basement sedimentary rocks (consisting of shales, sandstones and conglomerates) have been identified on the Avino concession in the south-central portion of the caldera, covering the Guadalupe, Santiago, San Jorge, the San Gonzalo Trend, Malinche, Porterito and Yolanda areas.

 

A northerly trending felsic dyke, probably a feeder to the upper volcanic sequence, transects the Property and many of the veins. The Aguila Mexicana low temperature vein system, with significant widths but overall low precious metal values, trends north-northwest, similar to the felsic dyke and with similar continuity across the Property. The two structures may occupy deep crustal faults that controlled volcanism and mineralization, with the felsic dyke structure controlling the emplacement of the Avino, Nuestra Senora and El Fuerte-Potosina volcanic centres and the Aguila Mexicana controlling the Cerro San Jose and El Fuerte-Potosina volcanic centres (Paulter 2006).

 

Silver- and gold-bearing veins crosscut the various lithologies and are generally oriented north-northwest to south-southeast (the Avino Vein trend) and northwest to southeast the San Gonzalo trend). In Mexico, these vein deposits may have large lateral extents, but can be limited in the vertical continuity of grades due to the effects of pressure on boiling levels for mineralizing fluids. The rocks have been weathered and leached in the upper sections, as a result of contact with atmospheric waters. The oxide tailings material is derived primarily from these shallow zones, whereas the sulphide tailings are predominantly from material sourced at depth from the underground workings.

 

The valuable minerals found during the period of mining of the oxide zone are reported to be argentite, bromargyrite, chalcopyrite, chalcocite, galena, sphalerite, bornite, native silver and gold, and native copper.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

1-3

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Three deposits, the Avino Vein, the San Gonzalo Vein and the oxide tailings deposit, are the subject of Mineral Resource estimates disclosed in this report.

 

Figure 1.2 Perspective View of the Property Looking North and Showing the Three Deposits

  

 

1.3.1 THE AVINO VEIN

 

The Avino Vein (see Figure 1.2 for location) has been and continues to be the primary deposit mined on the Property since at least the 19 th century. It is 1.6 km long and up to 60 m wide on the surface. The deepest level is at the 1,930 m amsl level (430 m below surface).

 

1.3.2 THE SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

The San Gonzalo Vein system (see Figure 1.2 for location), including the crosscutting Angelica vein, is located 2 km northeast of the Avino Vein. It constitutes a strongly developed vein system over 25 m across, trending 300 to 325°/80° northeast to 77° south. Banded textures and open-space filling are common and individual veins have an average width of less than 2 m. The vein was mined historically and underground workings extend approximately 1.1 km along strike and to the 1,970 m amsl (300 m below surface).

 

1.3.3 THE OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The oxide tailings deposit (see Figure 1.2 for location) comprises historic recovery plant residue material that was wasted from processing plants during the earlier period of open pit mining of the Avino Vein. The oxide tailings are partially covered by younger unconsolidated sulphide tailings on the northwest side.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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1.4 RESOURCE ESTIMATES

 

The Avino system, San Gonzalo system, and oxide tailings Mineral Resources were modelled and estimated using Datamine™ Studio software version 3.24.25.0. The reported Mineral Resource estimated by Aranz was interpolated using ordinary kriging (OK) and capped grades and inverse distance squared (ID 2 ) and nearest neighbour (NN) for model validation purposes. All three deposits were estimated for silver, gold, copper, lead and zinc. Under current economic and technical conditions gold and silver and copper are recoverable from the Avino system and all three metals are included in the mineral resource and for the silver equivalent (Ag_Eq) calculation for the Avino system. Under current economic and technical conditions only gold and silver are recoverable from the San Gonzalo system and the oxide tailings and consequently only silver and gold are included in the Mineral Resource and for the silver equivalent calculation for the San Gonzalo system and oxide tailings. Cut-off reporting (to consider “eventual prospects for eventual economic extraction”) utilizes an Ag_Eq calculation where the total metal value is converted into an in situ silver resource. For reporting purposes, a base-case Ag_Eq cut-off of 55 g/t is used for the Avino system, an Ag_Eq cut-off of 125 g/t is used for the San Gonzalo system, and an Ag_Eq cut-off of 50 g/t is used for the oxide tailings based on current economic parameters.

 

Table 1.1 is the Mineral Resource statement. Other grade tonnage graphs and tables found in Section 14.0 are intended to show sensitivity of the mineralized material and must not be considered Mineral Resources.

 

It must be noted that no Mineral Resource has been estimated for the sulphide tailings portion of the Property.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 1.1 Mineral Resources at the Avino Property

Resource Category

Deposit

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq

g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Grade

Metal Contents

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Ag

(million

tr oz)

Au

(thousand

tr oz)

Cu

(t)

Avino Mine: Measured and Indicated Mineral Resources

Measured

Avino System

55

950,000

143

74

0.33

0.69

2.3

10.0

6,550

Measured

San Gonzalo System

125

170,000

357

272

1.50

0.00

1.5

8.2

0

Total Measured

All Deposits

-

1,120,000

176

105

0.51

0.58

3.8

18.2

6,550

Indicated

Avino System

55

500,000

129

68

0.36

0.56

1.1

5.7

2,800

Indicated

San Gonzalo System

125

320,000

310

237

1.30

0.00

2.4

13.3

0

Indicated

Oxide Tailings

50

1,330,000

124

98

0.46

0.00

4.2

19.8

0

Total Indicated

All Deposits

-

2,150,000

152

111

0.56

0.13

7.7

38.8

2,800

Total Measured and Indicated

All Deposits

-

3,270,000

160

109

0.54

0.29

11.5

57.0

9,350

Avino Mine: Inferred Mineral Resources

Inferred

Avino System

55

5,790,000

155

81

0.57

0.58

15.1

105.8

33,550

Inferred

San Gonzalo System

125

540,0haa00

403

314

1.58

0.00

5.5

27.5

0

Inferred

Oxide Tailings

50

1,810,000

113

88

0.44

0.00

5.1

25.6

0

Total Inferred

All Deposits

-

8,140,000

162

98

0.61

0.41

25.6

158.9

33,550

 

Notes:  

Figures may not add to totals shown due to rounding.

Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

The Mineral Resource estimate is classified in accordance with the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum’s (CIM) Definition Standards

For Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves incorporated by reference into National Instrument 43-101 (NI 43-101) Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects.

Mineral Resources are reported at cut-off grades 50 g/t, 55 g/t, and 125 g/t Ag_Eq grade.

Au_Eq grades were calculated using conversion formulas Ag_Eq = Ag + 55.9 * Au + 72.99 * Cu for Avino Vein and Ag_Eq = Ag + 56.38 * Au for San Gonzalo Vein System and oxide tailings.

Cut-off grades were calculated using current costs, silver price of US$19.50/oz, gold price of US$1,250/oz, and copper price of US$2.10/lb.

Au - gold; Ag - silver; Cu - copper.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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1.5 MINERAL PROCESSING, METALLURGICAL TESTING AND RECOVERY METHODS

 

1.5.1 AVINO VEIN

 

Prior to the mine shutting down in 2001, Avino operated a 1,000 t/d processing plant, achieving up to 1,300 t/d, producing a copper concentrate that was sold to a smelter in San Luis Potosi. Mine and mill operations were then suspended. Following several years of redevelopment, Avino completed the Avino Mine and mill expansion in Q4 2014. On January 1, 2015, full scale operations commenced and commercial production was declared effective April 1, 2016 following a 19 month advancement and test period.

 

The plant consists of a conventional three-stage crushing circuit with the tertiary crusher in closed circuit with a screen. The crushed material is fed to a ball mill and classified with a hydrocyclone. The fines from the hydrocyclone reports to the flotation circuit where typical flotation reagents for copper minerals are used. The concentrates from the rougher and scavenger circuits are upgraded in a cleaner circuit with the final concentrate reporting to a thickener and pressure filter. The moisture of the filter cake is approximately 8% and then shipped for sale overseas. Flotation tailing is pumped to the permitted tailings impoundment where decant water is reclaimed for process use.

 

1.5.2 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the San Gonzalo Vein, including processing of San Gonzalo Vein material at the mill plant at the Avino Mine site.

 

The process plant consists of crushing and grinding circuits, followed by a flotation process circuit to recover and upgrade silver and gold from the feed material. Common reagents are used within the flotation circuit. The flotation concentrate is thickened, filtered to 9.9% moisture content, and sent to the concentrate stockpile for subsequent shipping to customers.

 

The final flotation tailings is disposed of in the tailing pond.

 

1.5.3 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

Currently there is no metal recovery operation on the stored tailings. As reported by MineStart Management Inc. (MMI) and Process Research Associates Ltd. (PRA), several metallurgical work programs were conducted to investigate silver and gold recovery from the tailings.

 

The test work investigated various treatment methods, including gravity separation, flotation, and cyanide leaching (tank leaching and heap leaching). The preliminary test results appears to show that the tailings materials responded reasonably well to the cyanide leaching treatment, including tank leaching and column leaching testing procedures. A preliminary economical evaluation was conducted in 2012 and appeared to indicate that a heap leaching treatment would produce a better financial alternative, compared to tank leaching with or without regrinding processes.

 

 

 

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Accordingly, a heap leaching treatment is proposed for gold and silver recovery from the oxide tailings. The processing will consist of tailings reclamation, agglomeration, and cyanide heap leaching followed by a Merrill-Crowe process to recover silver and gold from the pregnant solution. The process plant will operate at a throughput rate of 1,370 t/d on a 24 h/d, 365 d/a basis, with an overall utilization of 90%. The simplified processing flowsheet is illustrated in Figure 1.3 .

 

1.5.4 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the sulphide tailings. Because some of the oxide tailings and sulphide tailings were co-deposited, and the oxide tailings are partially covered by younger unconsolidated sulphide tailings on the northwest side of the tailings storage dam, the sulphide tailings materials will be reclaimed as required during the oxide tailings reclamation. The reclaimed sulphide tailings is planned to be stored in a separate sulphide tailings storage facility for further exploration, while some of the sulphide tailings could be used for constructing the heap leach pad and facilities for the oxide tailings retreatment; however, no quantities have been estimated at this stage. In addition, no recovery methods are currently proposed for the sulphide tailings, which have been excluded from this study.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Figure 1.3 Simplified Process Flowsheet

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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1.6 MINING METHODS

 

1.6.1 AVINO VEIN

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the Avino Vein using longhole stoping and sub-level caving mining methods.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility Study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure that are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility Study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts. Information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

Production from the Avino Vein is summarized in Table 1.2.

 

Table 1.2 Recent Production from the Avino Vein

Production Description

2015

2016

Q1 2017

Mill Feed Tonnage

Tonnes Milled (t)

396,113

429,289

116,553

Feed Grade

Silver (g/t)

65

67

61

Gold (g/t)

0.29

0.42

0.50

Copper (%)

0.62

0.50

0.44

Recovery

Silver (%)

87

85

86

Gold (%)

75

64

67

Copper (%)

87

90

91

Total Metal Produced

Silver Produced (oz)

717,901

789,372

195,562

Gold Produced (oz)

2,757

3,691

1,252

Copper Produced (lb)

4,743,691

4,206,585

1,024,853

Ag_Eq Produced (oz)

1,801,997

1,606,272

439,163

Source: Avino (2017a; 2017b)

 

1.6.2 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the San Gonzalo Vein using cut-and-fill and shrinkage stoping mining methods.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility Study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure that are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility Study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts. Information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

 

 

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Production from the San Gonzalo Vein is summarized in Table 1.3.

 

Table 1.3 Recent Production from the San Gonzalo Vein

Production Description

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Q1 2017

Mill Feed Tonnage

Total Mill Feed (t)

19,539

78,415

79,729

121,774

115,047

20,133

Feed Grade

Silver (g/t)

259

288

337

279

267

229

Gold (g/t)

1.04

1.34

1.88

1.48

1.25

1.19

Recovery

Silver (%)

79

83

84

83

83

84

Gold (%)

70

73

78

75

74

76

Total Produced

Silver (oz)

128,607

602,233

724,931

907,384

822,689

124,520

Gold (oz)

455

2,473

3,740

4,326

3,427

585

Ag_Eq Produced (oz)

151,372

751,462

958,702

1,218,351

1,073,062

165,480

 Source: Avino (2017a; 2017b)

 

1.6.3 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The oxide tailings Mineral Resource will be mined/moved using a conventional truck/loader surface mining method. The production cycle consists of loading and trucking. The production schedule has been developed for the oxide tailings based on a treatment rate of 500 kt/a, which would be equivalent to a throughput rate of 1,370 t/d. This will give an overall project duration of approximately eight years. This eight-year period includes a one-year pre-production period and excludes the time required for remediation of the heap after the leaching process has been completed. Only oxide tailings will be considered for treatment, while sulphide materials will be considered waste.

 

The production schedule is shown in Table 1.4 .

 

 

 

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Table 1.4 Mining Production Schedule

Year

Mineralized

Material
(t)

Head Grade

Waste (t)

Total Material

Moved
(t)

Ag (g/t)

Au (g/t)

-1

-

-

-

500,000

500,000

1

350,000

88.83

0.51

558,906

908,906

2

500,000

100.11

0.48

497,101

997,101

3

500,000

94.95

0.44

498,995

998,995

4

500,000

78.28

0.45

75,148

575,148

5

499,673

82.99

0.44

500,327

1,000,000

6

500,000

87.95

0.36

295,829

795,829

7

272,641

76.27

0.28

12,405

285,046

LOM

3,122,314

87.75

0.43

2,938,711

6,061,025

 

1.7 PROJECT INFRASTRUCTURE

 

The history of operations at the Avino Mine provides ample evidence of sufficient infrastructure and services in the area. The San Gonzalo Mine entered commercial production in October 2012, followed by reopening the Avino Mine in January 2015. The two mines feed a conventional flotation mill that has three separate circuits and a capacity of 1,500 t/d. The existing tailings deposition facility has been upgraded and is fully permitted and operational for approximately another 500,000 t of tailings. The offices, miner’s quarters, secured explosives storage facilities, warehouse, laboratory and other associated facilities are all in place. The tailings leach facilities are planned to be located southeast of the existing tailings storage pond.

 

1.8 ENVIRONMENTAL

 

Environmental settings, permits and registrations, and environmental management strategies that may be required for the Project are summarized in Section 20.0. Permits and authorizations required for the operation of the Project may include an operating permit, an application for surface tenures, a waste water discharge registration, a hazardous waste generator’s registration, and an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or Evaluación de Impacto Ambiental. Acid-base accounting (ABA) tests have indicated that mild acid generation may already have started on the tailings dam. A gap analysis and additional tests to further characterize current conditions of the tailings should be completed to properly design a tailings management plan.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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1.9 CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS

 

1.9.1 CAPITAL COST ESTIMATES

 

OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The capital cost for the Project has been assessed at US$28.8 million (US$24.4 million of initial capital plus US$4.4 million sustaining capital) and is summarized in Table 1.5.

 

Table 1.5 Capital Cost Summary

Item/Description

Total Initial
Capital Cost
(US$000)

Total Sustaining Capital Cost (US$000)

Direct Costs

Mining, Agglomeration, and Pad Loading

2,899

818

Process Facilities

3,979

 

Reagents/Auxiliary Services

526

 

Buildings

1,003

 

Leach Pad and Infrastructure

4,522

1,819

Power Supply and Distribution

1,571

 

Total Direct Costs

14,500

2,637

Indirect Costs

Engineering, Procurement, Construction Management, Quality Assurance and Vendor Representatives

2,338

386

Freight and Construction Indirects

2,898

430

Owner’s Costs

725

132

Contingency

3,902

767

Total Indirect Costs

9,863

1,715

Total Capital Costs

24,363

4,352

 

AVINO VEIN, SAN GONZALO VEIN AND SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the Avino and San Gonzalo veins. There is no cost estimate applicable and all costs are based on actual expenditure.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility Study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure that are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility Study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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The actual capital expenditures (in US dollars) to date on the Avino Vein and San Gonzalo Vein operations are summarized in Table 1.6 and Table 1.7, respectively. The capital expenditures have been broken down by year and area.

 

Table 1.6 Capital Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

Description

Q1 2017

2016

2015

2014

Office Furniture

5,531

8,625

7,093

6,521

Computer Equipment

1,415

14,913

17,233

33,178

Mill Machinery and Processing Equipment

3,315

70,653

525,067

2,832,627

Mine Machinery and Transportation Equipment

106,659

1,985,446

1,918,764

2,125,229

Buildings and Construction

99,334

485,757

590,639

313,875

San Gonzalo Vein Mineral Property

0

0

0

0

Elena Toloso Mineral Property

233,772

4,330,125

0

0

Total Capital Costs

450,026

6,895,518

3,058,796

5,311,429

Source: Avino

 

Table 1.7 Capital Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

Description

Q1 2017

2016

2015

2014

Office Furniture

5,212

7,248

3,725

6,521

Computer Equipment

1,368

12,575

17,233

32,937

Mill Machinery and Processing Equipment

139,499

188,884

100,537

264,178

Mine Machinery and Transportation Equipment

143,758

40,294

133,248

646,981

Buildings and Construction

101,559

443,135

55,819

356,300

San Gonzalo Vein Mineral Property

133,723

1,080,889

577,462

697,107

Elena Toloso Mineral Property

0

0

0

0

Total Capital Costs

525,119

1,773,024

888,024

2,004,023

Source: Avino

 

Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property. No capital costs have been estimated for any potential mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property.

 

1.9.2 OPERATING COST ESTIMATES

 

OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The life-of-mine (LOM) overall operating costs for the Oxide Tailings Retreatment Project, including the costs for mining, process and general and administrative (G&A), have been estimated to be approximately $15.06/t milled. Table 1.8 gives the LOM overall unit operating cost summary, based on a nominal processing rate of 1,370 t/d. The operating cost estimate is reported in US dollar with an exchange rate of Mexican Peso to US Dollar at 19.23.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 1.8 LOM Unit Operating Cost Estimate Summary

Description

Personnel

Unit Cost

(US$/t treated)

Mining

15 *

1.13

Process

39

12.53

G&A

11

1.41

Total Operating Cost

65

15.06

 Note: * labour requirement for hauling the tailings and waste is excluded, as it will be by done by a contractor.

 

AVINO VEIN, SAN GONZALO VEIN, AND SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the Avino and San Gonzalo veins. There is no cost estimate applicable and all costs are based on actual expenditures.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility Study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure that are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility Study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

The actual operating costs (in US dollars) for the Avino Vein and the San Gonzalo Vein in 2016 and Q1 2017 are presented in Table 1.9 and Table 1.10.

 

The mine and milling costs include operating and maintenance labour together with the operation associated consumable supplies. The cost for electrical power is included in the milling costs. The geological component is mostly related to technical labour.

 

Table 1.9 Operating Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

Description

Q1 2017

Q4 2016

Q3 2016

Q2 2016

Mining Cost

1,711,570

1,402,941

2,232,967

1,670,300

Milling Cost

947,743

922,639

1,082,387

942,560

Geological and Other

710,786

711,391

847,942

740,911

Royalties

160,468

202,790

219,658

188,349

Depletion and Depreciation

367,658

301,433

354,249

264,074

Total Direct Costs

3,898,225

3,541,194

4,737,202

3,806,193

G&A

777,487

742,572

1,516,352

558,332

Total Operating Costs

4,675,712

4,283,766

6,253,555

4,364,525

 Source: Avino

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 1.10 Operating Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

Description

Q1 2017

Q4 2016

Q3 2016

Q2 2016

Q1 2016

Mining Cost

451,288

1,798,503

793,057

1,419,545

313,684

Milling Cost

70,962

212,467

208,665

358,227

221,803

Geological and Other

149,192

318,843

141,618

200,997

103,299

Royalties

0

0

0

0

0

Depletion and Depreciation

97,352

485,732

148,105

271,972

72,053

Total Direct Costs

768,794

2,815,545

1,291,445

2,250,740

710,839

G&A

293,096

607,351

635,649

281,192

666,121

Total Operating Costs

1,061,890

3,422,897

1,927,094

2,531,933

1,376,960

Source: Avino

 

Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property. No operating costs have been estimated for any potential mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property.

 

1.10 ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

 

No economic analysis was performed for the Avino Vein, the San Gonzalo Vein or the sulphide tailings. Tetra Tech prepared an economic evaluation for the oxide tailings retreatment based on a pre-tax financial model. Metal prices used in the base case were:

 

 

·

gold - US$1,250/oz

 

 

 

 

· silver - US$18.50/oz.

 

The pre-tax financial results are:

 

 

· 48.4% internal rate of return (IRR)

 

 

 

 

· 2.0-year payback period

 

 

 

 

· US$40.5 million net present value (NPV) at an 8% discount rate.

 

Avino commissioned PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) in Vancouver to prepare the tax component of the model for the post-tax economic evaluation for this updated PEA, with the inclusion of applicable income and mining taxes.

 

The following post-tax financial results were calculated:

 

 

· 32.0% IRR

 

 

 

 

· 2.6-year payback period

 

 

 

 

· US$22.2 million NPV at an 8% discount rate.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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1.11 RECOMMENDATIONS

 

Tetra Tech would recommend that Avino proceed with the next phase of work to identify potential cost savings and additional revenue generating opportunities and more completely assess the viability of the tailings retreatment Project.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

  

 

2.0 INTRODUCTION

 

 

Avino is a Canadian-based mining and exploration company listed on the TSXV and NYSE-MKT, trading under the symbol ASM. Avino has precious metal properties in Mexico and Canada and has a head office located at 900-570 Granville Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6C 3P1.

 

Avino retained Tetra Tech, in conjuction with Aranz Geo Expert Services (Aranz) (formerly QG Australia (Pty) Ltd., to produce an updated technical report on the Avino Property. The primary purpose of this updated report is to evaluate technical and economical viability for the Project. The report also includes a summary of the information previously disclosed in a Technical Report filed in 2016 (QG 2016), comprising a Mineral Resource estimate and the 2013 PEA on the oxide tailings portion of the Property (Tetra Tech 2013). This report has been prepared in accordance with NI 43-101 and Form 43-101F.

 

2.1 EFFECTIVE DATES

 

The effective date of this report is April 11, 2017. The effective date of the Mineral Resource estimate is August 31, 2016.

 

2.2 QUALIFIED PERSONS

 

A summary of the Qualified Persons (QPs) responsible for this report is provided in Table 2.1. The following QPs conducted site visits of the Property:

 

 

· Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng. M.A.Sc., visited the site March 30, 2011 for one day.

 

 

 

 

· Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Scit.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM visted the site June 6 to 7, 2016, inclusive.

 

Table 2.1 Summary of QPs

Report Section

Company

QP

1.0 Summary

All

Sign-off by Section

2.0 Introduction

Tetra Tech

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

3.0 Reliance on Other Experts

Aranz Tetra Tech

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng.

Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng.

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

4.0 Property Description and Location

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

 table continues…

 

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Report Section

Company

QP

5.0 Accessibility, Climate, Local Resources, Infrastructure and Physiography

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

6.0 History

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

7.0 Geological Setting and Mineralisation

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

8.0 Deposit Types

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

9.0 Exploration

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

10.0 Drilling

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

11.0 Sample Preparation, Analyses and Security

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

12.0 Data Verification

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

13.0 Mineral Processing and Metallurgical Testing

Tetra Tech

Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng.

14.0 Mineral Resource Estimates

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

15.0 Mineral Reserve Estimates

Tetra Tech

Sabry Abdel Hafez, PhD., P.Eng.

16.0 Mining Methods

Tetra Tech

Sabry Abdel Hafez, PhD., P.Eng.

17.0 Recovery Methods

Tetra Tech

Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng.

18.0 Infrastructure

Tetra Tech

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

19.0 Market Studies and Contracts

Tetra Tech

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

20.0 Environmental Studies, Permitting and Social or Community Impact

Tetra Tech

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

21.0 Capital and Operating Costs

Tetra Tech

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng.

Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng.

22.0 Economic Analysis

Tetra Tech

Sabry Abdel Hafez, PhD., P.Eng.

23.0 Adjacent Properties

Aranz

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

24.0 Other Relevant Data and Information

Tetra Tech

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

25.0 Interpretation and Conclusions

All

Sign-off by Section

26.0 Recommendations

All

Sign-off by Section

27.0 References

All

Sign-off by Section

28.0 Certificates of Qualified Person

All

Sign-off by Section

 

2.3 INFORMATION AND DATA SOURCES

 

In preparation of this report, various historical engineering, geological and management reports compiled about the Project or site were reviewed and supplemented by direct site examinations and investigations. All the data files reviewed for this study were provided by Avino in the form of hard copy documents, electronic .pdf reports, .xls files, email correspondence, and personal communication with management and personnel from Avino. Work completed by Avino includes several decades of open pit and underground mining, drilling and sampling, trenching, metallurgical testing, and geophysical surveying.

 

 

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The main sources of information in preparing this report are:

 

 

· Gunning, D. (2009). Resource Estimate on the San Gonzalo Vein - A Part of the Avino Mine, Durango, Mexico, for Avino Silver and Gold Mines Ltd. Prepared by Orequest. August 31, 2009.

 

 

 

 

· Slim, B. (2005d). A Tailings Resource. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Report prepared by Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. October 25, 2005.

 

 

 

 

· Tetra Tech (2013). Technical Report on the Avino Property. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Effective Date: July 19, 2013. www.sedar.com Document No. 1251920100-REP-R0001-02.1.

 

 

 

 

· QG Australia (Pty) Ltd. (2016). Amended Resource Estimate Update for the Avino Property Durango, Mexico. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mined Ltd. October 27, 2016.

 

A complete list of references is provided in Section 27.0.

 

2.4 UNITS OF MEASUREMENT

 

All units of measurement used in this technical report and resource estimate are in metric, and currency is expressed in US dollars, unless otherwise stated.

 

 

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3.0 RELIANCE ON OTHER EXPERTS

 

 

This PEA has been prepared by Michael O’Brien, P.Geo, of Aranz, and Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng, Jianhui Huang, Ph.D. P.Eng. and Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng, all of Tetra Tech. All authors are independent QPs as defined within the requirements of NI 43-101.

 

The information, conclusions, opinions, and estimates contained herein are based on:

 

 

· information available to the authors at the time the report was prepared

 

 

 

 

· assumptions, conditions, and qualifications as outlined in this report

 

 

 

 

· production and expenditure data, reports, and other information supplied by Avino and other third-party sources.

 

Avino reported to the authors that, to the best of its knowledge, there is no known litigation that could potentially affect the Project.

 

Note: The authors of this report are not qualified to provide extensive commentary on legal or political issues associated with the Property, which are considered to be outside the scope of this report. For the portions of this report (Sections 1.2, 4.2 and 4.3) that deal with the types and numbers of mineral tenures and licenses; the nature and extent of title and interest in the Property and the terms of any royalties, back-in rights, payments or other agreements and encumbrances to which the Property is subject, we have relied upon the title opinion dated February 3, 2017 by Juan Manuel Gonzalez Olguin of the Mexican law firm Bufete Gonazalez Olguin, S.C., dated February 3, 2017 (a copy of which is appended to this report).

 

Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng. relied on PwC in Vancouver concerning tax matters relevant to this report. The reliance is based on a letter to Avino titled “Assistance with preparation of the income and mining tax portions of the economic analysis prepared by Tetra Tech Canada Inc. (“Tetra Tech) in connection with the Preliminary Economic Assesment (the “Report”) on Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.’s project (the “Project)” and dated May 10, 2017.

 

 

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4.0 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION AND LOCATION

 

 

4.1 LOCATION

 

The Property is located in Durango State in North Central Mexico, within the Sierra Madre Silver Belt on the eastern edge of the Sierra Madre Occidental mountain range. The nearest major centre is the city of Durango, 82 km to the southwest of the Property. The Property is within the municipality of Pánuco de Coronado between the towns of Pánuco de Coronado and San José de Avino. The Property is located at latitude N 24° 53’, longitude W 104° 31’, 14 km northwest of Highway 40D.

 

The Property location is situated as illustrated in Figure 4.1 and Figure 4.2.

 

Figure 4.1 General Location of the Property

 

 

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Figure 4.2 Local Property Location

 

4.2 PROPERTY OWNERSHIP

 

The current Property comprises 23 mineral concessions, totalling 1,103.934 ha.

 

In 1968, Avino Mines and Resources Ltd. acquired a 49% interest in the company CMMA and Minera San José de Avino SA, which together held mineral claims totalling 2,626 ha (6,488 ac). Avino Mines and Resources Ltd. retained Vancouver based Cannon-Hicks & Associates Ltd. (Cannon-Hicks), a mining consulting firm, to conduct the exploration and development of the Property. Cannon-Hicks’s exploration activities included surface and underground sampling and diamond drilling (VSE 1979).

 

On July 17, 2006, the Company completed the acquisition of Compañía Minera Mexicana de Avino, S.A. de C.V. (Avino Mexico), a Mexican corporation, through the acquisition of an additional 39.25% interest in Avino Mexico which combined with the Company’s pre-existing 49% share of Avino Mexico, brought the Company’s ownership interest in Avino Mexico to 88.25%. The additional 39.25% interest in Avino Mexico was obtained through the acquisition of 79.09% of the common shares of Promotora Avino S.A. de C.V., referred to as “Promotora”, which in turn owns 49.75% of Avino Mexico’s common shares, and the direct acquisition of 1% of the common shares of Avino Mexico.

 

 

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The July 17, 2006 acquisition was accomplished by a share exchange by which the Company issued 3,164,702 shares as consideration, which we refer to as the “Payment Shares”, for the purchase of the additional 39.25% interest in Avino Mexico. The Payment Shares were valued based on the July 17, 2006 closing market price of the Company’s shares on the TSX-V.

 

The Company acquired a further 1.1% interest in Avino Mexico through the acquisition from an estate subject to approval and transfer of the shares to the Company by the trustee for the estate. On December 21, 2007 approval was received and the Company obtained the 1.1% interest from the estate for no additional consideration.

 

On February 16, 2009, the Company converted existing loans advanced to Avino Mexico into new additional shares of Avino Mexico. As a result, the Company’s ownership interest in Avino Mexico increased to 99.28%.

 

On June 4, 2013, the Company converted existing loans advanced to Avino Mexico into new additional shares of Avino Mexico, resulting in the Company’s ownership increasing by 0.38% to an effective 99.67%. The issuance of shares to the Company by Avino Mexico on June 4, 2013 resulted in a reduction in the non-controlling interest from 0.72% to 0.34%.

 

On August 26, 2015, the Company converted existing loans advanced to Avino Mexico into new additional shares, resulting in an increase of the Company’s ownership by 0.01% to an effective 99.67%. The intercompany loans and investments are eliminated upon consolidation of the financial statements. The Company had a pre-existing effective ownership interest of 99.66% in Avino Mexico prior to the 0.01% increase. The issuance of shares to the Company by Avino Mexico on August 26, 2015, resulted in a reduction in the non-controlling interest from 0.34% to 0.33%.

 

4.3 MINERAL CONCESSIONS AND AGREEMENTS

 

The current Property comprises 23 mineral concessions, totalling 1,103.934 ha (Figure 4.3). Of these, 22 mineral concessions totalling 1,005.104 ha, are held by CMMA (Avino’s Mexican subsidiary company), Promotora Avino SA de CV, and Susesion de la Sra. Elena del Hoyo Algara de Ysita. Ownership proportions and mineral concessions are summarized in Table 4.1 and Table 4.2, respectively.

 

Table 4.1 Summary of Property Ownership

Company

Relationship to Avino

Silver and Gold

Mines Ltd.

Effective Ownership

of Avino Mine Property (%)

CMMA

Subsidiary

98.45

Promotora Avino, S.A. de C.V.

Subsidiary

1.22

Total Effective Ownership of Avino Mine Property

-

99.67

Estate of Ysita

Non-controlling interest

0.33

Total

-

100.00

 

 

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Table 4.2 Mineral Concessions - Avino Property

Concession Name

Concession No.

Location

Hectares

(ha)

Date

Acquired

Expiration

Date

Cost

(US$/ha)

Payment

(US$)

Agrupamiento San Jose (Purisma Chica)

155597

Pánuco

136.708

30/09/1971

29/09/2021

124.74

17,052.91

Agrupamiento (San Jose)

164985

Pánuco

8.000

13/08/1979

12/8/2029

124.74

997.92

Agrupamiento San Jose (El Trompo)

184397

Pánuco

81.547

13/10/1989

12/10/2039

124.74

10,172.12

Agrupamiento San Jose (Gran Lucero)

189477

Pánuco

161.468

5/12/1990

4/12/2040

124.74

20,141.57

Agrupamiento San Jose (San Carlos)

117411

Pánuco

4.451

5/2/1961

16/12/2061

124.74

555.16

Agrupamiento San Jose (San Pedro Y San Pablo)

139615

Pánuco

12.000

22/06/1959

21/06/2061

124.74

1,496.88

Aguila Mexicana

215733

Pánuco

36.768

12/3/2004

29/06/2044

70.88

2,606.12

Ampliacion La Malinche

204177

Pánuco

6.010

18/12/1996

17/12/2046

124.74

749.72

Ampliacion San Gonzalo

191837

Pánuco

5.850

19/12/1991

18/12/2041

124.74

729.67

Avino Grande Ix

216005

Pánuco

19.558

2/4/2002

1/4/2052

70.88

1,386.24

Avino Grande Viii

215224

Pánuco

22.882

14/02/2002

13/02/2052

70.88

1,621.85

El Caracol

215732

Pánuco

102.382

12/3/2002

28/04/2044

70.88

7,256.84

El Potrerito

185328

Pánuco

9.000

14/12/1989

13/12/2039

124.74

1,122.66

Fernando

205401

Pánuco

72.129

29/08/1997

28/08/2047

124.74

8,997.33

La Estela

179658

Pánuco

14.000

11/12/1986

12/12/2036

124.74

1,746.36

La Malinche

203256

Pánuco

9.000

28/06/1996

27/06/2046

124.74

1,122.66

Los Angeles

154410

Pánuco

23.713

25/03/1971

24/03/2021

124.74

2,957.96

Negro Jose

218252

Pánuco

58.000

17/10/2002

16/10/2052

70.88

4,111.04

San Gonzalo

190748

Pánuco

12.000

29/04/1991

28/04/2041

124.74

1,496.88

San Martin De Porres

222909

Pánuco

30.000

15/09/2004

14/09/2054

70.88

2,126.40

Santa Ana

195678

Pánuco

136.182

14/09/1992

13/09/2042

124.74

16,987.38

Yolanda

191083

Pánuco

43.458

29/04/1991

28/04/2041

124.74

5,420.91

Total

-

-

1005.106

-

-

110.29

110,856.58

 

 

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Figure 4.3 Map of Avino Property Concessions

 

Source: after Tetra Tech (2013)

 

In May 1970, Avino Mines and Resources Ltd. signed a formal agreement with Selco Mining and Development (Selco), a division of Selection Trust Company. Due to other commitments, Selco abandoned its interest in the Project in 1973 (VSE 1979). On February 18, 2012, through its subsidiary company CMMA, Avino re-entered into an agreement (the Agreement) with Minerales, whereby Minerales has indirectly granted to Avino the exclusive mining and occupation rights to the La Platosa concession. The La Platosa concession covers 98.83 ha and hosts the Avino Vein and ET Zone.

 

Pursuant to the Agreement, Avino has the exclusive right to explore and mine the concession for an initial period of 15 years, with the option to extend the agreement for another 5 years. In consideration of the grant of these rights, Avino has paid to Minerales the sum of US$250,000, by the issuance of 135,189 common shares of Avino. Avino will have a period of 24 months for the development of mining facilities.

 

 

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Avino has agreed to pay to Minerales a royalty equal to 3.5% of NSRs, at the commencement of commercial production from the concession. In addition, after the development period, if the minimum monthly processing rate of the mine facilities is less than 15,000 t, then Avino must pay to Minerales in any event a minimum royalty equal to the applicable NSR royalty based on processing at a minimum monthly rate of 15,000 t. In the event of a force majeure, Avino shall pay the minimum royalty as follows:

 

 

· first quarter: payment of 100% of the minimum royalty

 

 

 

 

· second quarter: payment of 75% of the minimum royalty

 

 

 

 

· third quarter: payment of 50% of the minimum royalty

 

 

 

 

· fourth quarter: payment of 25% of the minimum royalty

 

 

 

 

· in the case of force majeure still in place after one-year of payments, payment shall recommence at a rate of 100% of the minimum royalty and shall continue being made as per the quarterly schedule.

 

Minerales has also granted to Avino the exclusive right to purchase a 100% interest in the concession at any time during the term of the Agreement (or any renewal thereof), upon payment of US$8 million within 15 days of Avino’s notice of election to acquire the Property. The purchase would be completed under a separate purchase agreement for the legal transfer of the concession. This agreement replaces all other previous agreements.

 

During the month of May of each year, Avino must file assessment work made on each concession for the immediately preceding calendar year. During the months of January and July of each year, Avino must pay in advance the mining taxes which are based on the surface of the concession and the number of years that have elapsed since it was issued.

 

Consistent with the mining regulations of Mexico, cadastral surveys have been carried out for all the listed mineral concessions as part of the field staking prior to recording (Slim 2005d). It is believed that all concessions are current and up to date. Mineral concessions in Mexico do not include surface rights. Avino has entered into agreements with communal land owners (Ejidos) of San José de Avino, for the temporary occupation and surface rights of the concessions.

 

A current title opinion dated February 3, 2017, has been prepared by Juan Manuel González Olguin of the Mexican law firm Bufete González Olguin S.C. (a copy of which is appended to this report [Appendix A]).

 

 

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5.0 ACCESSIBILITY, CLIMATE, LOCAL RESOURCES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND PHYSIOGRAPHY

 

 

5.1 TOPOGRAPHY, ELEVATION AND VEGETATION

 

The average elevation of the Property is approximately 2,200 masl. Local relief is estimated to be roughly 100 m ranging from the bottom bench of the tailings to the top of the open pit.

 

Vegetation is sparse and consists of shrubs and grasses typical of the high desert.

 

5.2 ACCESSIBILITY AND LOCAL RESOURCES

 

The Property is easily accessible by road and the mine is an important employer of the local community from which skilled workers are available. Access is provided by Highway 40, a four-lane highway leading from Durango, past the airport and on to the city of Torreon in Coahuila. Successive turn-offs for the Property are at Francisco I Madero, Ignacio Zaragoza, and San José de Avino (Slim 2005d). The Avino mineral concessions are covered by a network of dirt roads, which provide easy transport access between all areas of interest on the Property and the mill at the main Avino Mine (Gunning 2009).

 

The nearest major city is Durango, with a population of approximately 465,000. Durango is a major mining centre in Mexico where experienced labour and services can be obtained. The two towns nearest the mine are Pánuco de Coronado and San José de Avino, where the majority of the employees lived while working at the mine when it was in operation. Pánuco de Coronado has a population of approximately 12,000, and San José de Avino is a small centre with a population of less than 1,000.

 

5.3 CLIMATE AND LENGTH OF OPERATING SEASON

 

The climate is temperate and semi-arid. In the region, the mean annual rainfall is 580.6 mm and the average annual temperature is 16.9°C. July and January average temperatures are 21.8°C and 11.3°C, respectively (www.worldclimate.com - Durango). The majority of the rainfall occurs between June and September. In the winter months, the temperature can drop below freezing and frost and even light snowfall can occur.

 

Exploration, development, and mining activities may take place throughout the year without any significant seasonal impact.

 

 

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5.4 INFRASTRUCTURE

 

Infrastructure is disclosed in Section 18.0.

 

 

 

 


 

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6.0 HISTORY

 

 

6.1 AVINO MINE, 1555-1968

 

The Avino deposit was originally discovered around 1555 by the Spanish conquistador, Don Francisco de Ibarra. In 1562, Francisco de Ibarra, was appointed governor of the newly formed province of Nueva Vizcaya, in the Viceroyalty of Nueva España (New Spain) and, in 1563, founded the town of Durango. Francisco de Ibarra led several expeditions in search of silver deposits in the region and is recognized as having established Minas de Avino, present day Avino Mine; San Martín, Durango; and Pánuco, Sinaloa. Mining operations at the Avino Mine are said to have commenced in 1562-1563 and have been in production until the early 1900s. Operations at the Avino Mine continued up to the onset of the War of Independence (1810) when operations were interrupted but then restarted and continued through to the early 1900s.

 

In 1880, the mines were taken over by Avino Mines Ltd., a company controlled by American and British interests. The introduction of more modern industrial technology helped the Avino Mine develop into a significant mining operation at the beginning of the 20 th century. By 1908, the Avino Mine was considered one of the largest open pit mines in the world and equipped with one of the largest lixification smelters (Gallegos 1960; VSE 1979; Slim 2005d).

 

During the early phases of the Mexican Revolution in 1910, proceeds from the mine supplied funds to the revolutionary forces. Since much of the fighting occurred in and around Durango and the risk posed by brigands hiding in the mountains was high, the mine was abandoned in 1912.

 

Between 1912 and 1968, the mine was worked intermittently on a small scale (Avino Annual Report 1980). There is no documentary record of production from the Avino Mine during this period.

 

The Property was acquired under current ownership in 1968.

 

6.1.1 AVINO VEIN SYSTEM DEPOSIT

 

The Avino Vein System was the mainstay of historic exploitation and is situated adjacent to the mine offices and processing plant. The upper portion of the deposit was extensively mined in an open pit and the lower portion is currently accessible via a ramp and has been extensively developed and mined from more than 6 km of horizontal drifts, with vertical spacings between 15 and 25 m. The Avino workings extend to a maximum depth of 360 m vertically below the portal of the Avino ramp. An old vertical shaft, no longer used for hoisting, is used for ventilation and to supply water and power for development and mining. A vertical section of Avino Mine is shown in Figure 6.1.

 


 

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Figure 6.1 Avino Mine: Vertical Section View Showing Development and Stoping

 

 

6.2 SAN GONZALO VEIN DEPOSIT

 

Shallow workings from an old mine are present in the San Gonzalo Vein, and consist of small underground workings which were originally accessed by a five-level vertical shaft.

 

Current access to the San Gonzalo Deposit is via a ramp that is being actively developed. All old working levels have been dewatered. The deposit has been explored and exploited by more than 4 km of horizontal drifts with upper levels at 40 m vertical spacing and lower levels at 25 m vertical spacing. A vertical section of the San Gonzalo Mine is shown in Figure 6.2.

 

 

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Figure 6.2 San Gonzalo Mine: Vertical Section View Showing Development and Stoping

 

 

 

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7.0 GEOLOGICAL SETTING AND MINERALIZATION

 

 

7.1 REGIONAL GEOLOGY

 

The Property is located within the Sierra de Gamon, on the east flank of the Sierra Madre Occidental. The area is a geological window into the Lower Volcanic series and consists mainly of volcanic flows, sills, and tuffaceous layers of andesite, rhyolite, and trachyte. Individual rock units typically vary from 300 to 800 m in thickness. Andesitic rocks outcrop over most of the region with other rock types occurring more sparsely to the north (Slim 2005d).

 

A large monzonitic intrusion is observed in the region in the form of dykes and small stocks, which appear to be linked to the onset of the Avino Vein mineralization. Other post-mineralization dykes of intermediate to felsic composition crop out in various areas and appear to cause minor structural displacements. Occurrences of thin mafic sills are also found in various parts of the region and are believed to be related to recent volcanism.

 

Higher areas of the Sierra Madre Occidental surrounding the mine are composed of rhyolites and ignimbrites of the Upper Volcanic Series, with thicknesses approaching 1,500 m.

 

The Laramide orogenic event is believed to have affected the Avino district. Later extrusive and intrusive igneous events appear to have caused the formation of various systems of pre-mineralization faulting. These fault systems usually produced normal displacement of the pre-existing rocks, and generally strike northwest-southeast (subparallel to the Avino Vein System). Additional normal fault systems are also observed in the region, striking northeast-southwest and dipping towards the south (subparallel to the San Gonzalo Vein System).

 

The rugged topography is a result of erosion of the post-mineralization faulted blocks. One of the most significant regional features of the district is the Avino Fault which strikes northwest 20° southeast, dips southeast and which appears to terminate the Avino Vein mineralization, juxtaposing the Upper and Lower Volcanic series (Figure 7.1).

 

 

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Figure 7.1 General Map of Property Geology

 

7.2 PROPERTY GEOLOGY AND MINERALIZATION

 

The Avino concession is located within a 12 km (north-south) by 8.5 km (east-west) caldera. The Property contains numerous low-sulphidation epithermal veins, breccias, stockwork, and silicified zones that grade into a “near porphyry” environment, particularly in the Avino Mine area. The caldera has been uplifted by regional north-trending block faulting (a graben structure), exposing a window of andesitic pyroclastic rocks of the lower volcanic sequence within the caldera. The Lower Volcanic Sequence is overlain by the Upper Volcanic Sequence, consisting of rhyolite to trachyte flows and extensive ignimbrites and intruded by monzonite bodies.

 

The basal andesite-bearing conglomerate and underlying Paleozoic basement sedimentary rocks (consisting of shales, sandstones and conglomerates) have been identified on the Avino concession in the south-central portion of the caldera, covering the Guadalupe, Santiago, San Jorge, the San Gonzalo Trend, Malinche, Porterito and Yolanda areas. A northerly trending felsic dyke, possibly a feeder to the upper volcanic sequence, transects the Property and many of the veins. The Aguila Mexicana low temperature vein system, trends north-northwest at a similar orientation to the felsic dyke and with similar continuity across the Property. The two structures have been interpreted to occur along deep crustal faults that controlled volcanism and mineralization, with the felsic dyke structure controlling the emplacement of the Avino, Nuestra Senora and El Fuerte-Potosina volcanic centres and the Aguila Mexicana structure controlling the Cerro San Jose and El Fuerte-Potosina volcanic centres (Paulter 2006).

 

 

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Silver- and gold-bearing veins cross-cut the various lithologies and are generally oriented north northwest-south southeast and northwest-southeast (Figure 7.1). The rocks have been weathered and leached in the upper sections, as a result of contact with atmospheric waters; the oxide tailings material (Section 7.2.3) is primarily from this source, whereas the sulphide tailings are predominantly from material sourced at depth, below the leached zone. In Mexico, these types of deposits can have large lateral extents, but can be limited in the vertical continuity of grades.

 

In the oxide zone, mineralization is primarily hosted by the minerals argentite, bromargyrite, chalcopyrite, chalcocite, galena, sphalerite, bornite, native silver, gold, and native copper. Other minerals present in mineralized areas, but not hosting the metals of interest, include hematite, chlorite, quartz, barite, pyrite, arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite. Malachite, anglesite and limonite are common in the quartz zones of the weathered parts of the oxide material.

 

7.2.1 AVINO VEIN

 

Geology and mineralization of the Avino Vein are summarized from Slim (2005d).

 

The Avino Vein is 1.6 km long and 60 m wide on the surface. The Avino Vein is the most striking and important example of the epithermal mineralization of the district whose structures are normally weathered and leached in their upper section as a result of contact with atmospheric waters producing a band of oxide minerals and zones of supergene enrichment to a depth of about 70 m.

 

In the oxide portion of the Avino Vein, the common minerals encountered include hematite, limonite, anglesite and copper carbonate in white or green, somewhat chloritized, quartz zones. The common primary and secondary minerals encountered are argentite, bromargyrite, chalcopyrite, chalcocite, galena sphalerite, bornite, native silver, free gold, and native copper. Other minerals present in mineralized areas include quartz, pyrite, chlorite, barite, arsenopyrite, pyrrhotite and specularite.

 

Higher silver values are reported to decrease overall with depth, except at vein intersections and vein inflections, where higher values persist to depth. The same can be said for gold, although the higher values start just below the onset of silver mineralization, at or near the surface. In contrast, higher copper values coincide with vein intersections and may increase with depth. Sporadic, localized copper enrichment occurs toward the footwall contact and may represent a different phase of fluid emplacement. Despite the overall decrease in precious metal grade with depth, local increases in metal grades are apparent in the mine sampling and exploration drilling, possible reflecting changes in boiling level with pressure variations in the epithermal system.

 

The Avino Vein has been followed longitudinally for more than 1,300 m and vertically for more than 600 m. It strikes north 66° east with an east-west splay, and dips to the south and southeast at 60° to 70°. Steeply dipping, high grade zones within the vein and stock-work zones are frequently found in the upper part of the vein, as well as at its intersections with a number of lateral veins. An example of a higher-grade area of mineralization encountered with major lateral vein intersecting the Avino was the El Hundido, which exceeded 40 m in thickness. In the lower areas of the vein and mine, mineralized cross-veins, branch-veins, and stockwork zones have been found in the footwall at San Luis and at El Hundido, and are assumed to persist with depth.

 

 

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The hanging wall of the Avino Vein is andesite, while the footwall is a monzonite intrusive with andesite sections. A post-mineralization fault parallel with the vein occurs in the hanging wall at a distance of several metres in the area of San Luis, while in the central part of El Hundido, this fault is located at the contact with the vein over a distance of about 300 m, up to the area of Santa Elena and San Antonio. From that point, and proceeding toward the El Chirumbo Mine, this fault cuts the vein between the face at San Carlos and the exposure at the underground ramp. The fault then enters the footwall where it remains until a point about 30 m east of the west face of the Chirumbo area, producing a downward displacement of the vein of between 50 to 100 m.

 

At Chirumbo, the fault largely replaces the vein due to strong leaching by post-mineralization circulating of water in the gouge. On the east face at Chirumbo, the fault again enters the hanging wall; in this zone the vein is composed of branches and stockwork and to the east of this point the fault crosses the vein numerous times.

 

The deposit is epithermal and made up of veins and dependent stockwork structures, mainly in the hanging wall and often associated with vein intersections. Four vein systems have been described which, in decreasing order of importance, are:

 

 

· system striking east-west, dipping south at 60° to 70°, including the Avino Vein and its possible extension in the Cerro de San Jose

 

 

 

 

· system striking north 60° to 70° west, dipping 60° to 80° southwest, comprising the following important veins: El Trompo, San Juventino, San Jorge, Platosa, Los Reyes, Potosina, El Fuerte, and Conejo

 

 

 

 

· system striking north 20° to 30° west, dipping between 60° to 80° to either the southwest or northeast, comprising the following significant veins: San Gonzalo, Aguila Mexicana, and La Calcita, as well as the Stockwork La Potosina, and the Stockwork El Fuerte

 

 

 

 

· systems striking north 60° to 80° east, dipping 60° to 80° southeast, comprising the following veins: Santiago, Retana, Nuestra Senora, and San Pedro and San Pablo.

 

Alteration has been reported in three main types:

 

 

· Propylitic alteration is most common in andesite, giving the andesite a greenish tint.

 

 

 

 

· Argillaceous alteration appears mainly in the upper parts of the veins and manifests itself as a whitening of the country rock due to alunite and montmorillonite clays.

 

 

 

 

· Silicification, chloritization, and pyritization alteration is observed in the hanging wall and footwall, and is more prominent closer to the vein.

 

 

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7.2.2 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

The San Gonzalo Vein is located approximately 1.4 km northeast of the eastern modelled extent of the Avino Vein. The San Gonzalo Vein system constitutes a strongly developed vein system over 25 m wide, trending 300° to 325°/80° northeast to 77° south. It is characterized by banded textures and open-space filling. The main vein has an average width of 2 m, but the silica-pyrite or iron oxide-sericite alteration with additional stock working extends across 300 m, south of the main San Gonzalo Vein to the Los Angeles Vein.

 

The San Gonzalo is a typical narrow vein precious metal deposit with some erratic values and extends approximately 2 km to the northwest to the Santa Ana-Malinche area (Gunning 2009).

 

The Cerro San Jose-La Estella-San Gonzalo Cerro San Jose represents a distinct hydrothermal centre with similar characteristics to the Avino system which include the following (Paulter 2006):

 

 

· occur on a topographic high

 

 

 

 

· strong to intense silicification and brecciation

 

 

 

 

· easterly trending stockwork system similar to the trend of the Avino Vein

 

 

 

 

· similar temperatures of formation to Avino

 

 

 

 

· presence of an intersecting northwesterly trending vein system (la Estella at San Jose and San Juventino at Avino)

 

 

 

 

· emplacement along a northerly trending, deep crustal fault zone (defined by the Aguila Mexicana Vein at Cerro San Jose and the felsic dyke at Avino).

 

7.2.3 OXIDE AND SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

The Avino tailings dam is located approximately 500 m west-southwest of the main shaft to the old underground workings and 2.5 km southwest of the San Gonzalo Vein. An orthogonal view of the oxide tailings deposit, looking northwards and with the drillholes indicated, is shown in Figure 7.2.

 

 

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Figure 7.2 Orthogonal View of the Oxide Tailings Deposit and Drillholes

 

 

Within the tailings dam, there are three distinct benches:

 

 

· lower oxide bench

 

 

 

 

· middle oxide bench

 

 

 

 

· upper bench or sulphide bench.

 

Due to the historical processing sequence, the oxide tailings are primarily derived from weathered and oxidized rocks close to the surface on the Property, whereas the sulphide tailings are predominantly derived from material sourced at depth from the underground workings, below the weathered/leached zone.

 

The oxide tailings (both the middle and lower benches) have been analyzed in greater details than the sulphide tailings, and are included in the current mineral resource for the oxide tailings. The sulphide tailings, in the absence of any definitive sampling data penetrating the depth of the pile, are an exploration target (Section 14.15).

 

 

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8.0 DEPOSIT TYPES

 

 

Regionally, the Property is situated within a 12 km by 8.5 km caldera that hosts numerous low- to intermediate-sulphidation silver-gold epithermal veins, breccias, stockwork and silicified zones, grading into a “near porphyry” environment in the Avino Mine area.

 

The historic mining on the Property was on the Avino Vein, a silver-gold-copper rich epithermal vein. The San Gonzalo Vein, however, has a much lower copper content than the Avino Vein and is more equivalent to other silver-lead-zinc deposits of the Sierra Madres.

 

Low-sulphidation vein systems are commonly characterized by low concentrations of sulphide minerals, alteration mineralogy dominated by quartz-adularia-sericite, and a lack of extensive wall-rock alteration. Conversely, high-sulphidation vein systems are commonly characterized by sulphur saturation leading to the presence of native sulphur and sulphide minerals, quartz-alunite alteration, and extensive wall-rock alteration. The Mexican silver deposits are usually within the intermediate sulphidation range, rather than either of the end member classifications.

 

In Mexico, and particularly within the Mexican Silver Belt, these types of deposits can have large lateral extents, but may be limited vertically. There are many silver-gold mines in Mexico, some of which form large mining districts, and others that exploit multiple veins over limited vertical horizons that are sometimes only 100 m in depth (Gunning 2009).

 

On the Property, the oxide tailings have been predominantly sourced from earlier open pit operations and the sulphide tailings have been predominantly sourced from later underground workings.

 

 

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9.0 EXPLORATION

 

 

9.1 EARLY EXPLORATION (PRIOR TO MINE CLOSURE), 1968 TO 2001

 

Exploration on the Property has been ongoing since before production commenced, and the majority of the recorded work has been focused on the main Avino Vein and surrounding area. The following is a summary of significant exploration work conducted either by Avino, or on behalf of Avino, until the mine closed in 2001.

 

Pre-production exploration was carried out by CMMA and others, and covered 2,500 m of drifting and cross-cuts, as well as 8,000 m of surface and underground diamond drilling. Extensive rehabilitation was completed involving Selco, including connecting three of the old-possibly pre-1900-underground mine workings.

 

In 1970, a contract was signed with Selco, who spent more than US$1 million in exploration and feasibility studies before returning the Property back to CMMA in 1972, reportedly because of low metal prices. The majority of the documentation examined covered feasibility work and was related to investigations of old underground workings that were likely developed in the late 1800s. A contract was signed in October 1973 with S.G.L. Ltd. and Sheridan Geophysics Ltd., under which a new 500 t/d plant was completed in May 1974.

 

Since 1992 exploration in/for the mine has been limited to traditional underground mine development with associated sampling and planning for production feed. In the late 1990s it appears that development was not kept up as company monthly reports showed decreasing historical reserve allocations for production and mill feed.

 

The only recorded property exploration, apart from limited prospecting, is documented in the 1993 report by Servicios Administratos Luismin, SA de CV, the engineering branch of Cía Minera de San Luis Exploration. The study reported on detailed analysis and sampling of the then known showings on the Property with the emphasis on the Avino Vein and Potosina/El Fuerte area. The extensive underground sampling program carried out by Luismin provided later direction for underground mining. The report made recommendations for follow-up for drilling and underground development for the main Avino Vein, as well as trenching and drilling recommendations for the Potosina/El Fuerte area. It is believed that these recommendations were never implemented for the prospective areas. Additionally, the report included a property-scale geological mapping and lithogeochemical sampling program which was contoured and coloured for gold, silver, copper, lead, zinc, arsenic, antimony and mercury.

 

Other notable observations from the study include the following:

 

 

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·

All mineralization, with the exception of the Nuestra Senora and Potosina/El Fuerte area radiate outwards in a west to north-west direction from the Cerro San Jose. The Cerro San Jose is a silicified and partly hornfelsed body of volcanic rock probably overlying an intrusive stock, which could have been the source of most mineralization on the Property.

 

 

 

 

·

Mineralization in all radiating structures is described as being strongest 2 to 3 km from Cerro San Jose. This resembles many of the gold deposits in Nevada where the source of mineralization is a near surface acid-intrusive but with mineralized bodies lying 1 to 5 km away along high angle faults.

 

 

 

 

·

The two strongest and widest structures appear to be the Avino and Aguila Mexicana veins.

 

 

 

 

·

The Avino Vein has three main mineralized zones-San Luis, Elena Tolosa (La Gloria/Hundido) and Chirumbo areas-which rake to the west and are open at depth. While silver values decrease with depth, gold appears to increase.

 

 

 

 

·

The existence of other mineralization cutting the Cerro San Jose mineralization in the Nuestra Senora and Potosina/El Fuerta areas could offer the potential for bulk mineable stockwork zones.

 

Assay values from outcrop sampling of surface-mapped veins towards the San Jose hill ranged from lows of 2 g/t silver and trace gold over true thicknesses from 0.1 to 2.3 m up to a high of 755 g/t silver with a corresponding 1.5 g/t gold over a thickness of 0.45 m.

 

No systematic sampling, trenching or drilling of either the outcrops or the veins is known to have occurred during the program undertaken in 1993.

 

9.2 RECENT EXPLORATION, 2001 TO PRESENT

 

Since mine closure in 2001, Avino has intermittently conducted exploration work on the Property, with the intention of expanding and better defining known areas of mineralization. Historic near-to-surface mining activities are being relied upon for guidance, and modern techniques are being employed to integrate, manage and interpret results. Included in the list of exploration activities is an induced polarization (IP) geophysical survey, 1,500 soil samples, satellite imagery, mapping, trenching, tailings investigations, bulk sampling, and underground channel sampling.

 

9.2.1 TAILINGS INVESTIGATIONS (OXIDES), 2003 AND 2004

 

Two specific mineralogical assessments were conducted in 2003 and 2004 on samples from the tailings on the Property. The purpose of the program was to provide data for independent investigation of the 1990 drilling results on the oxide tailings (discussed in Section 10.0) in terms of verifying assay grades and volumes, as well to examine the metallurgical characteristics of the material. The results and implications of these findings are discussed further in Section 13.0.

 

 

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The following information regarding the 2004 sampling is summarized from Slim (2005d).

 

The 2004 tailings field-work was under the direction of MineStart and excavation of the sample pits was under contract to Desarrollos Rod Construcciones of Durango. Given the hydraulic deposition of the tailings, four important factors required examination: anomaly characteristics of the samples and total population, assay comparison by fence, examination of downstream decrease in assays and factors arising from the downstream construction.

 

Comparison of the 2004 assays with those from 1990 show consistency in assay values and provide confidence in the 1990 sampling and assaying program.

 

The preliminary investigations in 2003 showed the need for a sampling of the oxide tailings to validate the assay results of the 1990 drilling and to carry out metallurgical characterization, the latter requiring large samples. In deciding on test pitting, the costs, timing and sample size were important. Backhoes were available locally and could be mobilized within a few days whereas drills would have to be brought in from up to 500 km away, for minimum contracts in excess of the project needs and with limited immediate availability. Backhoe sampling was chosen.

 

The sampling exercise carried out in 2004, using shallow (4 m deep) backhoe trenches and hand-dug pits, represented a local corroboration of the previous sampling but could not be considered to constitute a representative random sampling of the oxide tailings for the following reasons:

 

 

·

The positions of the sampling pits and trenches were sketched on previous maps but were not surveyed, unlike the drillhole collars from the 1990 campaign.

 

 

 

 

·

Full sections through the tailings were not obtained and access was limited to the eastern portion of the oxide tailings; thus the sampling is vertically and laterally biased to represent only the topmost 4 m of the easternmost oxide tailings.

 

The trench sampling material (Z-series) from the 1993 campaign was also considered to be non-representative as:

 

 

·

Samples were taken in the surficial zone in the vicinity of the middle bench wall of the tailings heap, where cycloning of the material to aid the construction of the wall will have produced significantly coarser material than in the rest of the tailings deposit.

 

 

 

 

·

These trench samplings also do not cover the full thickness of the upper (second) phase of the oxide tailings, so they cannot be considered fully representative of material, even on a local scale.

 

Consequently, it was decided to use only the drillhole assay data (excluding the Z-series trenches, (Section 10.1.2) from the 1990 campaign for the oxide tailings resource estimate (Section 14.2), as it represents unbiased vertical profiles through the entire oxide tailings and has positional control. Recent drilling of the oxide tailings (2014-2016), has provided samples which show statistical and spatial grade patterns similar to the 1990, which provide comfort that the 1990 is fit to be used for estimation.

 

 

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9.2.2 TAILINGS SAMPLING (SULPHIDES), 2005

 

Some sampling was carried out in 2005 by means of hand-dug pits on the “upper bench” of sulphide tailings. The silver and gold values generally ranged from 40.0 to 100.0 g/t and 0.3 to 0.6 g/t, respectively. While these values give a general idea of the potential grade of the sulphide tailings, they have not been verified to be representative of the sulphide tailings, even at a local scale.

 

9.2.3 BULK SAMPLE PROGRAM OF SAN GONZALO VEIN, 2011

 

Avino completed a 10,000 t bulk sample program at the San Gonzalo deposit following a comprehensive review of the data and discussions with Tetra Tech. The bulk sample feed grade was 261 g/t silver and 0.9 g/t gold. Silver and gold recoveries were stated to be 76% and 59%, respectively, and 232 dry tonnes of flotation concentrate were produced.

 

Table 9.1 Underground Channel Sampling by Level for the Avino and San Gonzalo Underground Mines, since 2013

 

Level

Hanging

Wall

Elevation

(m)

Number

of

Channels

Total

Sampled

(m)

Avg.

Channel

Length

(m)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Pb

(%)

Zn

(%)

Avino Vein

9

2115.3

63

301.5

4.8

50.2

0.39

0.63

0.07

0.11

11.5

2037.2

160

1245.5

7.8

35.9

0.35

0.57

0.05

0.10

12

2019.5

294

1814.1

6.2

59.4

0.33

0.62

0.06

0.11

12.5

1997.3

197

1957.4

9.9

51.1

0.19

0.61

0.08

0.10

14

1976.5

152

1244.6

8.2

65.6

0.18

0.68

0.10

0.12

14.5

1954.6

146

1555.1

10.7

68.8

0.26

0.72

0.10

0.15

15

1934.5

97

1059.6

10.9

79.0

0.30

0.70

0.11

0.12

San Gonzalo Vein

2

2264

84

233.4

2.8

42.8

0.18

0.03

0.14

0.22

3

2218

137

361.4

2.6

117.8

0.37

0.03

0.14

0.25

4

2178

359

997.8

2.8

229.8

0.97

0.04

0.28

0.36

5

2138

304

819.7

2.7

271.9

1.87

0.09

0.60

0.93

6

2091

447

1333.7

3.0

255.7

1.64

0.09

0.46

0.63

6.5

2045

403

1140.0

2.8

157.2

1.18

0.09

0.44

0.41

7

2025

136

405.6

3.0

67.5

0.45

0.06

0.27

0.25

 

 

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9.2.4 UNDERGROUND CHANNEL SAMPLING OF SAN GONZALO AND ANGELICA VEINS, 2010-PRESENT

 

Underground channel sampling began in 2010 and has continued to the present. Channel sampling between 2010 and 2012 was summarized in Tetra Tech (2013). Results of underground sampling since 2013 are summarized in Table 9.1.

 

Figure 9.1 and Figure 9.2 show the location of all channels, colour coded by grade, included in the current resource estimate (Section 14.2), within and adjacent to the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein systems respectively.

 

Figure 9.1 Channel and Drillhole Samples, Colour Coded by Silver Grade, within the Avino System

 

 

Figure 9.2 Channel Samples, Colour Coded by Silver Grade, within the San Gonzalo Vein System

 

 

 

 

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10.0 DRILLING  

 

 

Drilling activities performed by Avino since acquisition of the Property are summarized in the following sections. Drillhole assay results have been previously reported (except ET-12-07 to ET-12-09; Appendix A) by Gunning (2009), Tetra Tech (2012) and Tetra tech (2013) and are not disclosed here.

 

10.1 EARLY DRILLING (PRIOR TO MINE CLOSURE), 1968 TO 2001

 

10.1.1 AVINO VEIN

 

Between 1968 and 2001, at least 25 diamond drillholes, ranging in length from 132.20 to 575.20 m, are reported to have been drilled from surface into the Avino Vein. Included in this total are 10 holes that were drilled by Selco in 1970 when they were re-habilitating some of the old underground workings to provide access for sampling (Slim 2005d). No further information on these drillholes was available to Aranz and they are not included in the resource estimate for the Avino Vein.

 

10.1.2 OXIDE TAILINGS, 1990 TO 1991

 

Between November 10 and December 5, 1990 and March 8 and May 30, 1991, Avino completed six trenches and 28 vertical drillholes in the tailings (Table 10.1) along 7 fences at a spacing of roughly 50 m by 50 m (Figure 10.1) (Benitez Sanchez 1991). Drilling was completed transversely to the drainage pattern of the tailings. Cut at 1 m vertical increments, 461 samples were assayed for silver and gold at the mine assay lab and occasional moisture contents were reported. Assay results from these drillholes have been previously reported (Tetra Tech 2012). Although the Z-series trenches are included in Table 10.1 and Figure 10.1, they are not included in the oxide tailings resource estimate (Section 14.3) as they are not considered representative of the tailings at a local scale (see Section 9.2.1). During 2015 and 2016 further drilling was carried out on the oxide tailings.

  

10.2 RECENT DRILLING (POST-MINE CLOSURE), 2001 TO PRESENT

 

A total of 37 drillholes have been completed on the Avino Vein system and 101 holes 21,253 m San Gonzalo Vein system, totalling almost 34,100 m. Additional exploration holes have been drilled elsewhere on the Property, but those drilling results are not considered material. Most holes were surveyed downhole using a Tropari single-shot magnetic instrument. Of those holes for which downhole surveys were completed, the majority contain three or fewer measurements, typically at the collar and near the end of hole, and sometimes part-way down the hole. Many holes were not surveyed to within 10 m of the end of the hole.

 

 

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

10.2.1 AVINO VEIN (INCLUDING ET ZONE) AND NEARBY VEINS

 

Since 2001, Avino has drilled 34 holes below Level 12, where mining ceased, for a total of 11,523.2 m of drilling. Drilling has targeted the ET Zone in particular. There were 5 holes completed in 2006 (2,166.85 m), 12 holes in 2007 (3,906.5 m), 8 holes in 2008 (2,186.7 m), and 9 holes in 2012 (3,263.15 m). No drilling has been completed on the Avino Vein since 2012. Collar coordinates for all drillholes included in the Avino Vein resource estimate (Section 14.1) are provided in Table 10.2. Assay results from all drillholes up to and including ET-12-06 have been previously reported (Tetra Tech 2012). Assay results from drillholes ET-12-07 to ET-12-09 are provided in Appendix A. A location map of Avino Vein drillholes is provided in Figure 10.2.

 

Tecmin Servicios, S.A. de C.V., was contracted for the 2007 and 2008 drilling programs at the ET Zone of the Avino Vein. Since the Avino deposit strikes approximately east-west and dips at 60 to 70° to the south, holes are generally oriented from south to north at various bearings and dip angles in order to intersect the structure at a target depth. Holes were drilled using Avino's Longyear 44 core rig at thin wall NQ diameter.

 

Figure 10.1 Drillholes Completed from 2006 to 2016 on the Avino Vein

 

 
 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

10-2

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

10.2.2 SAN GONZALO AND NEARBY VEINS

 

At San Gonzalo, Avino drilled 40 holes in 2007 (9,257 m), 6 in 2008 (1,783 m), and 18 in 2011 (3,619 m), 15 in 2014 (3,621 m), 24 in 2015 (3,413 m), 7 in 2016 (922 m), for a total of 110 drillholes and 22,614 m of drilling. All holes were of thin wall NQ size core diameter and were completed using Avino’s Longyear 44 core rig. Additional holes also explored the nearby Guadalupe, San Juventino, San Lucerno, Mercedes, San Jorge, and Yolanda veins.

 

According to Gunning (2009), the collars for 2007 and 2008 drillholes were marked by concrete monuments and the collars have been surveyed. More recent collars were seen during a site visit in June 2016.

 

A check of the coordinates with a handheld global positioning system (GPS) during a site visit in 2016 revealed a possible 4 m constant error, which may indicate the existence of a small surveying error on the Property.

 

Collar coordinates for drillholes on the San Gonzalo are provided in Table 10.1. Assay results from these drillholes have been previously reported (Gunning 2009; Tetra Tech 2012). A location map of drillholes on the San Gonzalo Vein is provided in Figure 10.2.

 

Figure 10.2 Location of Drillholes Completed from 2006 to 2016 on the San Gonzalo Vein

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 10.1 Drillholes Completed from 2007 to 2016 on the San Gonzalo Vein

 

Hole ID

Azimuth

(°)

Dip

(°)

Depth

(m)

Easting

(m)

Northing

(m)

Elevation

(m)

SG-07-01

43

-60

386.8

571,713

2,713,982

2,297

SG-07-02

38

-48

323.7

571,714

2,713,983

2,297

SG-07-03

74

-43

315.0

571,714

2,713,981

2,297

SG-07-04

53

-49

312.7

571,651

2,714,059

2,276

SG-07-05

59

-69

137.0

571,650

2,714,058

2,276

SG-07-06

55

-58

387.2

571,650

2,714,058

2,276

SG-07-07

44

-44

281.6

571,578

2,714,117

2,281

SG-07-08

43

-55

383.7

571,578

2,714,116

2,281

SG-07-09

38

-45

106.6

571,677

2,714,137

2,277

SG-07-10

53

-58

162.9

571,677

2,714,136

2,277

SG-07-11

15

-49

158.6

571,676

2,714,135

2,277

SG-07-12

89

-53

175.5

571,678

2,714,133

2,277

SG-07-13

55

-49

160.6

571,770

2,713,993

2,315

SG-07-14

54

-53

295.2

571,716

2,713,972

2,297

SG-07-15

218

-49

96.2

571,689

2,714,268

2,296

SG-07-16

219

-54

99.9

571,552

2,714,354

2,285

SG-07-17

252

-55

69.8

571,428

2,714,421

2,268

SG-07-18

218

-65

238.1

571,765

2,714,318

2,293

SG-07-19

257

-66

344.9

571,763

2,714,320

2,293

SG-07-20

215

-67

247.4

571,650

2,714,345

2,281

SG-07-21

38

-53

295.0

571,713

2,713,979

2,297

SG-07-22

218

-54

232.5

572,007

2,714,128

2,343

SG-07-23

216

-70

303.5

572,007

2,714,128

2,343

SG-07-24

217

-53

124.4

571,969

2,714,077

2,351

SG-07-25

216

-65

190.5

571,969

2,714,078

2,351

SG-07-26

216

-69

395.4

572,033

2,714,172

2,337

SG-07-27

218

-55

237.8

572,078

2,714,077

2,345

SG-07-28

218

-74

319.5

572,078

2,714,078

2,345

SG-07-29

221

-43

103.6

572,033

2,714,010

2,356

SG-07-30

221

-64

158.4

572,034

2,714,010

2,356

SG-07-31

218

-43

104.8

571,954

2,714,056

2,352

SG-07-32

223

-70

408.0

572,122

2,714,135

2,330

SG-07-33

211

-43

130.6

572,069

2,714,009

2,353

SG-07-34

210

-58

183.1

572,069

2,714,010

2,353

SG-07-35

211

-68

272.2

572,069

2,714,010

2,353

SG-07-36

215

-41

102.2

572,050

2,713,959

2,358

SG-07-37

219

-53

154.4

572,115

2,713,975

2,351

SG-07-38

221

-67

214.2

572,115

2,713,975

2,351

SG-07-39

220

-73

128.1

572,120

2,713,898

2,353

SG-07-40

220

-74

516.1

571,899

2,714,211

2,321

SG-08-01

35

-51

210.1

571,776

2,713,974

2,314

 table continues…

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

10-4

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 

 
 
 
 

 

 

 

Hole ID

 Azimuth

(°)

 Dip

(°)

 Depth

(m)

 Easting

(m)

 Northing

(m)

 Elevation

(m)

SG-08-02

215

-57

269.1

571,964

2,714,167

2,335

SG-08-03

215

-70

332.0

571,964

2,714,168

2,335

SG-08-04

215

-63

270.0

572,029

2,714,121

2,343

SG-08-05

35

-55

475.3

571,701

2,713,893

2,285

SG-08-06

48

-64

226.4

571,679

2,714,137

2,277

SG-11-01

215

-59

101.0

571,981

2,714,009

2,357

SG-11-02

215

-63

141.2

571,995

2,714,030

2,355

SG-11-03

215

-44

98.5

572,020

2,713,994

2,357

SG-11-04

212

-54

176.5

571,969

2,714,079

2,351

SG-11-05

40

-43

151.4

571,892

2,713,832

2,317

SG-11-06

189

-44

122.3

571,732

2,714,379

2,274

SG-11-07

30

-68

74.0

572,030

2,713,946

2,358

SG-11-08

37

-67

125.4

572,043

2,713,888

2,360

SG-11-09

181

-48

71.1

571,585

2,714,366

2,278

SG-11-10

201

-61

78.4

571,240

2,714,538

2,235

SG-11-11

201

-61

92.0

571,329

2,714,397

2,274

SG-11-12

218

-71

312.2

571,811

2,714,288

2,305

SG-11-13

218

-71

345.4

571,847

2,714,258

2,310

SG-11-14

209

-61

330.5

571,939

2,714,214

2,326

SG-11-15

211

-68

363.5

572,030

2,714,172

2,337

SG-11-16

209

-62

334.3

572,092

2,714,173

2,331

SG-11-17

210

-70

383.1

571,836

2,714,336

2,306

SG-11-18

218

-71

318.2

571,765

2,714,321

2,293

SG-14-01

287

-54

156.6

571,858

2,714,156

2,086

SG-14-02

258

-60

120.1

571,858

2,714,155

2,086

SG-14-03

160

-71

173.0

571,861

2,714,153

2,086

SG-14-04

199

-70

120.0

571,688

2,714,270

2,296

SG-14-05

219

-70

346.8

572,157

2,714,044

2,330

SG-14-06

207

-79

411.0

572,158

2,714,044

2,331

SG-14-07

210

-27

248.3

572,284

2,714,059

2,297

SG-14-08

209

-58

336.0

572,285

2,714,061

2,298

SG-14-09

208

-68

401.8

572,285

2,714,061

2,297

SG-14-10

213

-50

235.3

572,293

2,713,911

2,300

SG-14-11

37

2

224.2

571,865

2,714,159

2,087

SG-14-12

286

-52

185.0

571,896

2,714,157

2,044

SG-14-13

209

-62

213.4

571,898

2,714,156

2,043

SG-14-14

208

-33

192.2

572,294

2,713,912

2,300

SG-14-15

210

-72

257.4

572,294

2,713,912

2,300

SG-15-01

237

-40

75.2

571,874

2,714,128

2,043

SG-15-02

187

-42

81.7

571,875

2,714,128

2,043

SG-15-03

148

-30

75.8

571,878

2,714,126

2,043

SG-15-04

280

-43

98.8

571,873

2,714,130

2,043

table continues…

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

10-5

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Hole ID

Azimuth

(°)

Dip

(°)

Depth

(m)

Easting

(m)

Northing

(m)

Elevation

(m)

SG-15-05

163

-52

58.0

571,878

2,714,127

2,043

SG-15-06

242

-73

106.4

571,876

2,714,129

2,043

SG-15-07

258

0

44.0

572,234

2,713,841

2,139

SG-15-08

13

0

16.2

572,255

2,713,906

2,138

SG-15-09

215

-36

99.6

572,255

2,713,894

2,138

SG-15-10

260

-32

90.5

572,252

2,713,896

2,137

SG-15-11

204

-71

150.0

571,672

2,714,298

2,292

SG-15-12

192

-83

200.8

571,672

2,714,298

2,291

SG-15-13

240

0

74.5

572,288

2,713,887

2,138

SG-15-14

216

-58

145.8

571,652

2,714,345

2,280

SG-15-15

216

-76

195.7

571,652

2,714,346

2,280

SG-15-16

90

0

100.8

572,288

2,713,888

2,138

SG-15-17

226

-68

145.3

571,593

2,714,352

2,282

SG-15-18

215

-30

209.8

572,479

2,713,867

2,284

SG-15-19

214

-52

290.9

572,480

2,713,868

2,283

SG-15-20

210

-52

218.8

572,586

2,713,740

2,309

SG-15-21

212

-20

145.6

572,584

2,713,739

2,309

SG-15-22

218

-71

350.0

572,570

2,713,772

2,303

SG-15-23

213

-59

251.8

572,702

2,713,747

2,284

SG-15-24

215

-28

187.7

572,700

2,713,745

2,284

SG-16-01

250

-68

147.7

571,428

2,714,421

2,268

SG-16-02

250

-77

167.8

571,428

2,714,421

2,268

SG-16-03

208

-51

74.8

571,339

2,714,462

2,256

SG-16-04

193

-79

111.0

571,340

2,714,463

2,256

SG-16-05

190

-75

159.6

571,347

2,714,495

2,248

SG-16-06

215

-69

171.7

571,300

2,714,500

2,245

SG-16-07

215

-54

89.5

571,299

2,714,499

2,245

Datum NAD27 Mexico

 

10.2.3 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

During 2015 and 2016, Avino has drilled 57 new holes on the oxide tailings deposit. Collar coordinates are provided in Table 10.2. Drillholes completed before 2015 on the oxide tailings have been previously reported (Tetra Tech 2013). A location map of oxide tailings drillholes is provided in Figure 10.3. The new holes are indicated in red.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

10-6

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 10.2 Drillholes Completed from 2015 and 2016 on the Oxide Tailings

 

Hole ID

Azimuth

(°)

Dip

(°)

Easting

(m)

Depth

(m)

Northing

(m)

Elevation

(m)

PJ-15-01

0

90

2,219.473

6.48

570,190.7

2,712,415

PJ-15-02

0

90

2,219.162

12.35

570,183.0

2,712,386

PJ-15-03

0

90

2,218.644

13.4

570,172.7

2,712,357

PJ-15-04

0

90

2,217.708

18.9

570,167.8

2,712,327

PJ-15-05

0

90

2,216.812

21.8

570,160.3

2,712,298

PJ-15-06

0

90

2,216.389

8.3

570,153.1

2,712,269

PJ-15-06A

0

90

2,216.499

26.8

570,154.8

2,712,277

PJ-15-07

0

90

2,215.738

28.5

570,142.6

2,712,241

PJ-15-08

0

90

2,219.473

28

570,128.2

2,712,212

PJ-15-09

0

90

2,214.867

21.2

570,093.4

2,712,157

PJ-15-10

0

90

2,215.244

27

570,101.2

2,712,184

PJ-15-11

0

90

2,216.778

28.5

570,108.5

2,712,215

PJ-16-01

0

90

2,216.743

27.9

570,116.4

2,712,245

PJ-16-02

0

90

2,217.210

26.4

570,124.1

2,712,274

PJ-16-03

0

90

2,217.399

23

570,131.6

2,712,305

PJ-16-04

0

90

2,217.965

18

570,138.8

2,712,335

PJ-16-05

0

90

2,218.485

12

570,134.8

2,712,371

PJ-16-06

0

90

2,219.221

8

570,154.0

2,712,393

PJ-16-07

0

90

2,220.314

3.9

570,156.2

2,712,422

PJ-16-08

0

90

2,218.839

18

570,111.1

2,712,340

PJ-16-09

0

90

2,217.796

22.9

570,099.4

2,712,313

PJ-16-10

0

90

2,216.919

27.5

570,090.6

2,712,284

PJ-16-11

0

90

2,216.620

23

570,083.0

2,712,255

PJ-16-12

0

90

2,216.016

24.1

570,078.2

2,712,223

PJ-16-13

0

90

2,216.043

24

570,066.2

2,712,197

PJ-16-14

0

90

2,215.937

20

570,057.4

2,712,168

PJ-16-15

0

90

2,215.129

14.5

570,057.4

2,712,138

PJ-16-16

0

90

2,215.770

9.5

570,020.0

2,712,120

PJ-16-17

0

90

2,215.998

14

570,028.1

2,712,145

PJ-16-18

0

90

2,215.905

13.1

570,034.9

2,712,177

PJ-16-19

0

90

2,216.047

21

570,042.4

2,712,206

PJ-16-20

0

90

2,217.054

26

570,049.8

2,712,234

PJ-16-21

0

90

2,217.524

24.5

570,056.1

2,712,261

PJ-16-22

0

90

2,218.194

21.5

570,028.8

2,712,232

PJ-16-23

0

90

2,217.687

20

570,013.6

2,712,210

PJ-16-24

0

90

2,215.840

8.9

569,998.9

2,712,152

PJ-16-25

0

90

2,216.180

8.4

570,004.2

2,712,125

PJ-16-26

0

90

2,207.578

0.6

570,226.8

2,712,405

PJ-16-27

0

90

2,206.271

0.5

570,218.8

2,712,377

PJ-16-27A

0

90

2,206.009

0.7

570,217.7

2,712,373

PJ-16-28

0

90

2,204.970

0.6

570,211.0

2,712,349

table continues…

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

10-7

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

 

Hole ID

 Azimuth

(°)

 Dip

(°)

 Easting

(m)

 Depth

(m)

 Northing

(m)

 Elevation

(m)

PJ-16-29

0

90

2,205.515

7.9

570,187.8

2,712,322

PJ-16-30

0

90

2,205.253

13.5

570,179.0

2,712,289

PJ-16-31

0

90

2,205.810

16

570,172.7

2,712,261

PJ-16-32

0

90

2,204.902

19.6

570,165.6

2,712,232

PJ-16-33

0

90

2,204.493

17

570,158.9

2,712,206

PJ-16-34

0

90

2,203.793

20.5

570,152.0

2,712,176

PJ-16-35

0

90

2,202.850

13.7

570,140.9

2,712,147

PJ-16-36

0

90

2,201.348

8.1

570,137.8

2,712,120

PJ-16-37

0

90

2,200.552

4.3

570,130.4

2,712,090

PJ-16-38

0

90

2,200.867

2

570,108.7

2,712,094

PJ-16-39

0

90

2,201.701

6

570,115.8

2,712,122

PJ-16-40

0

90

2,200.646

0.6

570,144.2

2,712,093

PJ-16-41

0

90

2,245.898

28.5

570,048.6

2,712,386

PJ-16-42

0

90

2,245.372

21

570,018.7

2,712,393

PJ-16-43

0

90

2,245.549

20

570,061.0

2,712,412

PJ-16-44

0

90

2,245.549

5

570052.4

2,712,443

Datum NAD27 Mexico

 

Figure 10.3 Location of Drillholes Completed from 2015 to 2016 on the Oxide Tailings

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

10-8

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

10.2.4 SPECIFIC GRAVITY RESULTS

 

Bulk density samples were analyzed from all 2006-2012 drilling programs on both the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins. Analytical procedures are discussed in Section 11.7. Table 10.3 summarizes the results of these specific gravity measurements.

 

Table 10.3 Avino and San Gonzalo Density Data Summary

 

Domain

Number

Minimum

Maximum

Mean

Variance

Coefficient of

Variation

Avino Vein System

10 (Main)

40

2.53

3.00

2.71

0.02

0.05

20

42

2.43

2.90

2.68

0.01

0.03

wall rock

93

2.29

3.00

2.65

0.04

0.07

Combined

175

2.29

3.00

2.67

0.03

0.06

San Gonzalo Vein System

10

50

2.40

3.00

2.64

0.03

0.07

20

2

2.73

2.78

2.76

0.00

0.01

Wall Rock

41

2.40

3.00

2.69

0.02

0.05

Combined

93

2.40

3.00

2.67

0.03

0.06

 

 

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11.0 SAMPLE PREPARATION, ANALYSES, AND SECURITY

 

 

11.1 DRILLING AND TRENCHING OF OXIDE TAILINGS, 1990 TO 1991

 

The oxide tailings were sampled prior to institution of NI 43-101 and associated quality assurance (QA)/quality control (QC) requirements, and as such no QA/QC measures were utilized during the 1990-1991 program. As a result, the resource estimate for the oxide tailings in Section 14.3 is all classified as Inferred. Twenty-eight holes were drilled and six trenches completed, from which a total of 461 samples were collecting for assaying. The analyses were completed in the on-site laboratory, which is described in Section 11.7 and was visited during the site visit, as summarized in Section 12.4.

 

Avino’s current on-site, non-certified, laboratory facility consists of sample preparation, crushing and pulverizing, a fire assay and an atomic absorption (AA) section. However, the procedures and facilities used in 1990 to 1991 may be different from the current sample analysis procedures. As a result of the uncertainty associated with these analyses, two separate verification exercises have been completed. Slim (2005d) collected several samples from the oxide tailings, and the results of this verification are discussed in Section 11.2. In 2012, Mr. M.F. O’Brien, QP, collected numerous verification samples from the oxide tailings, and these results are discussed in Section 12.3.2.

 

11.2 TAILINGS INVESTIGATIONS (TEST PITS IN OXIDE TAILINGS), 2004

 

The sampling method and approach adopted by Slim (2005d) on the test pits in the oxide tailings incorporated the following steps:

 

 

1.

A backhoe was used to excavate sample pits to a depth of 4 m. Hand samples were taken at 1 m vertical increments from the sidewalls of each pit.

 

 

 

 

2.

The sample mass collected from each sampling point generally amounted to between 2 and 5 kg.

 

 

 

 

3.

The sampling program was ostensibly based on the 1990 CMMA sampling program. Fourteen sample pits were excavated to a depth of 4 m and generated 86 samples.

 

The samples were air-freighted to PRA labs in Vancouver, British Columbia, from Durango, Mexico. The samples had been initially bagged and sealed with identification tags attached. The samples were allotted new identification numbers, and were subsequently un-bagged and dried. The dry samples were individually mixed and blended, and then split into four one-quarter fractions as directed by Slim (2005d). One fraction was used to determine the head grade assay, while another quarter was used to create composite samples used for the subsequent metallurgical test work program. Instructions were followed with the compositing of the samples, and the test work program.

 

 

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Excess sample was archived for future test work or analyses. For analytical techniques employed during the test work program, the standard fire assay (with AA spectrophotometric finish) was initially used for the silver analyses.

 

However, this method is not very accurate for silver values of less than 100 g/t. Subsequently, the inductively coupled plasma spectroscopy method (ICP-MS), which uses multi-acid digestion, was used for silver. This method also resulted in analyses being obtained for other elements of interest (e.g. copper, zinc, lead, etc.). The standard fire assay method was used for gold analyses. Cyanide and lime concentrations were measured using standard titrimetric methods. Total sulphur was measured using a standard Leco furnace, and sulphide sulphur assays were measured using the standard wet chemical gravimetric analysis (Slim 2005d).

 

The PRA labs (part of Inspectorate labs) in Nevada and British Columbia are International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 9001:2008 certified, full service laboratories that are independent of Avino. Aranz did not independently verify nor compare the results of the sampling program.

 

11.3 DRILLING PROGRAM, SAN GONZALO, 2007 TO PRESENT

 

For the drilling programs at San Gonzalo, core is sawed at Avino's core storage facility at the secure mine site. Samples of vein material, usually from a few centimeters to 1.5 m, are placed and sealed in plastic bags, which are collected by personnel from Inspectorate Labs in Durango at the mine site facilities. Samples are prepared in Durango, and pulps are sent to the Inspectorate facility in Sparks, Nevada for analysis.

 

Sample preparation in Durango involves the initial drying of the entire sample. Two-stage crushing is used to create a product which is at least 80% minus 10 mesh. A Jones riffle splitter is then used to separate a nominal 300 g portion of the sample. This 300 g sub-sample is then pulverized to more than 90% passing a 150-mesh screen. Inspectorate Labs states that they use sterile sand to clean the pulverizer between samples (Gunning 2009).

 

Gold analyses are by 30 g fire assay with an AA finish. silver, zinc, and lead are analyzed as part of a multi-element inductively coupled argon plasma package using a four-acid digestion with over-limit results for silver being reanalyzed with assay procedures using fire assay and gravimetric. Avino employs a rigorous quality control program that includes standardized material, blanks, and core duplicates. However, for the 2007 program, Avino did not perform any independent QA/QC and relied on the internal QA/QC procedures completed by the labs (Gunning 2009).

 

 

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Inspectorate Labs in Nevada and British Columbia are ISO 9001:2008 certified, full service laboratories that are independent of Avino.

 

Avino used a series of standard reference materials (SRMs), blank reference materials (blanks) and duplicates as part of their QA/QC program during analysis of assays from San Gonzalo Vein drillholes. Aranz compiled and reviewed these results in Section 12.1.4.

 

11.4 DRILLING PROGRAMS, ET ZONE OF THE AVINO VEIN, 2006 TO PRESENT

 

Sample lengths of NQ drill core were diamond sawed into halves by mine staff and shipped to Inspectorate Labs in Durango for preparation into pulps and rejects. Pulps were analyzed at Inspectorate Labs in Sparks, Nevada. Gold and silver were analyzed by fire assay using aqua regia leach and AA finish. Other elements are reported from a 29-element ICP-MS package. Inspectorate Labs in Nevada and British Columbia are ISO 9001:2008 certified, full service laboratories that are independent of Avino. Sample preparation and analysis and QA/QC procedures are as described in Section 11.3.

 

Avino used a series of certified reference materials (CRMs), blank reference materials (blanks) and duplicates as part of their QA/QC program during analysis of assays from Avino Vein drillholes. Aranz compiled and reviewed these results in Section 12.1.4.

 

11.5 UNDERGROUND CHANNEL SAMPLING OF SAN GONZALO VEIN, 2010 TO PRESENT

 

Samples from channels cut across the San Gonzalo Vein were assayed by Inspectorate Labs. Samples were crushed and ground in Durango with pulps assayed in Richmond, British Columbia using fire assay and AA finish for gold, four acid digestion and AA for most silver with fire assay and gravimetric finish for very high silver. Base metals were analyzed via aqua regia digestion and ICP-MS. Inspectorate Labs in Durango and British Columbia are ISO 9001:2008 certified, full service laboratories that are independent of Avino. Sample preparation and analysis and QA/QC procedures are as described in Section 11.3.

 

For the 2011 bulk sampling program of San Gonzalo, samples were obtained from channels cut across the vein, and were assayed by Inspectorate Labs. Samples were crushed and ground in Durango with pulps assayed in Richmond, British Columbia using fire assay and AA finish for gold, four acid digestion and AA for most silver with fire assay and gravimetric finish for very high silver. Base metals were analyzed via aqua regia digestion and ICP-MS for base metals. Inspectorate Labs in Nevada and British Columbia are ISO 9001:2008 certified, full service laboratories that are independent of Avino.

 

Samples from 2012 and 2013 underground channel sampling of the San Gonzalo Vein are shipped to Inspectorate Labs for analysis for gold, silver, arsenic, bismuth, copper, molybdenum, lead, antimony, zinc, and mercury. Samples are crushed and ground in Durango with pulps assayed in Reno, Nevada using fire assay and AA finish for gold, four acid digestion and AA for most silver with fire assay and gravimetric finish for very high silver, and aqua regia digestion and ICP-MS for base metals. Inspectorate Labs in Nevada and British Columbia are ISO 9001:2008 certified, full service laboratories that are independent of Avino. Sample QA/QC procedures are as described in Section 11.3.

 

 

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11.6 AVINO LABORATORY

 

The Avino laboratory has fire assay, AA and sieving analysis equipment and has been recently upgraded with new AA equipment. A high standard of neatness and cleanliness is being maintained to reduce the risk of contamination.

 

11.7 SPECIFIC GRAVITY SAMPLES

 

Avino completed specific gravity measurements on drillcore from both the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins. All measurements were completed by Avino staff on the mine site. Two different methods were employed to obtain these specific gravity values: caliper volume calculation (CV) and water displacement (WD). The procedures followed for each method are summarized in the following sections.

 

A total of 262 samples were measured for bulk density, 110 from the Avino Vein and 152 from the San Gonzalo Vein. Aranz provides recommendations regarding specific gravity sampling procedures in Section 26.1.4 and a QP opinion in Section 12.5.1.

 

11.7.1 CALIPER VOLUME CALCULATION METHOD

 

The CV method of determining the specific gravity of drillcore samples involved the following procedures, based on the methodology outlined by Lipton (2001):

 

 

·

Each measurement involves pieces of whole core with the ends neatly cut perpendicular to the core axis.

 

 

 

 

·

The core diameter is determined using a pair of vernier calipers, and the diameter should be measured at several points along the length of core and averaged.

 

 

 

 

·

The core length is measured using a tape measure.

 

 

 

 

·

The mass is determined by weighing the core; weighing should be completed once the core is dried.

 

 

 

 

·

The dry bulk density is calculated by: density = mass/volume where volume = Pi x (average core diameter/2) 2 x core length.

 

11.7.2 WATER DISPLACEMENT METHOD

 

The WD method of determining the specific gravity of drill core samples involved the following procedures, based on Archimedes’ Principle:

 

 

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·

The mass is determined by weighing the core; weighing should be completed once the core is dried.

 

 

 

 

·

A graduated cylinder, of an appropriate size to completely submerse the core, is used to determine the volume. The volume of water in the graduated cylinder is measured prior to submersing the core.

 

 

 

 

·

The core is then submersed in water in the graduated cylinder and the total volume is measured.

 

 

 

 

·

The difference in the volume of water before and after sample submersion is the volume of the sample.

 

 

 

 

·

The dry bulk density = mass/volume.

 

11.8 QP OPINION

 

Aranz is not aware of any drilling, sampling or recovery factors affecting the reliability of the samples. It is Aranz’s opinion that the sample preparation, security and analytical procedures followed by Avino are fit for the purpose of this Technical Report.

 

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12.0 DATA VERIFICATION

 

 

12.1 AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEIN DRILLHOLE DATABASE VERIFICATION

 

Aranz compiled the drillhole data provided by Avino on a hole-by-hole basis, including drillhole collar, survey, lithology, and assay data. As reported previously by Tera Tech (2013) the drillhole data exists in several forms of spreadsheet and Microsoft ® Access databases. A rate of 0.5% depth errors were encountered.

 

During the site visit in June 2016, Aranz selected the following drillholes for verification in the core shack: ET-06-02, ET-07-01, ET-07-03, SG-15-03 and SG-14-02. Logging and cores showed good correspondence with no significant differences.

 

The QP opinion of the reliability of the Avino drillhole data is discussed in Section 12.5.1 and detailed recommendations are provided in Section 26.1.

 

12.1.1 COLLAR AND ASSAY DATA

 

Table 12.1 summarizes the database validation results. The Avino Vein lithology data for the older drillholes and upper portion of the mine, is very sparse owing to the age of the records. The upper part of the deposit model has consequently been modelled using assay data and development mapping information. As the deficient lithology information pertains mainly to parts of the deposit that have been mined out, Aranz does not consider it to be a material deficiency.

 

Table 12.1 Number of Records and Discrepancies for the Avino Drillhole Data

 

Avino Vein

Number of

Records

Discrepancies

Discrepancy Rate

(%)

Avino Vein

Survey Data

3,330

-

2.2

No Surveys for Collar

2

Duplicate Collar and Surveys

3

Duplicate Survey Depths

67

Assays

16,906

0.3

No Sample for Collars

24

Overlapping Segments

8

Collar Max Depth Exceeded

15

Lithology

4,059

54.2

From to Depth Overelap

280

table continues…


  

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Avino Vein

Number of

Records

Discrepancies

Discrepancy Rate

(%)

No Samples for Collar

1,916

Collar Max Depth Exceeded

2

San Gonzalo Vein

Survey Data

3,506

0.1

No Survey for Collar

1

Duplicate Collar and Surveys

0

Duplicate Survey Depths

0

Incomplete Survey Data

2

Assays

16,077

0.2

No Samples for Collars

23

Overlapping Segments

8

Collar Max Depth Exceeded

6

Lithology

15,043

0.3

From to Depth Overlap

0

No Samples for Collar

52

Collar Max Depth Exceeded

0

 

A previous validation exercise was completed for assay results from post-2009 drilling by Tetra Tech (2012). Original assay certificates were compared against the data as reported by Avino. Assay results from drillholes SG-11-13 to SG-11-17, and ET-12-01 to ET-12-09 were verified. For all metals in the database (gold, silver, copper, lead, zinc, and bismuth), the error incidence was less than 1%.

 

12.1.2 DOWNHOLE SURVEY DATA

 

Downhole survey data exists for 87 of the 98 drillholes completed in the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins. Most drillholes have three or fewer downhole survey points, which is less frequent than typical industry practice. Many of these holes contain a survey data point at the collar and near the end of hole, and sometimes part-way down the hole. However, 26 of the 87 holes for which downhole survey data exists were not surveyed to within 10 m of the end of the hole. All measurements were completed by a magnetic survey method, which is not recommended in general, and particularly not in locations with extensive underground infrastructure such as those present on the Property. Given the abundance of historical infrastructure on the Property and the potential for any drillholes to intersect active workings, downhole survey measurements should be collected at a frequency of at least every 10 m and all drillholes should be cemented following completion.

 

Downhole survey data for hole SG-07-06 was disregarded below 50 m depth due to an unrealistic kink in the drillhole orientation below this depth, which could be due to an instrument malfunction or to magnetic interference.

 

 

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12.1.3 GEOLOGY DATA AND INTERPRETATION

 

Aranz has the following observations on the Avino geology database and interpretation:

 

To Aranz’s knowledge, routine photography of drillcore and underground drifts is being completed. A digital photographic record is kept of all drillcore and underground drifts for future reference, and to facilitate consistent core logging and geology interpretation.

 

12.1.4 REVIEW OF DRILLHOLE QUALITY ASSURANCE/QUALITY CONTROL SAMPLES

 

QA/QC samples were submitted in the sample stream during all 2006 to 2012 drilling programs on both the Avino and San Gonzalo veins, although not in a consistent manner. These results were reviewed in detail by Tetra Tech and were discussed in Tetra Tech’s 2013 report. Avino used a number of SRMs, blank reference materials (blanks) and duplicates as part of their 2015/2016 QA/QC program.

 

STANDARDS

 

Three standards were analyzed during 2015-2016 oxide tailings drilling campaign. Three laboratory-certified standards (see Table 12.2 ) were used and the silver and gold results are discussed below.

 

Table 12.2 Standards Specifications

CDN-ME-1307

Recommended Value

1.02 ± 0.09 g/t Au

Recommended Value

54.1 ± 3.1 g/t Ag

Recommended Value

0.864 ± 0.036 % Pb

Recommended Value

0.746 ± 0.026 % Zn

Recommended Value

0.537 ± 0.020 % Cu

CDN-ME-1303

Recommended Value

0.924 ± 0.100 g/t Au

Recommended Value

152 ± 10 g/t Ag

Recommended Value

1.22 ± 0.06 % Pb

Recommended Value

0.931 ± 0.048 % Zn

Recommended Value

0.344 ± 0.016 % Cu

CDN-ME-1305

Recommended Value

1.92 ± 0.18 g/t Au

Recommended Value

231 ± 12 g/t Ag

Recommended Value

3.21 ± 0.09 % Pb

Recommended Value

1.61 ± 0.05 % Zn

Recommended Value

0.617 ± 0.024 % Cu

Note: Pb - lead; Zn - zinc

 

The 55 standards were submitted at a rate of 10% (total of 561 samples) which is higher than the industry norm of 5%. They were submitted to both Inspectorate and SGS Laboratories. Standards performances are graphed ( Figure 12.1 to Figure 12.6 , inclusive) against the recommended upper and lower limits and the laboratories are colour coded (red for SGS and green for Inspectorate).

 

 

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Figure 12.1 Standard 1303 - Silver Performance

 


 

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Figure 12.2 Standard 1303 - Gold Performance

 

 

Figure 12.3 Standard 1305 - Silver Performance

 


 

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Figure 12.4 Standard 1305 - Gold Performance

 

 

Figure 12.5 Standard 1307 - Silver Performance

 


 

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Figure 12.6 Standard 1307 - Gold Performance

 

 

The three standards appear to have been determined within the limits in the majority of cases, but standard CDN-ME-1305 shows some anomalies for silver, notably one high grade return above the upper limit and a run of four over the upper limit returns for the Inspectorate results. This is a high grade silver sample, so it may be that the standard was not well mixed and is showing some nugget behavior.

 

BLANKS

 

Sixteen blank samples were submitted which represents a submission rate of 3%, slightly lower than the industry norm of 5%. Silver and gold assay returns were acceptably low, the highest recorded being 0.032 g/t gold and 5 g/t silver, which are not significant. Blanks were recorded with generally higher but still negligible values by Inspectorate Laboratories.

 

 

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12.2 BULK DENSITY

 

12.2.1 AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEIN BULK DENSITY

 

A limited number of specific gravity measurements were originally collected by Avino from drillholes in the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins. These measurements were not representative of the veins spatially or by drilling program, and Tetra Tech (2012) requested additional specific gravity measurements be completed on drillcore from both veins. These additional measurements were completed by Avino in 2013. Review of these measurements (see Section 14.6) suggests that they are a limited basis for spatial estimation. Consequently, the long-term historic production average value of 2.63 has been assigned as a density factor to the Avino and San Gonzalo Mineral Resources disclosed in Section 14.0.

 

A QP opinion of the reliability of the Avino specific gravity data is discussed in Section 12.5.1.

 

12.3 OXIDE TAILINGS DRILLHOLE DATABASE

 

Tetra Tech compiled the assay data used in the oxide tailings resource estimate by referring to original mine sections (Tetra Tech 2012) and verification of this data is described below. The 1:1,000 scale plans drafted for this exercise were scanned and used to verify the positions of the old drillholes. A transposition error on one collar elevation in mine coordinates was observed and subsequently corrected (drillhole E3 was incorrectly recorded at an elevation of 2,275 m, and was corrected to 2,257 m).

 

Avino provided the following formulae to convert the collar coordinate data from local mine grid coordinates to Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinates:

 

 

· local mine grid X + 560421.245 = X UTM

 

 

 

 

· local mine grid Y + 2707618.312 = Y UTM

 

 

 

 

· local elevation - 41.306 = elevation amsl.

 

Since the trenches (named with Z-series) from the 1990 to 1991 program represent incomplete surface sampling of an unrepresentative part of the pile (at the wall where the outlets for the hydraulic emplacement of the material were sited), these data were not used in the oxide tailings resource estimate.

 

12.3.1 ASSAY VERIFICATION OF 1990/1991 DRILLHOLES IN OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The drillholes in the oxide tailings were completed prior to institution of NI 43-101 and related QA/QC requirements. The analyses were completed in the Avino Mine laboratory and no original assay certificates have been produced or preserved. The database and mine sections were therefore compared with the original hand-written data collected from the mine laboratory. These assay sheets from the mine laboratory show good agreement with the mine sections and resulting database used by Tetra Tech for estimation of the oxide tailings in Section 14.1.

 

Tetra Tech (2013) verified 54% of drillholes in this database (15 of 28 drillholes) and 58% of both silver and gold assays (444 of 766 values) used for this estimation.

 

The QP opinion of the reliability of the 1990 to 1991 oxide tailings assays is discussed in Section 12.5.2.

 

 

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12.3.2 OXIDE TAILINGS VERIFICATION SAMPLES

 

As was reported by Tetra Tech (2013), during a previous site visit conducted on June 7 and 8, 2012, Michael F. O’Brien visited the tailings heaps and supervised the collection of eight samples from the oxide tailings (3 to 4 kg each). The samples were collected from gulleys that had eroded into the tailings pile and provided a vertical section through the tailings. It is believed that while such samples cannot provide a statistically representative reflection of overall grade, they do provide some insight into the grade of the tailings near surface. The eight samples were each split into three separate sub-samples, which were submitted in turn to the Avino Mine laboratory together with SGS laboratories in Durango and Vancouver.

 

Statistical analysis of the three sets of results demonstrated that there is good correlation between the three laboratories and this conclusion remains valid.

 

The sampling exercise in 2012 provided the opportunity to review the artificial sedimentary deposit that comprises the Avino oxide tailings and supported the previous assumptions of the tailings, such as regarding the oxide tailings as two superimposed units with slightly different chemical and particle size characteristics and pronounced horizontal continuity. The source data and plans prepared more than 20 years ago after the initial drilling campaign, were examined at the mine and found to be of professional standard and provide support for their use in the estimation of the oxide tailings. The overall homogeneity of the material, horizontal continuity and relatively high confidence in the volume and tonnage, mitigate any uncertainty in the historical data set. The pattern of sample grades (see Figure 14.6) from the 2015/2016 drill campaigns the earlier drilling form a coherent pattern with no obvious discontinuity between campaigns.

 

12.4 SITE VISIT

 

Michael F. O’Brien conducted site visits on June 7 and 8, 2012 and June 6 and 7, 2016. During the latest visit, Mr. O’Brien visited the tailings heaps and verified the location of walls and the extent of the oxide and sulphide tailings. Mr. O’Brien used a Garmin ® etrex 20 GPS was used to verify collar locations and topography. The Avino and San Gonzalo underground mines were visited to gain familiarity with the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein systems. Exposures of the San Gonzalo Vein including the Anjelica vein were examined between three and five levels. The Avino Vein system was examined in the deeper levels of the Avino Mine and the characteristically competent silicified zones with marginal brecciation were examined. The core shed was visited, where Mr. O’Brien reviewed core logs (ET-06-02, ET-07-03, SG0701, SG-15-03, SG-14-02 and SG-07-17) as well as logging procedures followed by mine staff. Mr. O’Brien also visited the Avino Mine laboratory which has been re-equipped and renovated since 2012.

 

 

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12.5 ARANZ CONCLUSIONS AND OPINION

 

The drill dataset has been produced over a long period of time within a brownfield property. All data used for this study is obtained from work carried out by staff of the current issuer, which has owned the Property continuously since the start of this work.

 

12.5.1 AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEINS

 

DRILLHOLE DATABASE

 

A single, compiled database containing all relevant drilling information does not exist for the Property. A variety of partially-compiled data sources were provided to Aranz.

 

DOWNHOLE SURVEY DATA

 

Downhole survey data and the location of the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein intersections observed in drillholes has been verified by both surface and underground mapping, providing confidence in the location, orientation, and true width of both veins.

 

GEOLOGY DATA AND INTERPRETATION

 

The legacy data from the Avino Vein is deficient in recorded lithology data. Modelling of the Avino Vein and San Gonzalo Vein Systems made use of grade as well as lithology data. Consequently, Aranz regards the lithology database adequate and fit for purposes of resource estimation. The recent mining history provides comfort that the potentially economic units persistently demonstrate continuity as new exposures become available.

 

SPECIFIC GRAVITY SAMPLES

 

Based on a review of specific gravity data from drillholes in the Avino and San Gonzalo veins, Aranz concludes that future bulk density measurements should be completed using a water displacement method. A comparison of the two measurement techniques used for these specific gravity samples indicates that the results are acceptable for this study. However, Aranz considers that the current level of data is inadequate for meaningful spatial estimation and recommends that the frequency at which specific gravity measurements are collected should be increased. To supplement the specific gravity data generated from drillhole samples, Aranz recommends that large grab samples be obtained from the underground development at approximately 30 m intervals and subjected to the water displacement method of specific gravity determination.

  

QA/QC SAMPLES

 

The rate of QA/QC sample insertion is slightly below recommended industry standards on the Avino Vein, but significantly below industry standards on the San Gonzalo Vein. Based on the information provided to Aranz, it also does not appear that industry standard plots of standard, blank, and duplicate results (as in Section 12.3 ) are being constructed and reviewed by Avino on a routine basis. However, QA/QC samples were collected, albeit inconsistently, from all 2006 to 2012 drilling programs and Tetra Tech reviewed the results of these samples. This review found no evidence of systematic laboratory bias, indicating that the assay results are reliable.

 

 

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12.5.2 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The identified grade pattern is similar in character to other tailings deposits, such as overall homogeneity and a pronounced horizontal continuity.

 

Verification samples taken by Mr. O’Brien have confirmed the presence of gold and silver mineralization at grades similar to those obtained in the original tailings drilling campaign, with a low silver bias consistent with the superficial position of the samples in the zone most likely to have suffered surface leaching. The verification samples also confirm that the mine lab assays are not materially different from those of external labs.

 

12.5.3 QP OPINION

 

There were no limitations on or failure to conduct data verification.

 

In Aranz’s opinion the assay, sample location, vein lithology, and specific gravity data from the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins are reliable to support the purpose of this Technical Report and a current mineral resource on both veins and the oxide tailings.

 

 

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13.0 MINERAL PROCESSING AND METALLURGICAL TESTING

 

 

There are three separate mineralization sources in the Avino property, including the Avino and San Gonzalo Mines, which are currently in operation, and the potential tailings resource from previous milling operations.

 

The San Gonzalo Mine entered commercial production in October 2012, followed by reopening of the Avino Mine in January 2015. The two mines feed a conventional flotation mill that has three separate circuits and a capacity of 1,500 t/d.

 

13.1 AVINO VEIN

 

No mineral processing or metallurgical test work has been performed in the preparation of this report; however, the Avino Vein material has been successfully processed in the past using froth flotation to produce a marketable copper concentrate with silver and gold credits. Bismuth was identified as a deleterious material in the concentrate and there are plans for test work to reduce the bismuth content in the concentrate to improve on the smelter return.

 

The Avino Vein was mined during the 27 years of open pit and underground production prior to 2001. From 1997 to 2001, the mine and mill production averaged 1,000 t/d and achieved up to 1,300 t/d. The mine and mill operations were then suspended. Following several years of redevelopment, in Q4 2014 Avino completed its Avino Mine and mill expansion. On January 1, 2015, full-scale operations commenced and commercial production was declared effective April 1, 2016 following a 19-month advancement and test period.

 

The mill feed from the Avino Mine has been processed using froth flotation to produce a copper concentrate with silver and gold credits. In 2016 operation, the average copper, silver and gold recoveries reporting to a copper concentrate of 20.3% copper were 90%, 85%, and 64% respectively. The total ore processed was 429,289 t. In Q1 2017, the average copper, silver and gold recoveries reporting to a copper concentrate of 19.4% copper were 91%, 86%, and 67% respectively. The total ore processed was 116,553 t.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility Study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure that are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility Study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

 

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13.2 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

The San Gonzalo treatment scheme was based on the bulk sample test carried out in 2012. The feed grade of the bulk sample test was 261 g/t silver and 0.9 g/t gold. Silver and gold recoveries were 76% and 59%, respectively, and 232 dry tonnes of flotation concentrate were produced from 10,000 t of feed. Standard froth flotation was used to produce the flotation concentrate with the silver and gold values. Since then, a gravity circuit has been installed to improve the silver and gold recoveries. In 2016 a total of 115,047 t of mill feed has been processed. The silver and gold recoveries to the silver and gold concentrate were 83% and 74%, respectively. In Q1 2017, a total of 20,133 t of mill feed has been processed. The silver and gold recoveries to the silver and gold concentrate were 84% and 76%, respectively.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility Study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure that are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility Study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

13.3 TAILINGS MATERIALS

 

There are two potential tailings resources at the Avino tailings storage facility: oxide tailings and sulphide tailings. No metallurgical testing has been carried out on either of the tailings samples since 2012.

 

13.3.1 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Limited test work has been completed on material from the sulphide tailings before 2012. The two sets of the results on the reground sulphide samples indicate that 73% and 87% of the silver and 77% and 85% of the gold can be extracted using 1 and 2 g/L cyanide solutions, respectively. However, the cyanide consumptions were higher than the results from the oxide tailings. No further testing has been conducted on the sulphide tailings samples after 2012.

 

13.3.2 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

This study assesses the potential for processing the oxide tailings resource from previous milling operations. The subsections summarize the metallurgical characterization obtained from previous test work and the study conducted by MMI in 2005 (Slim 2005c). MMI’s report used the metallurgical results obtained and conclusions drawn by PRA (Huang 2003; Huang and Tan 2005). The revised and final report by MMI was dated October 2005 (Slim 2005d).

 

 

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The following sections are reproduced from the 2013 PEA (Tetra Tech 2013), with some minor modifications to summarize the findings of the metallurgical test programs conducted so far.

 

HISTORICAL METALLURGICAL TEST RESULTS

 

A number of metallurgical evaluations have been completed on various samples from the oxide tailings dam, according to the MMI report produced in 2003 (Slim 2003). Apparently, the first cyanidation tests were conducted in 1982, followed by further tests performed over the years. The summarized cyanidation test results are shown in Table 13.1 taken from the 2003 MMI report (Slim 2003), while the reported flotation test results are given in Table 13.2. The results obtained from the test work program initiated by MMI in 2003 and 2004 were reported in the MMI 2005 technical report (Slim 2005d) and are included in Table 13.1 for purposes of comparison. The results will be discussed in greater detail later in this section.

 

Table 13.1 Cyanidation Test Results

 

Author

Date of

Test

Extraction (%)

Leaching

Time

(h)

Particle

Size

(µm)

Ag

Au

Denver Equipment

1982

69.3

66.7

24

66.6% <149

Penoles

1987

78.3

88.9

24

87% <74

Maja

1990

85.9

80.9

24

100% <105

Chryssoulis

1990

85.9

80.9

24

no data

Rosales

1996

83.9

76.9

23

75% <74

MMI

2003

77.1

71.4

24

86% <74

MMI

2003

88.8

88.4

48

86% <74

 

Source: Slim (2003)

 

Table 13.2 Flotation Test Results

 

Author

Date of

Test

Recovery

(%)

Particle

Size

(µm)

Ag

Au

Penoles

1987

60.2

47.1

87% <74

Rosales

1996

69.4

66.9

75% <74

 

For the tests outlined in Table 13.1 and Table 13.2, no details have been provided regarding:

 

 

· the location or the manner in which the samples were taken

 

 

 

 

· why these particular samples were taken

 

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· the test parameters employed

 

 

 

 

· the assay techniques used, etc.

 

The first set of results for tests conducted on MMI samples from the 2003 sampling campaign indicate a silver extraction of 77.1% and gold extraction 71.4%. However, these results cannot be verified since the origin of this set of numbers as quoted in the MMI technical report (Slim 2005d) is not known. The second set of results was reported in the 2003 PRA report (Huang 2003). Considered in general terms, it would appear as if the cyanidation test results are reasonably consistent over the indicated period of time. However, no specific conclusions should be drawn since nothing is known about the head grades of the samples, the samples used, or the test and assay procedures used at the time that these tests were conducted.

 

The flotation results vary widely for similar particle sizes with recoveries ranging from 60% to 69% for silver and 47% to 67% for gold. However, the test details of these reported cyanidation and flotation tests are unknown.

 

THE MMI TECHNICAL REPORT

 

Avino commissioned MMI to produce a document that was NI 43-101 compliant with respect to detailing the indicated oxide tailings resource (subsequently referred to as an Inferred Resource) and to define the metallurgical characterization and assay results for this material. The proposed economic processing of this tailings material could then be used to form the financial basis for restarting the mine.

 

The first report prepared by MMI was titled "Tailings Valuation" and was dated November 2003 (Slim 2003). Two further reports by MMI titled "Preliminary Feasibility" (Slim 2005a) and "Tailings Valuation" (Slim 2005b) were produced in May 2005. The “Tailings Valuation” report (Slim 2005b) was subsequently revised and re-titled "A Tailings Resource" in July 2005 (Slim 2005c). This July 2005 MMI report (Slim 2005c) was reviewed by the Canadian Securities Administrators and returned to MMI for revision. The revised MMI report was re-issued as "A Tailings Resource" and dated October 2005 (Slim 2005d) and was resubmitted to the CSRA for review. The October 2005 report (Slim 2005d) was produced for Avino Mines, Cia Minera Mexicana, Durango, Mexico, by Bryan Slim, of MMI, North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The document was submitted as a Technical Report to the CSRA.

 

Two sets of test programs were conducted by PRA under direction of MMI. One was conducted during 2003, for which no sample origin can be determined (Huang 2003), and the other, more detailed test program, was conducted during 2004 (Huang and Tan 2005). The 2004 test work and assaying program was designed and supervised by MMI. It was conducted on samples collected from the tailings dam by MMI during 2004, while also using the results from the preliminary metallurgical scoping tests completed during 2003 as a guide. PRA staff, at their facilities in Vancouver, British Columbia, conducted all the test work from both MMI test programs. 

 

 

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INTRODUCTION TO THE MMI 2003 METALLURGICAL TEST PROGRAM

 

The 2003 test program consisted of the following tests as summarized in Table 13.3. The cyanidation extraction results obtained were used in a preliminary report by MMI (Slim 2003). MMI considered using a 2,000 t/d vat leaching process to recover the silver and gold from the oxide tailings; however, this treatment process option was revised when the results of the 2004 test program became available.

 

Table 13.3 Test Procedures MMI 2003 Test Program

 

Process/Procedure

Details of Test

Sample Identify

Sample Preparation

No details documented

Sample L and Sample U

Head Assays

Fire assays, AA, and ICP multi-acid

Composite of L and U

Specific Gravity

Standard pycnometer test

Composite of L and U

Cyanidation Leach

P 80 = 68 µm; 40% solids; pH 10.5; 1.0 g/L NaCN; 48 h; dO 2 > 7.9 mg/L 0.4 kg sample

Composite of L and U

Flotation

Rougher and 2 scavenger stages; P 80 = 85 µm; 35% solids; pH 5.5; PAX & A208 with MIBC; 1 kg sample

Composite of L and U

Mineralogical

Examination of flotation tailings

Composite of L and U

 

Note: dO 2 - dissolved oxygen; PAX - potassium amyl xanthate; NaCN - sodium cyanide Source: Slim (2003)

 

The exact origin of Sample L and Sample U is not known and does not appear to have been documented. The manner in which each of the samples was collected by MMI has apparently also not been documented. The size of both samples, namely 0.8 kg for Sample L and 0.9 kg for Sample U, is small and its representation is questioned. Also, there appears to be no documentation relating to the arrival and receipt of these samples at PRA. There is no receiving log in the PRA Report No. 0302303 (Huang 2003). Also, no assay certificates have been recovered to date. Even though these tests were considered to be scoping tests only, the results cannot be validated. When considering all the above factors, it is apparent that these results cannot be used with any degree of validity in the review of process options for the recovery of silver and gold.

 

INTRODUCTION TO THE MMI 2004 METALLURGICAL TEST PROGRAM

 

The 2004 test program was a better structured program, which included the pre-concentration processes such as gravity concentration and flotation, both with and without regrinding, in an attempt to upgrade the material into a smaller mass for the subsequent treatment for the recovery of silver and gold. Also, cyanidation leach tests were conducted on as-received samples, as well as samples that were reground in order to attempt to improve the liberation of silver and gold from the associated minerals. A single column leach test was also performed.

 

Additional work completed included establishing the specific gravity and bulk density of the material, determining the Bond Mill Work Index on an oxide sample from the open pit, settling and filtration tests following cyanidation tests, and electrowinning tests using Electrometals Electrowinning (EMEW) technology. All the different test procedures are summarized in Table 13.4. 

 

 

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Table 13.4 Test Procedures - MMI 2004 Test Program

 

Process/Procedure

Details of Test

Sample Identify

Sample Preparation

Individually numbered; dried; weighed; subsequently composited

Composites A, B and C

Head Assays

Fire assays, AA and ICP multi-acid

Individual samples, and Composites A, B and C

Specific Gravity

Standard pycnometer test

Composites A, B and C

Bulk Density

Standard volume displacement test

Composites A, B and C

Mineralogical Examination

Examination of as-received samples

Selected Samples

Test Product Assays

Fire assays, AA and ICP multi-acid

All test products

Bond Mill Work Index

Six cycles; closing screen size 150 µm

Oxide sample

Size-assay Distribution

Screened and assayed the size fractions

Selected samples

Gravity Concentration

Various test conditions

Composites A, B and C

Cyanidation Leach

Various test conditions

Composites A, B and C

Flotation

Various test conditions

Composites A, B and C

Column Leach Test

Agglomerated feed; 81 d duration; 0.5 to 1.0 g/L NaCN; pH 10.5; 0.05 mL/s

Composite of A and B

EMEW

Various test conditions

PLS from leach test

ABA

Acid generation tests

Composites A, B and C

 

The results obtained from this test program led MMI to include the heap leach process as the recommended treatment option in their report dated May 2005 (Slim 2005a).

 

EVALUATION AND REVIEW OF METALLURGICAL TESTS

 

Tetra Tech reviewed the metallurgical tests conducted during the MMI 2004 test program. The most promising process option will be selected as the recommended process treatment route based on the evaluation of the results obtained from the test program. This process option will then be evaluated with respect to capital and operating cost estimates. The process implications of the procedures and processes investigated, and the results obtained, are discussed in this section.

 

SAMPLE PREPARATION AND CHARACTERISTICS

 

Bagged samples carrying the MMI identification tags were prepared at Avino Mine under the direct supervision of MMI personnel. These samples were then transported from the mine site to Durango, Mexico, and shipped via airfreight to Vancouver, British Columbia. The samples were delivered to the PRA facility, and unpacked in the presence of MMI personnel to ensure that no tampering had occurred to the samples en route. The samples were subsequently renumbered by MMI prior to PRA staff un-bagging and drying the samples. These details are shown on the PRA sample receiving log (Huang and Tan 2005). The individual samples were initially air-dried, followed by a low-temperature of less than 50°C, of oven drying.

 


 

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The individual samples were subsequently homogenized and riffled, and split into four one-quarter fractions. One of these fractions was used for head assay determinations. A second fraction was used for compositing selected individual samples to create the sample Composite A, representing the oxide material of the lower bench of the tailings dam. Similarly, Composite B, representing the oxide material of the middle bench of the tailings dam, was prepared by compositing selected individual samples, as was Composite C, representing the sulphide tailings of the upper bench.

 

Although the samples had arrived at PRA from Avino Mine without any indication of tampering, it is the sampling regime itself, which is considered to be deficient. First, the sampling of the oxide section of the tailings dam was incomplete. The sampling did not replicate the 1990 CMMA program, and certain parts of the tailings dam were not sampled. Second, the samples that were taken by MMI only represented the first 4 m of depth of the tailings dam. Indications are, however, that the overall depth of the oxide section of the tailings dam varies between 7 and 27 m. These two major deficiencies were also recognized by the Canadian Securities Administrators as deficiencies during their review. Both these items were addressed in the final MMI report dated October 2005 (Slim 2005d). The October 2005 report recommended a more detailed program of sampling of the whole tailings dam up to bedrock or ground soil level, as well as conducting metallurgical characterization tests using representative material from this more detailed sampling process whenever this is to be performed. However, since the MMI Technical Report (as reviewed by the Canadian Securities Administrators subsequently referred to the oxide tailings as an Inferred Resource (Slim 2005d), this and other sampling discrepancies noted in the MMI test program, will not be discussed any further.

 

Moisture Content

 

The moisture contents of the samples as received from the Avino Mine tailings dam were found to vary widely, namely from a low value of 5.12% to a high value of 28.25% moisture. A frequency distribution for moisture content of all the oxide tailings samples as received by PRA is given in Table 13.5. The bi-nodal distribution is apparent.

 

Table 13.5 Moisture Content of Samples

 

Frequency Distribution

Moisture Content

Range

(%)

Number

5.00-7.50

9

7.51-10.00

14

10.01-12.50

19

12.51-15.00

16

15.01-17.50

5

17.51-20.00

5

20.01-22.50

12

22.51-25.00

5

25.01-27.50

0

27.51 -30.00

1

 

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The particular presence of these high moisture content values in the tailings dam apparently confirms the high moisture content values found during the 1990 sampling program conducted by CMMA. Although the precise sampling procedure and drying conditions are unrecorded, a data sheet provided by Avino Mines as ostensibly related to this sampling program, provides assay values and moisture contents obtained during the program. The moisture values obtained varied from a low moisture value of 13.89% to a high value of 29.4%, and a calculated average of 22.87% moisture.

 

A possible reason for the high moisture content of the tailings material is that the mine was operational during this period when the sampling program was undertaken, i.e. 1990, and that routine tailings deposition was still in progress.

 

The specific reason for the relatively high moisture contents found during the 2004 MMI sampling program, is not apparent. The MMI Technical Report (Slim 2005d) has referred to the possibility of the original manner of deposition of the tailings which has resulted in the localized areas of high moisture content. Also, the presence of artesian springs under the tailings dam has also been mentioned as a possible reason. It was also observed that any rain water run-off from the higher levels above the tailings dam would collect at the head of the tailings dam and subsequently seep through the dam exiting at the foot of the dam. Whatever the reason(s) may be, areas of high moisture content do exist and will influence the method of recovery of the tailings and the subsequent agglomeration process.

 

Head Assays and Test Products Assays

 

Gold assaying was completed using the standard fire assay procedure. Initially the silver was also analyzed by the fire assay procedure followed by an AA spectrophotometric finish. However, this fire assay based method for silver is not very accurate in the low concentration range of less than 100 g/t for silver. Assaying for silver was then done using ICP-MS preceded by the total digestion of the sample in a suite of mineral acids. A further method was also investigated, namely that of total acid digestion followed by an AA finish. The results obtained with this acid digestion and AA method were similar to the ICP-MS. The assay method selected for all the silver assays was therefore the ICP-MS method preceded by the total digestion of the sample in a suite of mineral acids (ICP-MS). All the other analyses for the various products arising from the metallurgical tests were done by the standard and universal methods using titration, ICP-MS or AA methods.

 

All the various head sample analyses conducted during the test program are listed in Table 13.6. The reference to the test number relates to the stage of the test work that the sample was submitted for analysis. The average values for the four different composite samples tested, namely Composite A, Composite B, Composite C, and the Composite A + B blended sample, have all been calculated and are given in the table together with the respective standard deviation values. The standard deviation of the head samples representing Composite A and Composite B are shown to be within 10% of the deviation from the average value. This is considered to be reasonable.

 

 

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However, the average silver value of all the head assay analyses assayed as head samples representing both Composite A and Composite B together is only 86.8 g/t silver. This average silver grade is less than the 95.5 g/t silver as given in the MMI Technical Report as being the overall silver grade of the material of the whole oxide tailings dam (Slim 2005d). Similarly, the average gold value of all the head assay analyses assayed as head samples representing both Composite A and Composite B (i.e. representing the oxide tailings dam) taken during the test work program, is 0.44 g/t gold which also is less than the 0.53 g/t gold, as quoted in the MMI Technical Report (Slim 2005d). For silver, this amounts to a difference of about 9% based on the MMI quoted head grade of 95.5 g/t silver, while for gold the difference is larger at 17% based on the MMI quoted gold value of 0.53 g/t gold. It is of interest that the average head assay for the Composite A + B sample is closer to the calculated average for Composite A and for Composite B, namely 89.6 g/t compared with 86.8 g/t for silver, and 0.41 g/t compared with 0.44 g/t for gold. The above discussion assumes that the tonnages of the tailings dam labelled Composite A (lower bench) will be mixed in equal proportion to the area of the tailings dam designated as Composite B (middle bench). In the absence of specific tailings dam volumes, or tonnages, this assumption may be an oversimplification and may therefore not be entirely valid. However, the assay values for the Composite B is lower than the overall average head grade of the tailings samples collected.

 

Table 13.6 Head Assays

 

Test No.

Assays

(g/t)

Test No.

Assays

(g/t)

Ag

Au

Ag

Au

Composite A

Composite B

SA9

99.8

0.37

SA10

88.3

00.55

Ave. 1

103.4

0.34

Ave. 1

82.6

0.68

Ave. 2

105.3

0.36

Ave. 2

88.4

0.51

C1

95.2

0.35

C4

76.3

0.52

C2

94.3

0.35

C5

70.6

0.49

C3

94.1

0.36

C6

71.4

0.50

C7

88.7

0.36

C9

70.3

0.52

C8

88.7

0.36

C10

70.3

0.52

C13

95.9

0.28

C15

77.2

0.49

C14

98.9

0.37

C16

78.3

0.52

C17

95.2

0.35

C18

77.2

0.49

Average Value

96.32

0.350

Average Value

77.35

0.526

Standard Deviation

5.27

0.025

Standard Deviation

6.72

0.054

Composite C

Column Composite A+B

C11

39.8

0.34

C4

87.4

0.42

C12

39.8

0.34

C5

90.1

0.40

Ave. 1

31.7

0.29

C6

91.4

0.42

Ave. 2

39.8

0.39

C9

-

-

Average Value

37.78

0.340

Average Value

89.63

0.413

Standard Deviation

4.05

0.041

Standard Deviation

2.04

0.012

 

 

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A further comment regarding the assay results above relates to the methods employed for the assaying techniques for silver from these samples. The MMI Technical Report (Slim 2005d) states that for the CMMA 1990 tailings drilling program, the silver assaying was completed using the mine standard practice of fire assay followed by acid digestion and AA finish. The PRA metallurgical test work program used multi-acid digestion followed by ICP assay method for silver analyses. It is anticipated that there will not be a significant difference between the silver assays as reported in 1990 and those from the MMI test program as conducted by PRA, but the extent of this difference cannot be quantified in this review. Similarly, no comment can be given as to the accuracy of the assays conducted by CMMA since the standards of precision of sampling, sample preparation and detailed methodology of the assaying methods are unknown. However, a summary sheet containing assay values has been provided by Avino as being the silver and gold grades obtained from the 1990 CMMA sampling program. No calculations have been performed using these assay values and it is only included in this report since it is part of the CMMA sampling program. The MMI report (Slim 2005d) provides a grid map identifying the various sample holes.

 

Mineralogical Evaluation

 

At the start of the 2004 metallurgical test program, MMI requested that a sample from some of the individual samples be submitted for mineralogical analysis. The mineralogical findings have not been reported in the PRA Report No. 0406407 (Huang and Tan 2005), and also were not alluded to in the MMI Technical Report (Slim 2005d), nor in any of the preceding reports. The reason(s) why these results have apparently not been communicated to Avino or to the investigators of the test program at PRA, is not known.

 

Bond Ball Mill Work Index

 

Although this information was not required for the treatment of the oxide tailings dam material, a Bond Ball Mill Work Index determination test was done on an oxide material sample. The work index was determined to be 12.3 kWh/t using a closing screen size of 74 µm (200 mesh) with convergence of the specific energy input (grams of product per revolution) found after five cycles of testing. This makes the sample tested a moderately hard rock type. The details regarding the origin of this sample have not been documented and its relevance as data is therefore questioned.

 

Bulk Density and Specific Gravity

 

Bulk density and specific gravity determinations were conducted on samples specifically identified by MMI. The specific gravity measurements were done using the standard pycnometric method, while the bulk density values were obtained by measuring the volume of dry solids in a measuring cylinder. The values obtained are reproduced in Table 13.7.


 

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Table 13.7 Bulk Density and Specific Gravity

 

Location/

Bench

Sample

Identify

P 80 Size

(µm)

Bulk Density

(g/cm 3 )

Specific

Gravity

Upper Bench

S2

226

1.66

2.74

Lower Bench

S10

326

1.73

2.62

Lower Bench

S22

367

1.73

2.76

Middle Bench

S45

254

1.60

2.76

Middle Bench

S50

201

1.63

2.74

Upper Bench

S74

301

1.57

2.72

Average

-

-

1.653

2.723

 

The bulk density values determined for the oxide tailings material were found to vary between 1.57 and 1.73 g/cm 3 with an average of 1.653 g/cm 3 . This average value is in reasonable accord with the bulk density of 1.605 g/cm 3 as quoted in the MMI Technical Report. The specific values obtained were generally consistent with an average value of 2.723.

 

Particle Size - Assay Analysis

 

A particle size - fraction analysis was done on the same samples as were used for the bulk density and specific gravity determinations. These tests were conducted to determine whether the silver and gold were predominantly occurring in a particular particle size range. The size-assay analyses indicated that the metal distributions were varied according to the location, but that all displayed the bi-nodal distribution for silver, gold and mass to varying degrees.

  

Sample S10 from Composite A from the Lower Bench of the tailings dam indicated one maximum metal distribution occurring in the size range 149 to 210 µm, and another in the minus 37 µm size range. The maximum mass distributions are generally similar although it occurs over a wider size range in the coarse size, namely 105 to 210 µm. The second sample from this bench, Sample S22, was similar but with a shifted maximum metal and mass distribution in the 210 to 297 µm size range, and a secondary maximum metal and mass distribution in the minus 37 µm size range.

 

Sample S45 from the Middle Bench of the tailings dam, and part of Composite B, indicated maximum metal distribution in the 149 to 210 µm size range with maximum mass distribution in the 105 to 149 µm size range. The secondary maximum metal and mass distribution was found in the minus 37 µm size range. The second sample from the Middle Bench, namely Sample S50, had the maximum metal and mass distributions in the 105 to 149 µm size range as well as the minus 37 µm size range.

 

The two samples from the Upper Bench of the tailings dam of Composite C displayed totally different particle size distributions. Sample S2 was bi-nodal with one maximum for metal and mass distribution in the size range 105 to 149 µm and the second maximum occurring for the size range of minus 37 µm. Sample S74 displayed only one maximum metal and mass distribution over the relatively wide coarse particle size range of 105 to 297 µm. This sample was almost entirely devoid of slimes, or minus 37 µm material.

 


 

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

These samples reflect the operating discharge conditions and history at the time of plant operations and tailings deposition. The results typify the use of a tailings cyclone situated on the tailings dam wall discharging the coarse undersize material onto the wall area with the finer cyclone overflow material flowing downstream and settling within the tailings dam. Changes in the size distribution would be anticipated with downstream distance from the point of discharge by the cyclones at the tailings dam wall. This is typified by the size distribution of Sample S74 which purports to be a cyclone underflow sample taken at the point of discharge and which was found to be almost totally devoid of fines, or minus 37 µm material.

 

Gravity Concentration Tests

 

Pre-concentration tests using the centrifugal gravity concentration method were conducted to evaluate the potential upgrading of silver and gold. The laboratory size concentrator used was the Falcon Model SB40 centrifugal concentrator. The tests were conducted on samples from Composites A, B and C. MMI dictated the test parameters used for these tests, including a set of tests where the samples were reground prior to conducting the gravity concentration test. The results from the gravity concentration tests are summarized in Table 13.8.

 

Table 13.8 Summary of Results of Gravity Concentration Tests

 

Sample Identify

Head Grade

Concentrate Grade

Recovery

(%)

P 80

(µm)

Remarks

(Note: All tests

are 3-pass tests)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Mass

Ag

Au

Composite A

93.8

0.35

124.7

0.52

24.1

32.1

36.5

269

Pressure 1.5 psig; no regrind

Composite B

70.3

0.50

96.9

0.71

23.6

32.5

33.3

180

-

Composite C

39.7

0.33

58.0

0.65

24.1

35.2

47.0

254

-

Composite A

92.1

0.33

126.1

0.71

19.7

27.2

42.1

76

Pressure 1.0 psig; reground

Composite B

70.5

0.56

96.5

1.29

22.4

30.7

51.5

77

-

Composite C

40.7

0.38

65.5

0.98

24.8

39.9

64.3

79

-

 

Note: psig = pounds per square inch (gauge)

 

The mass recoveries varied between 20 and 25% indicating that the tests were performed in a uniform and consistent manner. The highest silver recovery obtained was 40% (after regrind) for Composite C and decreasing to 31% for Composite B (after regrind) and about 27% for Composite A, also after regrind. The gold recoveries were higher than the equivalent silver recoveries, particularly after regrind, indicating that the liberation of the precious metals could be incomplete.

 

However, the upgrading factor for both silver and gold is very low, namely about 1.4 for silver and up to 2.3 for gold. No further upgrading or silver and gold recovery tests were conducted on the gravity concentrates produced possibly as a result of the relatively low grades and recoveries obtained. Also of interest is the fact that no historical test work was documented by MMI where gravity concentration was used to produce a saleable high-grade concentrate.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

13-12

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Flotation

 

Different scoping flotation tests were conducted on samples from Composite A and Composite B using various reagent schemes and conditions as dictated by MMI. The results of the flotation tests are summarized in Table 13.9. The test results reported led to the following conclusions.

 

For Composite A, a regrind from a P 80 size of 238 µm (as received particle size) to a P 80 of 72 µm, improved the flotation recovery of silver from 18 to 23%, and that of gold from 18 to 39%. The standard suite of reagents was used for these tests (Tests F1, F3 and F4). For Composite B, a regrind from a P 80 size of 173 µm (as received particle size) to a P 80 of 74 µm, improved the flotation recovery of silver from 22 to 33%, and that of gold from 12 to 32% (Tests F2, F5 and F6). A particle size fraction analysis distribution conducted on the tailings of Test F4 (Composite A) indicated that the major proportion of the mass and the silver and gold is present in the slimes, or minus 37 µm size fraction. However, significant losses of silver, and particularly gold, occurred in the coarser sizes, namely the size range 53 to 105 µm. This indicates that the degree of liberation could be improved and that some metal appears to be occluded in the coarser particle sizes. Some silver may also occur within secondary oxide minerals and be unrecoverable by flotation. A similar mass and metal distribution was obtained in the case of Test F9 (also Composite A) which was a flotation test performed using a sulphidization reagent.

 

In testing the various flotation reagent suites, variable mass and metal recoveries and concentrate grades were obtained. However, the maximum silver grade obtained for a rougher concentrate was 909 g/t silver, while the overall recoveries for silver could not be improved beyond approximately 40%. This indicated that mineral surface alteration or oxidation, or occlusion of precious metals in gangue, was inhibiting the concentration by the flotation process. Since the silver recoveries obtained were deemed low and unsatisfactory, no further flotation tests were conducted and no extraction tests were performed on flotation concentrates.

 

The head assays obtained during the flotation testing stage gave inconsistent results. Table 13.9 shows the actual head assays obtained for each flotation test compared with the head assay obtained for silver for the composite samples. For Composite A, the individual silver head values for each flotation test conducted are all higher than the assay for the composite sample, except in the case of Test F11. The gold (and silver) values obtained for Tests F7, F8 and F9, are known to have been the result of poor sampling technique adopted for these three tests. The composite head assay gold value of 0.36 g/t gold is probably a reasonably representative assay value for Composite A. For Composite B, the silver head value for the composite sample is slightly lower than the assays for the individual flotation tests. For gold, the composite sample value is higher at 0.52 g/t gold than the assays for the individual tests.

 

The historical results of the flotation tests reported in Table 13.2 are significantly higher at 60 to 69% recovery for silver and 47 to 67% for gold. However, in the absence of information regarding the origins of these samples, the lack of head grade data and the absence of sampling and flotation procedures involved, these results will not be taken into consideration in selecting of the processing options for the oxide tailings dam material.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 13.9 Summary of Results of Flotation Tests

 

Sample Identify &
Test No.

Head
Grade

Concentrate
Grade

Recovery
(%)

P 80
(µm)

Remarks

Ag
(g/t)

Au
(g/t)

Ag
(g/t)

Au
(g/t)

Mass

Ag

Au

Composite A/F1

112.2

0.35

908.7

3.17

2.1

17.8

18.4

238

3-stage ro., pH 8;

Composite A/F3

119.2

0.39

734.6

3.88

2.6

21.0

30.4

103

Conditioning NaCN +

Composite A/F4

104.6

0.40

630.9

3.36

3.8

22.6

38.6

72

Na 2 CO 3 ; A404, PAX

Composite A/F7

111.9

1.39

654.6

5.56

2.3

16.3

34.9

~75

2-stage ro., nil NaCN

Composite A/F8

108.5

2.38

887.2

11.91

0.9

7.8

30.7

~75

2-stage ro., nil NaCN

Composite A/F9

114.5

1.67

723.9

5.86

2.7

20.8

45

~75

2-stage ro., NaS 2 , PAX

Composite A/F10

103.5

0.58

401.3

1.62

8.9

34.6

39.8

~75

with NaCO 3 , CuSO 4

Composite A/F11

99.6

0.34

484.8

1.83

8.8

42.2

48.3

~75

with CuSO 4 , A208

Composite B/F2

88.4

0.42

695.4

2.65

2.6

22.0

12.2

173

3-stage ro., pH 8

Composite B/F5

89.7

0.47

806.1

4.18

2.9

27.0

24.6

92

conditioning NaCN +

Composite B/F6

89.9

0.51

867.1

5.45

2.9

32.5

32.1

74

Na 2 CO 3 ; A404, PAX

Composite A: Head

99.8

0.36

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Composite B: Head

88.3

0.52

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Note: CuSO 4 = copper sulphate; NaCO 3 = sodium carbonate

 

Cyanidation Tests

 

Cyanide leaching tests were conducted on samples from Composite A, Composite B and Composite C using different leaching conditions. The first set of tests were to determine the effect of regrinding the tailings samples prior to leaching while subsequent tests determined the effect of cyanide concentration in the leach solution.

 

For Composite A, the silver extractions varied from 66% for the un-milled (as received) sample to 80% for the samples that were reground, while the gold extractions varied from 82 to 89% respectively. For Composite B, the silver extractions ranged between 69% for as-received material, to 77% for samples that were reground. The corresponding gold extractions varied between 82 and 87%. Although the cyanide consumption increased with the regrinding of samples tested for both Composite A and Composite B, the increase in extraction may compensate for the additional cost of cyanide reagent and regrinding provided that the filtration characteristics are not detrimentally affected. Higher cyanide concentrations in the leach solution tended to improve the extractions of silver and gold, but increased the cyanide consumption significantly as well.

 

The results from the sulphide tailings, namely Composite C, indicate that between 73 and 87% of the silver can be extracted, with between 77 and 85% of the gold. However, the cyanide consumption values were higher than the results from the oxide tailings. Only two leach tests were conducted on reground samples from Composite C, each having a P 80 of about 69 µm. A summary of the cyanide leach test results is given in Table 13.10.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

13-14

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 13.10 Summary of Results of PRA Cyanidation Tests

 

Sample Identify &

Test No.

Extraction

(%)

Reagent Usage

(kg/t)

NaCN

Concentration

(g/L)

P 80

(µm)

Ag

Au

NaCN

Lime

Composite A+/C1

66.4

81.5

1.8

1.4

1.0

269

Composite A+/C2

79.3

85.7

1.6

1.8

1.0

103

Composite A+/C3

80.4

89.1

2.6

1.6

1.0

78

Composite A+/C7

78.6

82.7

2.2

1.8

0.5

74

Composite A+/C8

89.7

85.5

5.1

0.8

2.0

74

Composite A*/C13

79.7

86.8

1.5

1.3

0.5

74

Composite A*/C14

83.1

82.1

3.7

0.8

2.0

74

Composite A*/C17

79.4

90.9

1.0

1.2

1.0

74

Composite B+/C4

69.1

82.0

2.6

1.8

1.0

180

Composite B+/C5

77.1

88.3

1.7

1.8

1.0

100

Composite B+/C6

77.3

86.9

1.7

1.9

1.0

84

Composite B+/C9

73.2

86.0

2.6

1.2

0.5

84

Composite B+/C10

79.5

86.4

4.5

1.0

2.0

84

Composite B*/C15

72.9

82.6

1.6

2.0

0.5

84

Composite B*/C16

75.4

83.4

3.8

1.0

2.0

84

Composite B*/C18

67.7

78.6

0.9

1.3

1.0

84

Composite C+/C11

73.8

77.3

4.0

2.8

1.0

69

Composite C+/C12

86.6

85.0

7.3

2.6

2.0

67

 

Notes:

“+” indicates Original Composite Sample.

“*” indicates New Composite Sample.

Tests C17 & C18 = 24 h leach duration; other tests + 72 h leach duration.

 

During the cyanide leach test program, a new Composite A and Composite B sample had to be prepared since the original composite samples had been exhausted. Comparison of results from the two composite samples indicated similar behaviour patterns, although there are some noticeable differences in the extractions. Also, the cyanide and lime consumption values as recorded are inconsistent. This indicates that absolute numbers cannot be assigned to a single test although any observed trends would be valid. The averages of similar tests would more likely predict the overall responses more accurately. It is also apparent that non-systematic variations in the assay results could have arisen from subtle variations in mineralogy, sample preparation, the sample regrinding process and possibly daily variations in temperature.

 

The cyanide leach extraction results quoted by MMI in Table 13.1, and the averaged results from the present test program, are summarized below in Table 13.11, and will be discussed in the following section.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 13.11 Summary of Cyanidation Test Results Used by the MMI Reports

 

Sample Identify &

Test No.

Extraction

(%)

Remarks

Ag

Au

Composite A/C1

66

82

As-received; 1.0 g/L NaCN

Composite A/C7 & C13

80

85

Average; reground; 0.5 g/L NaCN

Composite B/C4

69

82

As-received; 1.0 g/L NaCN

Composite B/C9 & C15

73

84

Average; reground; 0.5 g/L NaCN

MMI 2003

77

71

Results from 2003 test program

MMI 2003

88

88

Origin of results unrecorded

MMI 2004/C8 & C10

85

86

Average; reground; 2.0 g/L NaCN

 

The average extraction results obtained from samples from Composite A and Composite B in the present study are generally lower than the results from the historical test work as detailed in Table 13.11. However, in the absence of details, these historical results cannot be used in the overall evaluation of this process. The MMI claim of a 77% silver extraction, based on the MMI (2003) test program, cannot be considered an acceptable result since only one test was done. The sample origin is purported to be four holes dug at approximately 25 m intervals with samples scraped into a bag, one for the lower bench and one for the upper bench of the oxide tailings dam. Clearly, a sample collected in this manner cannot be considered to be representative. Also, the other MMI (2003) claim for an extraction result of 89% silver and 88% gold cannot be validated. All these test results can therefore not be considered as valid and will not be used in any further discussions or evaluations.

 

The MMI (2004) results, as claimed in the Technical Report and listed in Table 13.11 above, are also considered unusable. The reasons for this statement are that these results were obtained with a reground sample and leached at a high cyanide concentration of 2.0 g/L sodium cyanide, whereas the other tests were done using 1.0 g/L sodium cyanide. Both these conditions, that is, the regrinding of the tailings material and a high cyanide concentration leach condition, will not be implemented in a recovery process and these results are considered to be unrealistic.

 

The extraction results from the cyanidation tests obtained using as-received samples from Composite A and Composite B, namely 66 to 69% for silver and 82% for gold, were encouraging.

 

Column Leach Test

 

One column leach test was conducted on a 30.9 kg sample being an equal mix of material from Composite A and Composite B. The sample was mixed with water, Portland Cement and lime and then agglomerated to a P 80 size of 2,614 µm. After curing, the sample was put into a column with a diameter of 102 mm and a height of 3 m. The column test was run for a total of 81 days after the solution flowrate and pH had been stabilized. The silver extraction obtained was 73.0% while the gold extraction was 78.9%. These results compare very well to the average extraction values calculated from the cyanidation tests of the individual composite samples leached in the as-received condition, namely 67.8% for silver and 81.8% for gold. The cyanide consumption values are also comparable. The results obtained from the column test, as well as the calculated average extraction values obtained from the tests conducted on the as-received samples of Composite A and Composite B, have been summarized in Table 13.12.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 13.12 Summary of Results of Column Leach Tests

 

Sample &

Test No.

Extraction

(%)

Reagent Consumption

(kg/t)

NaCN

Concentration

(g/L)

P 80

(µm)

Remarks

Ag

Au

NaCN

Lime

Cement

Column Test, Composites A and B

73.0

78.9

2.32

13.73

21.8

0.5 & 2.0

2,614

pH 11;

flowrate

0.05 mL/s

Composites A and B

Average,

Tests C1&C4

67.8

81.8

2.18

1.59

-

1.0

225

pH 10.5/11;

bottle roll

 

The kinetics of leaching had slowed down significantly by Day 81 when the test was terminated, although there was evidence that some leaching was still in progress.

 

A particle size assay analysis of the leach residue of the column test found that the highest unleached (undissolved) silver grade was in the coarsest size range of plus 210 µm, while the highest gold value was found in the minus 37 µm size range. This suggests both inadequate liberation of the silver grains and/or minerals, and occlusion of gold possibly by clay minerals, or the presence of tarnished/coated mineral surfaces, or the presence of refractory minerals. The subsequent leaching of de-agglomerated column leach test residue resulted in a negligible extraction of silver and gold. This indicates that the column leach test had virtually reached its maximum potential extraction, which confirms the observation that the leaching rate had slowed down.

 

Only one column leach test was conducted. Also, the material tested was a mixture of samples from Composite A and Composite B, that is, a mixture of material from the lower and the middle benches of the oxide tailings dam. During the test, flow problems were encountered which resulted in the column having to be unloaded and the material having to be re-agglomerated with the test subsequently re-started after filling the column. In general terms, the results from one test only cannot be regarded as representative of the whole oxide tailings dam. However, despite these limitations and problems encountered, the encouraging results obtained and the close comparison with the bottle-roll tests, implies that the results are relatively reliable. The extraction values obtained from the column test, namely 73.0% for silver and 78.9% for gold, will therefore be used in the evaluation of this treatment process. The reagent consumption values also appear to be very high, namely 13.73 kg/t for lime, 21.8 kg/t for cement and 2.32 kg/t for cyanide. However, lime and cement consumption values obtained in laboratory tests generally approximate commercial operations although, in this case, they seem to be unrealistically high. The cyanide consumption of a commercial operation would typically only be 30 to 50% of that measured in a laboratory test.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Acid-base Accounting

 

The ABA results predict the overall acid generating potential of selected samples. A net acid general potential was found for the sulphide tailings but not the oxide tailings. The processing of the sulphide tailings for silver and gold recovery could modify the ABA and increase the stability of the ultimate residues. Alternatively, the sulphide tailings would require the addition of lime during the process of relocating this material. This would ensure that the sulphide tailings would not cause acid-generating environmental problems.

 

Electrowinning

 

Electrowinning metal recovery tests were conducted using EMEW technology (from the Electrometals Electrowinning company), specifically designed for the electrodeposition of metals from dilute solution tenors. The tests were carried out using filtered cyanide leach pregnant solutions. Although the test results were favourable, it appears unlikely at this stage that this technology could be applied in this situation given the high solution volumes generated and the very low silver concentrations anticipated in the pregnant solution from the heap. However, further test work using the EMEW metal recovery system should be undertaken if the Project advances to the Feasibility Study level because the potential for savings in capital cost and operating cost needs to be investigated.

 

TEST RESULT REVIEW

 

Gravity Concentration

 

Review of Results

 

As indicated in Table 13.8, the upgrading for silver from the as-received oxide tailings was poor with a maximum concentrate grade of 125 g/t silver at a mass recovery of 20%. The upgrading of gold is similarly poor. The re-grinding of the samples prior to gravity concentration leads to an almost negligible improvement in the upgrading of silver to 126 g/t silver, while for gold a maximum concentrate grade of 1.29 g/t gold was obtained. The sulphide tailings response to gravity concentration is equally poor with even lower grade gravity concentrates being obtained despite slightly improved recoveries being observed for both silver and gold.

 

Conclusion

 

The poor results obtained in that no high-grade metal concentrate could be produced, coupled with the fact that no extraction tests for silver and gold were conducted on the gravity concentrates produced, has resulted in the gravity concentration treatment option not being selected for further consideration.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

13-18

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Flotation

 

Review of Results

 

The flotation results have been summarized in Table 13.9. The results indicate that the overall recoveries for both silver and gold are low, namely between 8 and 42% for silver and 12 to 48% for gold. The re-grinding of both the tailings samples (Composite A and Composite B) are seen to improve the recoveries, while the testing of various reagent regimes also resulted in improvements to the overall recoveries of both silver and gold in some cases. However, the overall recoveries are generally considered to be low at less than 40% for silver and less than 48% for gold, and this is coupled with a very low grade concentrate being produced. This poor flotation response is probably the result of surface alterations and/or inadequate liberation of the silver and gold bearing minerals. No extraction tests were conducted on any of the flotation concentrates produced and so the total extent of extraction is not known. No tests were conducted on the sulphide tailings material (Composite C) and its response to flotation as a pre-concentration process is therefore not known.

 

Conclusion

 

Flotation will not be considered as a treatment option for the recovery of silver and gold from the oxide tailings dam material. For the reasons specified above, namely a generally low recovery of silver and gold, the option of using flotation to recover silver and gold will not be considered as a processing method in the treatment of the oxide tailings dam material.

 

Cyanide Leaching

 

Review of Results

 

Cyanidation leach tests were done on samples from Composite A and Composite B under different conditions of particle size and solution cyanide concentration. The results have been summarized in Table 13.10. The results generally indicated that cyanidation was still occurring after 72 h of the leaching time used for the laboratory tests, but at a much reduced rate. The base metals copper and zinc also dissolved during the cyanide leach and will contribute to the overall consumption of cyanide. Increasing the cyanide concentration in the leach solution generally improved the extraction of silver and gold, but also increased the overall cyanide consumption. The extraction of silver and gold from Composite A increased with fineness of grind, while Composite B did not improve the extraction for finer grinds than P 80 of 100 µm. The cyanide consumption figures are inconsistent in some cases although trends are apparent. Although limited test work was done on material from Composite C, namely the sulphide tailings, a set of results have been included in Table 13.13 below for purposes of comparison.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

13-19

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 13.13 Cyanide Leaching Parameters

 

Sample Identify

Head Grade

Extraction

(%)

Reagent
Consumption

(kg/t)

NaCN

Concentration

(g/l)

P80

(µm)

Remarks

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

NaCN

Lime

Composite A

94.7

0.35

66.4

81.5

1.8

1.4

1.0

269

As-received sample

Composite B

95.9

0.28

69.1

82.0

2.6

1.8

1.0

180

Average of A & B

95.3

0.32

67.8

81.8

2.2

1.6

1.0

225

Composite A

94.7

0.35

79.3

85.7

1.6

1.8

1.0

103

Reground sample

Composite B

70.3

0.52

77.1

88.3

1.7

1.8

1.0

100

Average of A & B

82.5

0.44

78.2

87.0

1.7

1.8

1.0

102

Composite C

39.8

0.34

73.8

77.3

4.0

2.8

1.0

69

 

Conclusions

 

As-received (unmilled) and reground tailings dam material will be expected to show the following extraction results under normal leaching conditions of approximately 68% for silver and 82% for gold. The reground material will give higher extractions at approximately 78% for silver and 87% for gold (see results in Table 13.12). Although the regrinding of tailings material is considered to be an expensive treatment method, cyanidation with and without regrinding as a treatment option will be reviewed and discussed in Sections 17.1.

 

Column Leach Test

 

Review of Results

 

One column leach test was conducted using a blend of equal proportions of as-received (unmilled) Composite A and Composite B oxide tailings material. Despite interruptions in the leaching cycle as a result of the de-agglomeration of material in the column and the resultant percolation of fines, the overall extraction of silver was 73% and 79% for gold (see Table 13.12 for the results). Although the test was terminated after a total leaching time of 81 d, indications were that the leaching process was nearing completion but had not finalized at that stage. The above extraction results compare very well with the average extraction results obtained from the bottle roll leach tests, namely 68% extraction for silver and 82% for gold. The cyanide consumption of 2.3 kg/t for the column test was also comparable with that obtained for the bottle roll leach tests, namely 2.2 kg/t. The lime consumption for the column test was significantly higher probably as a result of the two repeated agglomeration exercises.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Conclusions

 

Although only one column leach test was performed, the extraction results are in keeping with those obtained from the bottle roll tests. The results as given in Table 13.12 will be used for developing the process design criteria.

 

Precious Metal Recovery

 

Review of Results

 

Only one technology was tested for recovering precious metals from cyanide leach solutions. The pregnant solution arising from leach tests performed on oxide tailings material was used to conduct electrowinning tests. Three tests were conducted using the EMEW technology. These tests indicated that silver could be electrowon from solutions with a starting concentration of about 58 mg/L silver to a depleted electrolyte with about 3 mg/L silver. The deposition was also shown to be very selective with respect to the co-deposition of base metals. However, the pregnant solution from a leaching heap is expected to be significantly less than 58 mg/l silver, possibly as low as 16 mg/L silver. It is unclear whether the EMEW technology could operate efficiently under such low silver tenors.

 

The alternative process options for the recovery of precious metals would likely be either activated carbon, or the zinc precipitation method. No tests were conducted on these two process options. The use of an activated carbon circuit to recover silver is not recommended because of the added operational complexity. Also, the relatively high-grade of the silver in solution will result in the treating of relatively large amounts of carbon, which will add to the cost of the Project.

 

Conclusions

 

No other historical test work results were reported by MMI, nor are any alternative technology results known to have taken place, which tested the recovery of silver from the Avino Mine tailings material. The Merrill-Crowe process will therefore be the preferred technology to recover the silver and gold from pregnant leach solution.

 

13.3.3 RECOMMENDATIONS

 

Further tests are recommended to evaluate the metallurgical performances of the tailings samples, including the sulphide tailings samples. Test work should be conducted on samples that better represent the tailings resources. The test work should include:

 

 

· head characterization and mineralogical determination leaching condition optimization, including cyanide concentration, leaching retention time, agglomeration binding material types and dosages.

 

 

 

 

· determination of the effect of the particle size distribution on metal extraction and agglomeration.

 

 

 

 

· further confirmation of the effect of flotation pre-concentration on improving overall metal recovery.

 

 

 

· residual cyanide management tests, including residual cyanide and valuable metal recoveries from the barren solution.

 

For the sulphide tailings, systematic test work should be conducted to effectively recover silver and gold values from the tailings, including co-processing of the sulphide tailings with the oxide tailings.

 

 

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14.0 MINERAL RESOURCE ESTIMATES

 

14.1   RESOURCE SUMMARY  

 

The following tables provide a synopsis of the reported Mineral Resources reported in this section. Table 14.1 summarizes the base case values for all current Mineral Resources on the Property.

 

The reporting cut-off for the Avino Vein is 55 g/t Ag_Eq and the cut-off for the San Gonzalo Vein is 125 g/t Ag_Eq. These cut-offs were determined by Avino based on actual mining scenarios and a silver price of $19.50/oz. Current cut-offs used for financial projections by Avino, based on recent market prices, include 50 g/t for the Avino Vein and 120 g/t for the San Gonzalo Vein.

 

The reporting cut-off for the oxide tailings is 50 g/t Ag_Eq.

 

No Mineral Resource for the sulphide tailings is disclosed in this Technical Report.

 

A PEA should not be considered to be a Prefeasibility or Feasibility study, as the economics and technical viability of the Project have not been demonstrated at this time. The PEA is preliminary in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves. Furthermore, there is no certainty that the conclusions or results reported in the PEA will be realized. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

 

 

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Table 14.1 Avino Mine - Mineral Resources

 

Resource Category

Deposit

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq

g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Grade

Metal Contents

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Ag

(million

tr oz)

Au

(thousand

tr oz)

Cu

(t)

Avino Mine: Measured & Indicated Mineral Resources

Measured

Avino System

55

950,000

143

74

0.33

0.69

2.3

10.0

6,550

Measured

San Gonzalo System

125

170,000

357

272

1.50

0.00

1.5

8.2

0

Total Measured

All Deposits

-

1,120,000

176

105

0.51

0.58

3.8

18.2

6,550

Indicated

Avino System

55

500,000

129

68

0.36

0.56

1.1

5.7

2,800

Indicated

San Gonzalo System

125

320,000

310

237

1.30

0.00

2.4

13.3

0

Indicated

Oxide Tailings

50

1,330,000

124

98

0.46

0.00

4.2

19.8

0

Total Indicated

All Deposits

-

2,150,000

152

111

0.56

0.13

7.7

38.8

2,800

Total Measured & Indicated

All Deposits

-

3,270,000

160

109

0.54

0.29

11.5

57.0

9,350

Avino Mine: Inferred Mineral Resources

Inferred

Avino System

55

5,790,000

155

81

0.57

0.58

15.1

105.8

33,550

Inferred

San Gonzalo System

125

540,000

403

314

1.58

0.00

5.5

27.5

0

Inferred

Oxide Tailings

50

1,810,000

113

88

0.44

0.00

5.1

25.6

0

Total Inferred

All Deposits

-

8,140,000

162

98

0.61

0.41

25.6

158.9

33,550

 

Notes:

Figures may not add to totals shown due to rounding.

Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.
The Mineral Resource estimate is classified in accordance with the CIM Definition Standards
For Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves incorporated by reference into NI 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects.
Mineral Resources are reported at cut-off grades 50 g/t, 55 g/t, and 125 g/t Ag_Eq.
Silver equivalent grades were calculated using conversion formulas Ag_Eq = Ag + 55.9 * Au + 72.99 * Cu for Avino Vein and Ag_Eq = Ag + 56.38 * Au for San Gonzalo Vein System and oxide tailings.

 

Cut-off grades were calculated using current costs, silver price of US$19.50/oz., gold price of US$1,250/oz. and copper price of US$2.10/lb.

 

 

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14.2 DATA

 

Drillhole data for the Avino and San Gonzalo resource estimates was supplied by Avino to Aranz in the form of several Microsoft ® Excel spreadsheet and Microsoft ® Access files, and this data was verified and compiled into .csv files (see Section 12.1).

 

Wireframe meshes (.dxf files) of the topography, underground development, previous 3D models of the San Gonzalo and Avino Veins and cross-section and plan view images were supplied by Avino. Drillhole data was imported into Datamine software (version 3.24.25.0) and Leapfrog Geo .

 

Data includes underground channel sampling and diamond drill data.

 

14.3 AVINO VEIN

 

14.3.1 GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION

 

The Avino Vein and the surrounding system are interpreted as part of a low- to intermediate-sulphidation system of silver-gold epithermal veins, breccias, stockworks, and silicified zones. The Avino system is relatively thick (up to 40 m thick in places) and exhibits lower silver but higher copper grades than the San Gonzalo Vein system.

 

Historically, exposure and sampling of the deposit in underground development has been understandably biased towards the higher end of the silver grade spectrum. This presents problems when making decisions on what should be considered to be mineralized vein material, as the position of the mineralization to barren interface was either not exposed or recorded in the development data. In many cases the edge of the mineralized zones was approximated by the end of sampling, the edge of the development or a 40 g/t silver grade.

 

14.3.2 WIREFRAMING

 

Mineralized zones were independently modeled by Aranz in Leapfrog Geo software, utilizing the drillhole data, topography and the underground development information. Wireframes supplied by Avino assisted in modelling the deposit. These wireframes were imported into Datamine Studio 3 software to provide the domain information to populate blocks in the resource model.

 

The modelling was carried out independently by Aranz using Leapfrog Geo software applying an implicit “vein system”-style of modelling workflow to produce a series of seamless 3D units.

 

The Avino mineralized vein system was modelled as four subparallel but cross-cutting veins including the main most persistent body consisting of vein material sandwiched between two prominent and siliceous breccias and three subsidiary units (NW1, NW2, NE1). Lithology information and grade information were both used to interpret the extents of the veins and to flag sampled and logged intervals as country rock or as one of the units of interest. Lithology information is often not available for the mined-out areas and grade interpretations had to be used. Material outside the veins and most likely of low grade has usually not been recorded in the legacy data for obvious reasons. Where there is absence of recorded intersections of the vein margins, Aranz has erred on the side of caution by interpreting the edges of the vein to the last samplings with appreciable grades.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Figure 14.1 Oblique View, Looking North, of the Avino Vein System Model

 

 

To test the robustness of the model, grade contact profiles were generated.

 

Grade contact profiles demonstrate how well the wireframe meshes segregate the metal, based on the assayed samples. These contact profiles were generated by determining the average grades for sampled metals within successive 5 m wide slices inside and outside the Avino Vein System models for a range of distances from -10 m (inside the system) to +50 m (outside) from the contact.

 

The profiles are shown in graphs in Figure 14.2 and the number of samples per 5 m slice is shown in Figure 14.3. There is a moderately rapid decrease with increasing distance from the vein contacts in silver, gold, zinc and copper profiles (as shown in Figure 14.2). To better display the profiles on a single graph, silver has been re-scaled to fit and copper and zinc are in percentage units. For example, the silver grade is generally in excess of 80 g/t within the vein but decreases to an average of less than 30 g/t at a distance of 30 m from the vein contact. Zinc appears to be a good indicator element for the mineralized system and rapidly decreases in abundance within 5 m of the contact. This may be used to advantage in future modelling of the system.

 


 

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As can be seen (Figure 14.3), there is a rapid decrease of information at ranges greater than 20 m from the contact (contact is represented by “0” on the horizontal axis). This is to be expected as the information has been generated in underground workings that have been designed to preferentially expose and sample material that is better mineralized in the vein system. Information is biased towards the underground excavations and the understandable historic tendency to only sample material at any distances away from the known veins that display good mineralization characteristics. However, the profiles do provide an indication that the Avino Vein System has a gradational or soft boundary tendency from an estimation point of view. Silver, gold and copper show the gradational profile, while zinc has relatively sharp profile. This should be followed up to develop future estimation strategies.

 

Figure 14.2 Grade Profiles Across the Avino Vein System Contacts  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.3 Number of Samples per Slice Across the Avino Vein System Contacts  

 

 

14.4 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

14.4.1 GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION

 

The San Gonzalo Vein is interpreted as part of a low- to intermediate-sulphidation system of silver-gold epithermal veins and silicified zones. The individual veins in the San Gonzalo system are relatively narrow (mostly less than 3 m thick in places) and exhibits higher silver but lower copper grades than the Avino Vein system.

 

14.4.2 WIREFRAMING

 

The system was modelled as six sub parallel but cross-cutting veins consisting of a main vein (SG1) and five subsidiary units (SG2 through SG6). Lithology information and grade information were both used to interpret the extents of the veins and to flag sampled and logged intervals as country rock or as one of the units of interest. Figure 14.4 displays the modeling results graphically.

 

 

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Figure 14.4 Oblique View, Looking North, of the San Gonzalo Vein System Model

 

 

To assess the level to which the interpreted San Gonzalo Veins have honoured the selection contact profiles were generated to examine how well the wireframe meshes segregate the metal, based on the assayed samples. The San Gonzalo Veins are more compact than the Avino Veins and the metal grades at San Gonzalo are largely confined to the vein material. The contact profiles were generated by determining the average grade s for several metals within successive 5 m wide slices inside and outside the San Gonzalo Vein System models for a range of distances from -1.5 m (inside the system) to +1.7 m (outside) from the contact. The profiles are shown in Figure 14.5. There is a rapid decrease with increasing distance from the vein contacts in silver, gold and copper profiles.

 


 

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Figure 14.5 Grade Profiles Across the San Gonzalo Vein System Contacts  

 

 

For example, the silver grade is generally in excess of 200 g/t within the vein but decreases to an average of less than 50 g/t at a distance of 1 m from the vein contact.

 

For gold the contacts were less conspicuous, but average grade data still showed that the populations were statistically distinct. All contacts between mineralized and wall rock populations were treated as hard boundaries in estimation.

 

The San Gonzalo Vein System model is more robust when compared to the data and displays more abrupt metal profiles than the equivalent for the Avino Vein. This may reflect real differences in the mineralization styles (thickness and metal grade differences also support a different process) but may also to some degree be a result of the sparse legacy lithology data in the upper part of the Avino Mine.

 

 

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14.5 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

14.5.1 GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION

 

In the Avino oxide tailings, a prominent bench separates the lower portion of the deposit (referred to as the “oxide lower bench” in various documents) from the upper portion of the oxide tailings (the “middle bench”). Overlying the oxide tailings is a volume of sulphide tailings material (the “upper bench” or “sulphide tailings”). The sulphide tailings material lacks representative sampling data.

 

Figure 14.6 is a perspective view looking north, showing the oxide lower bench, oxide lower bench and sulphide tailings and the positions of drillholes and silver assays.

 

Figure 14.6 Perspective View of Oxide Tailings Drilling and Silver Assays

 

14.5.2 WIREFRAMING

 

The tailings deposit was modelled using topography information supplied by Avino and bedrock contact information from the drilling data.

 

 

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Figure 14.7 Section View, Looking Northeast, Showing Silver Grades in Oxide Tailings Benches

   

The grade pattern of the upper and lower and middle benches has been better defined by the addition of the recent drilling information (more than doubling the amount of assays, see Table 14.2). Previously, the middle and lower oxide benches were considered separately from an estimation perspective based on the colour difference, the middle bench appearing to be more reddish than the lower material. This may reflect a change in iron content but not necessarily the gold or silver grades. The sampling data (see Figure 14.7) shows a pattern of silver depletion at the top of the middle bench with enrichment immediately below.

 

The spatial pattern indicates gradational changes between the middle and lower oxide benches, except for silver which appears to have been leached downwards from the top of the middle bench. While the colour difference between the two units may be significant for iron-bearing species, there is not a great statistical difference between the silver and gold grades in the middle and lower benches and the leaching effect (see Figure 14.6) appears to affect the upper portion of the middle bench. Consequently, it was decided to estimate the middle and lower bench as a single domain. The use of a variogram and search ellipse, flattened in the horizontal direction also reduces the risk of smearing grade vertically. In future it may be preferable to evaluate the leached cap of the tailings separately from the remainder. The risk of not doing so at this time, is ameliorated by the horizontal variogram continuity which reduces the risk of mixing.

 

 

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14.6 EXPLORATORY DATA ANALYSIS

 

14.6.1 RAW DATA ASSAYS AND STATISTICS

 

AVINO AND SAN GONZALO

 

Table 14.2 shows the length-weighted metal statistics for the sample data for the Avino and San Gonzalo mineralization. Assayed metals include silver, gold, copper, zinc, and lead. Metals considered in the Avino resource estimate include silver, gold, and copper. The domain numbers refer to the individual veins making up the Avino and San Gonzalo systems.

 

OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The drillhole dataset included 28 drillholes with a total metreage of 482.9 m that was completed in the tailings from 1990 to 2005. A total of 57 holes were drilled and sampled in 2015 and 2016, providing an additional 772.5 m of sampling. All drillholes intersect the oxide tailings, with a total of 1,004 assays of gold and 1,004 assays of silver. Most of the new campaign drilling has also been assayed for copper, lead and zinc. However, only the gold and silver are considered to be of economic interest in the oxide tailings deposit.

 

 

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Table 14.2 Metal Grade Statistics for Sampling of the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein Systems

 

Deposit

Domain

Metal

Number of

Samples

Minimum

Maximum

Mean

Variance

Coefficient of

Variation

Capping

Value

Number

Capped

San Gonzalo Vein

10

Ag

9,324

0

14,768

293.78

533,214

2.49

3,000

13

San Gonzalo Vein

10

Au

9,324

0

276.54

1.531

29.152

3.527

50

2

San Gonzalo Vein

10

Cu

9,372

0

3.74

0.061

0.017

2.132

0.8

3

San Gonzalo Vein

10

Pb

9,372

0

20

0.456

1.403

2.598

10

7

San Gonzalo Vein

10

Zn

9,372

0

35.5

0.757

4.255

2.725

15

3

San Gonzalo Vein

20

Ag

222

0.7

3,610.7

111.31

89,853.73

2.69

200

1

San Gonzalo Vein

20

Au

222

0.005

33.37

0.752

6.393

3.364

11

1

San Gonzalo Vein

20

Cu

232

0

0.832

0.051

0.012

2.167

0.4

5

San Gonzalo Vein

20

Pb

232

0

6.53

0.301

0.639

2.657

4

2

San Gonzalo Vein

20

Zn

232

0

13.15

0.429

1.326

2.681

2

1

San Gonzalo Vein

30

Ag

95

0.5

1,917.4

203.95

100,522.77

1.55

1,000

4

San Gonzalo Vein

30

Au

95

0.003

12.82

1.048

2.524

1.516

3

10

San Gonzalo Vein

30

Cu

95

0.001

0.938

0.064

0.013

1.762

0.5

1

San Gonzalo Vein

30

Pb

95

0.006

12.82

0.751

3.565

2.514

5

8

San Gonzalo Vein

30

Zn

95

0.012

17.3

1.221

7.154

2.19

6

7

San Gonzalo Vein

40

Ag

229

0.5

5,265.2

225.85

330,283.92

2.54

2,000

1

San Gonzalo Vein

40

Au

229

0.01

16.32

0.745

2.635

2.179

2

2

San Gonzalo Vein

40

Cu

230

0

0.52

0.058

0.005

1.226

0.4

2

San Gonzalo Vein

40

Pb

230

0

1.83

0.22

0.066

1.164

1.2

2

San Gonzalo Vein

40

Zn

230

0

7.02

0.906

1.252

1.235

5

2

San Gonzalo Vein

50

Ag

36

1.5

2,851.9

229.25

320,717.12

2.47

1,000

8

San Gonzalo Vein

50

Au

36

0.01

5.96

0.679

2.21

2.189

3

11

San Gonzalo Vein

50

Cu

36

0.001

0.649

0.074

0.014

1.582

-

San Gonzalo Vein

50

Pb

33

0

2.39

0.243

0.28

2.175

1

5

San Gonzalo Vein

50

Zn

33

0.009

1.18

0.223

0.105

1.458

1

9

San Gonzalo Vein

60

Ag

56

0.7

395.1

28.49

4,906.92

2.46

100

8

San Gonzalo Vein

60

Au

56

0.002

2.66

0.168

0.137

2.208

1

6

table continues…

 

 

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Deposit

Domain

Metal

Number of

Samples

Minimum

Maximum

Mean

Variance

Coefficient of

Variation

Capping

Value

Number

Capped

San Gonzalo Vein

60

Cu

56

0

0.258

0.019

0.001

1.938

-

5

San Gonzalo Vein

60

Pb

56

0.001

4.83

0.134

0.202

3.363

1

5

San Gonzalo Vein

60

Zn

56

0.01

4.22

0.198

0.18

2.146

1

3

Avino Vein

10

Ag

4,916

0.91

1,242.95

124.03

8,145.44

0.73

800

5

Avino Vein

10

Au

4,915

0

1,17.154

0.935

10.694

3.496

12

10

Avino Vein

10

Cu

4,916

0

7.6

0.803

0.326

0.712

5

2

Avino Vein

10

Pb

1,101

0

19.15

0.236

1.064

4.369

6

3

Avino Vein

10

Zn

1,958

0

4.89

0.152

0.085

1.913

-

0

Avino Vein

20

Ag

79

21

566.75

148.1

8,327.32

0.62

500

1

Avino Vein

20

Au

79

0.168

5.6

1.228

0.819

0.737

3

5

Avino Vein

20

Cu

78

0.08

2.85

0.776

0.24

0.631

2

2

Avino Vein

20

Pb

25

0.04

5.2

0.689

0.927

1.397

3

4

Avino Vein

20

Zn

25

0.08

2.8

0.624

0.575

1.215

-

0

Avino Vein

30

Ag

35

22

356.18

172.42

7,887.49

0.52

300

2

Avino Vein

30

Au

35

0.35

2.65

1.241

0.296

0.439

2

2

Avino Vein

30

Cu

35

0.2

2.829

0.663

0.258

0.766

2

2

Avino Vein

30

Pb

4

0.4

1.328

0.774

0.225

0.613

2.5

1

Avino Vein

30

Zn

4

0.22

4

2.115

3.524

0.888

-

0

 

 

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Table 14.3 Oxide Tailings Samples by Sampling Campaign

 

By campaign

Pre-2012

2015-16

Campaign

0

1

Number (Ag)

448

561

Number (Au)

448

556

Number (Cu)

0

566

Number (Pb)

0

563

Number (Zn)

0

566

Mean Ag (g/t)

95.39

97.81

Mean Au (g/t)

0.53

0.47

Mean Cu (%)

-

0.14

Mean Pb (%)

-

0.99

Mean Zn (%)

-

0.19

Variance Ag

814.94

1073.20

Variance Au

0.03

0.06

Variance Cu

-

0.01

Variance Pb

-

0.18

Variance Zn

-

0.04

Minimum Ag

11.00

4.00

Minimum Au

0.10

0.01

Minimum Cu

-

0.00

Minimum Pb

-

0.00

Minimum Zn

-

0.00

Maximum Ag

222.00

309.00

Maximum Au

1.28

2.02

Maximum Cu

-

0.66

Maximum Pb

-

3.26

Maximum Zn

-

1.65

CV Ag

0.09

0.11

CV Au

0.10

0.26

CV Cu

-

0.53

CV Pb

-

0.18

CV Zn

-

1.19

 

The total dataset has been divided by unit and the metal assay statistics are summarized in Table 14.4.

 

 

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Table 14.4 Oxide Tailings Assays by Unit

 

Unit

Unknown

Lower

Middle

Bedrock

Length (m)

139.7

608.9

619.2

28.2

Number (Ag)

50

497

482

11

Number (Au)

50

497

482

11

Number (Cu)

41

186

207

3

Number (Pb)

41

186

207

3

Number (Zn)

41

186

207

3

Mean Ag (g/t)

97.72

103.85

89.27

77.55

Mean Au (g/t)

0.39

0.47

0.51

0.29

Mean Cu (%)

0.15

0.13

0.12

0.14

Mean Pb (%)

1.24

1.12

0.85

1.28

Mean Zn (%)

0.18

0.18

0.12

0.20

Variance Ag

20.60

20.60

52.00

20.60

Variance Au

0.20

0.11

0.13

0.11

Variance Cu

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

Variance Pb

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

Variance Zn

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

Minimum Ag

148.13

182.01

193.13

115.00

Minimum Au

0.74

1.08

1.21

0.44

Minimum Cu

0.27

0.27

0.26

0.15

Minimum Pb

1.75

1.83

2.02

1.50

Minimum Zn

0.34

0.38

0.26

0.22

Maximum Ag

542.01

428.63

525.92

1257.48

Maximum Au

0.01

0.02

0.01

0.01

Maximum Cu

24.41

22.01

9.75

3.51

Maximum Pb

479.10

531.34

528.62

453.94

Maximum Zn

18.67

25.97

12.96

6.20

CV Ag

0.00

0.00

0.01

0.00

CV Au

1.30

0.52

0.48

1.34

CV Cu

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

CV Pb

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

CV Zn

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

 

14.6.2 OUTLIER MANAGEMENT AND CAPPING STRATEGY

 

It is common practice in the mineral industry to restrict the influence of high assays through “top-cutting” or “capping”. Capping was implemented for each element and for each domain, after to sample length compositing. Capping limits were chosen based on a review of sampling histograms using Snowden Supervisor software and examination of coefficient of variation statistic for each domain. The coefficient of variation, also known as relative standard deviation (RSD), is a standardized measure of dispersion of a probability distribution and provides an indication of the presence of significant outliers. Coefficient of variation statistics greater than two and the visual detection of irregular behaviour in the upper portion of log histogram of the data were used as an indicator that capping should be applied.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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14.6.3 DRILLHOLE COMPOSITING

 

Compositing is carried out to ensure a common ‘change of support’ length. If samples are not composited, small length samples with a high grade (and the converse) might bias the estimation process.

 

Inspection of the raw data from the Avino and San Gonzalo systems, indicated that a common composite length of 2 m would accommodate most sample lengths as the majority of sample lengths were less than 2 m and 2 m was used as the standard composite length for the deposit.

 

Compositing in Leapfrog included all samples in the composites with a minimum width of 1.0 m within the mineralized zones. New composites were thus created each time the domain changed.

 

14.7 DENSITY

 

14.7.1 DENSITY DATA

 

Density data was supplied by Avino in the form of a set of measurements made at site. Summary statistics for these measurements are provided in Table 14.5 and Table 14.6.

 

Table 14.5 Avino Vein System Density Data Summary

 

Domain

Number

Minimum

Maximum

Mean

Variance

Coefficient of

Variation

10 (Main)

40

2.53

3.00

2.71

0.02

0.05

20

42

2.43

2.90

2.68

0.01

0.03

Wall Rock

93

2.29

3.00

2.65

0.04

0.07

Combined

175

2.29

3.00

2.67

0.03

0.06

 

Table 14.6 San Gonzalo Vein System Density Data Summary

 

Domain

Number

Minimum

Maximum

Mean

Variance

Coefficient of

Variation

10

50

2.40

3.00

2.64

0.03

0.07

20

2

2.73

2.78

2.76

0.00

0.01

Wall Rock

41

2.40

3.00

2.69

0.02

0.05

Combined

93

2.40

3.00

2.67

0.03

0.06

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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The Avino Vein System density data is widely spaced in drillholes across the lower portion of the mine and more than half of the measurements are not in the vein material. The San Gonzalo Vein System density data is more comprehensive but more than 40% of the measurements are not in the vein material.

 

The density data is generally so sparse and so widely-spaced that spatial estimation seems unlikely to provide meaningful results. Consequently, it was decided to use a global average of 2.63 that reflects the historic average used at the mine for both the Avino and the San Gonzalo Vein Systems.

 

Avino conducted bulk density measurements on 432 samples from 20 drillholes in the oxide tailings. Based on these data, Slim (2005d) determined a global average specific gravity value of 1.605 for the oxide tailings. No new specific gravity data that can be considered representative of the tailings pile has been collected, so Aranz used the specific gravity value of 1.605 for the current oxide tailings estimate.

 

14.8 VARIOGRAPHY AND SPATIAL ANALYSIS

 

Variography was conducted utilizing Snowden Supervisor software. The experimental variograms were modelled parallel to the orientations of the veins in the case of the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins and horizontal for the oxide tailings.

 

Experimental variograms were modelled for all three deposits, for all domains and for silver, gold, copper, lead and zinc.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Figure 14.8 through to Figure 14.14 are representative of the variography.

 

Figure 14.8 Avino Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-18

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Figure 14.9 Avino Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Gold Variograms

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-19

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Figure 14.10 Avino Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Copper Variograms

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-20

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Figure 14.11 San Gonzalo Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Figure 14.12 San Gonzalo Vein: Domain 10 Experimental Gold Variograms

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Figure 14.13 Oxide Tailings: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Figure 14.14 Oxide Tailings: Domain 10 Experimental Silver Variograms

 

 

  

14.9 INTERPOLATION PLAN AND KRIGING PARAMETERS

 

Estimation for the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein systems was carried out using Datamine software and parameters optimized by kriging neighbourhood analysis (KNA) carried out using Supervisor software. Optimization was achieved by minimising the number of negative kriging weights and maximising the theoretical slope of regression of the estimates.

 

14.9.1 AVINO

 

A single block model was created to cover the Avino system. A block size of 10 m by 10 m by 10 m was used for block model and resource estimate. The interpolation method used for populating the block model was OK following a kriging neighbourhood specification tested in Snowden Supervisor software. A minimum of 16 and maximum of 48 composites were used per block with a maximum of 40 samples per drillhole.

 

Estimation parameters for the Avino Vein System are summarised in Table 14.7.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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14.9.2 SAN GONZALO

 

A single block model was created to cover the San Gonzalo system. A block size of 10 m by 10 m by 10 m was used for block model and resource estimate. The interpolation method used for populating the block model was OK following a kriging neighbourhood specification tested in Snowden Supervisor software. A minimum of 16 and maximum of 48 composites were used per block with a maximum of 40 samples per drillhole.

 

Estimation parameters used for the San Gonzalo System are summarised in Table 14.8.

 

14.9.3 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

A single block model was created to cover the Avino oxide tailings deposit. A block size of 20 m by 20 m by 2 m was used for block model and resource estimate, as the average distance between sample drillholes approximates 30 m and the composite length is 2 m. The interpolation method used for populating the block model was OK following a kriging neighbourhood specification tested in Snowden Supervisor software. A minimum of 8 and maximum of 32 composites were used per block with a maximum of 40 samples per drillhole.

 

Estimation parameters used for the oxide tailings deposit are summarised in Table 14.9.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 14.7 Avino Vein System: Variogram and Search Parameters

 

Domain 10 (Main)

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.5

0.27

44

11

4

0.23

128

48

17

155

65

145

8

32

Au

0.3

0.33

12

10

9

0.37

122

56

28

155

65

145

8

32

Cu

0.4

0.33

53

23

11

0.27

150

87

23

155

65

145

8

32

Pb

0.42

0.28

12

10

8

0.3

88

50

23

155

65

145

8

32

Zn

0.43

0.31

20

14

6

0.26

93

60

20

155

65

145

8

32

Domain 20 (NW1)

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.5

0.27

44

11

4

0.23

128

48

17

-175

45

135

8

32

Au

0.3

0.33

12

10

9

0.37

122

56

28

-175

45

135

8

32

Cu

0.4

0.33

53

23

11

0.27

150

87

23

-175

45

135

8

32

Pb

0.42

0.28

12

10

8

0.3

88

50

23

-175

45

135

8

32

Zn

0.43

0.31

20

14

6

0.26

93

60

20

-175

45

135

8

32

Domain 30 (NW2)

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.5

0.27

44

11

4

0.23

128

48

17

180

90

110

8

32

Au

0.3

0.33

12

10

9

0.37

122

56

28

180

90

110

8

32

Cu

0.4

0.33

53

23

11

0.27

150

87

23

180

90

110

8

32

Pb

0.42

0.28

12

10

8

0.3

88

50

23

180

90

110

8

32

Zn

0.43

0.31

20

14

6

0.26

93

60

20

180

90

110

8

32

table continues…

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-26

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Domain 40 (NE1)

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.5

0.27

44

11

4

0.23

128

48

17

180

90

110

8

32

Au

0.3

0.33

12

10

9

0.37

122

56

28

180

90

110

8

32

Cu

0.4

0.33

53

23

11

0.27

150

87

23

180

90

110

8

32

Pb

0.42

0.28

12

10

8

0.3

88

50

23

180

90

110

8

32

Zn

0.43

0.31

20

14

6

0.26

93

60

20

180

90

110

8

32

Domain 50

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

35

75

130

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

35

75

130

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

35

75

130

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

35

75

130

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

35

75

130

8

32

Domain 60

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

55

80

110

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

55

80

110

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

55

80

110

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

55

80

110

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

55

80

110

8

32

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-27

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 14.8 San Gonzalo Vein System: Variogram and Search Parameters

 

Domain 10 (SG1)

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

35

75

105

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

35

75

95

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

35

75

105

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

35

75

105

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

35

75

105

8

32

Domain 20

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

5

85

100

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

5

85

100

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

5

85

100

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

5

85

100

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

5

85

100

8

32

Domain 30

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

-165

90

95

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

-165

90

95

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

-165

90

95

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

-165

90

95

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

-165

90

95

8

32

table continues…

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Domain 40 (Anjelica)

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

10

95

100

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

10

95

100

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

10

95

100

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

10

95

100

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

10

95

100

8

32

Domain 50

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

35

75

130

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

35

75

130

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

35

75

130

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

35

75

130

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

35

75

130

8

32

Domain 60

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle Rotation DM Convention

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

Ag

0.35

0.32

37

11

7

0.33

92

42

14

55

80

110

8

32

Au

0.82

0.11

19

17

9

0.07

49

32

21

55

80

110

8

32

Cu

0.57

0.21

31

22

11

0.22

135

92

24

55

80

110

8

32

Pb

0.71

0.22

35

20

6

0.06

123

38

21

55

80

110

8

32

Zn

0.62

0.22

22

15

11

0.16

117

98

21

55

80

110

8

32

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-29

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Table 14.9 Oxide Tailings Deposit: Variogram and Search Parameters

 

Domain 10

C1

R11

R12

R13

C2

R21

R22

R23

Angle1

Angle2

Angle3

mincomps

maxcomps

Metal

Nugget

Ag

0.37

0.49

30

7

68

0.14

130

20

170

0

-90

135

8

32

Au

0.39

0.51

55

8

16

0.1

100

20

92

0

-90

135

8

32

Cu

0.2

0.59

68

8

24

0.21

195

19

112

0

-90

135

8

32

Pb

0.45

0.35

63

13

70

0.2

269

14

170

0

-90

135

8

32

Zn

0.23

0.42

190

11

51

0.35

191

12

165

0

-90

135

8

32

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

14-30

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

14.10 RESOURCE BLOCK MODELS

 

14.10.1 BLOCK MODEL CONFIGURATIONS

 

The specifications for the estimation block models (built using DataMine Studio ) are summarized in Table 14.10. All three are oriented with the model origin at the lower left hand corner (bottom southwest). Both the hard rock vein deposit models for the Avino and San Gonzalo systems are rotated about a vertical axis passing through the bottom left hand corner to better conform to the strike of the veins. Sub-blocking was used to optimize volume filling of the vein models by preferentially minimizing block dimension in the Y-dimension for the vein models while the sub-blocking used for the oxide tailings block model minimized the block dimension in the vertical direction. The block models were not inclined, to avoid potential geometric confusion when the models are used for planning and reconciliation.

 

Table 14.10 Estimation Block Model Specifications

 

Model

X0

Y0

Z0

NX

NY

NZ

DX

DY

DZ

Min

DX

Min

DY

Min

DZ

Rot

V

Avino Vein

569840

2712270

1800

137

44

65

10

10

10

5

1

5

335

San Gonzalo Vein

571060

2714430

1800

163

72

56

10

5

10

5

0.5

1

35

Oxide Tailings

569680

2712020

2170

16

15

37

40

40

2

4

4

0.2

0

 

Table 14.11 Explanation of Table 14-10

 

Variable

Meaning

X0

minimum easting

Y0

minimum northing

Z0

minimum elevation

NX

number of primary blocks in easting direction

NY

number of primary blocks in northing direction

NZ

number of primary blocks in elevation direction

DX

primary easting block dimension

DY

primary northing block dimension

DZ

primary vertical block dimension

MinDX

minimum sub-block easting dimension

MinDY

minimum sub-block northing dimension

MinDZ

minimum sub-block vertical dimension

RotV

Rotation angle of model about a vertical axis

 


 

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14.10.2 INTERPOLATION

 

The reported resource relies on OK as the best unbiased linear estimator of grade. Other methods of interpolation, includingID 2 and NN were employed for model validation purposes and are retained in the block models.

 

14.11 MODEL VALIDATION

 

14.11.1 STATISTICS

 

Mean values for estimated blocks and composites used for the estimation in the Avino Vein are shown in Table 14.12. Overall the block estimates show lower silver grades than the composites due to the declustering effect of kriging and the large numbers of relatively high-grade composites in the development sampling.

 

Table 14.12 Avino Vein: Block Estimates and Composite Sample Grades

 

Estimator

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Pb

(%)

Zn

(%)

Ordinary Kriging

86.31

0.62

0.57

0.33

0.19

Nearest Neighbour

79.57

0.61

0.57

0.34

0.21

Inverse Distance

86.41

0.62

0.59

0.31

0.19

Composites

100.87

0.68

0.67

0.31

0.14

Number of Blocks

19,024

-

-

-

-

 

Mean values for estimated blocks and composites used for the estimation in the San Gonzalo Vein are shown in Table 14.13. The block estimates show lower silver grades than the composites due to the declustering effect of kriging and the large numbers of relatively high-grade composites in the development sampling.

 

Table 14.13 San Gonzalo Vein: Block Estimates and Composite Sample Grades

 

Estimator

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Pb

(%)

Zn

(%)

Ordinary Kriging

258.42

1.37

0.06

0.46

0.76

Nearest Neighbour

222.87

1.10

0.06

0.41

0.63

Inverse Distance

267.74

1.37

0.06

0.46

0.77

Composites

279.82

1.47

0.06

0.47

0.78

Number of Blocks

84,385

-

-

-

-

 

Mean values for estimated blocks and composites used for the estimation in the oxide tailings model are shown in Table 14.14. The block estimates show lower silver grades than the composites due to the declustering effect of kriging and the large numbers of relatively high-grade composites in the development sampling.

 

 

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Table 14.14 Oxide Tailings: Block Estimates and Composite Sample Grades

 

Estimator

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Pb

(%)

Zn

(%)

Ordinary Kriging

93.24

0.48

0.130

0.950

0.150

Nearest Neighbour

92.56

0.48

0.129

0.930

0.150

Inverse Distance

93.94

0.48

0.128

0.949

0.151

Composites

96.48

0.46

0.125

0.958

0.153

Number of Blocks

45,607

-

-

-

-

 

14.11.2 SECTIONS

 

The spatial pattern of metal grade distributions for the Avino Vein is shown in Figure 14.15 to Figure 14.18, inclusive. Figure 14.15 shows a typical transverse section illustrating the interaction between the secondary (NE1) zone developed on the footwall side of the main the Avino Vein system. Figure 14.16 to Figure 14.18 are longitudinal sections viewed from the south showing silver, gold and copper grades with high-grade zones tending to plunge steeply to the west.

 

Figure 14.15 Avino Vein: Typical Transverse Section, Looking East through Drillhole ET07-10, Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade

 

 

 

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Figure 14.16 Avino Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade

 

 

Figure 14.17 Avino Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Gold Grade

 

 

 

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Figure 14.18 Avino Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Coper Grade

 

 

The spatial pattern of metal grade distributions for the San Gonzalo Vein is shown in Figure 14.19 to Figure 14.22, inclusive. Figure 14.19 shows a typical transverse section illustrating the relatively narrow San Gonzalo Vein and the Anjelica vein (SG4). Figure 14.20 to Figure 14.22 are longitudinal sections viewed from the south showing silver, gold and copper grades with high-grade zones tending to plunge almost vertically.

 

 

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Figure 14.19 San Gonzalo Vein: Typical Transverse Section, Looking East Aligned Along Drillhole SG1115 Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade

 

  

Figure 14.20 San Gonzalo Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Silver Grade

 

 

 

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Figure 14.21 San Gonzalo Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Color Coded by Gold Grade

 

 

Figure 14.22 San Gonzalo Vein: Longitudinal Section Showing the Block Model Centroids Colour Coded by Copper Grade

 

 

14.11.3 SWATH PLOTS

 

Swath plots were generated for the underground vein deposits to compare trends in the estimated grades for the three estimation methods (ordinary kriging, inverse distance and nearest neighbour) in the block models to the source sampling data. The estimation methods for comparison are ordinary kriging (OK), nearest neighbour (NN) and inverse distance squared (ID2) block estimates for the silver, gold, and copper) and averages were generated for slices oriented parallel to the eastings, northings and elevations. The widths of the swaths (or slices) are 20 m for eastings and 10 m for elevations and the number of blocks is also plotted to give an indication of the model volume.

 

 

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Figure 14.23 through Figure 14.28 displays the swath plots for the Avino deposit, comparing block model estimates and sample grades.

 

Figure 14.23 Avino Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Eastings  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.24 Avino Vein, Swathplot for Gold Eastings  

 

 

Figure 14.25 Avin Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Eastings  

 

 

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Figure 14.26 Avino Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Elevation

 

 

Figure 14.27 Avino Vein, Swathplot for Gold, Elevation  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.28 Avino Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Elevation  

 

 

Figure 14.29 through Figure 14.34 displays the swath plots for San Gonzalo Deposit, comparing block model estimates and sample grades.

 

Figure 14.29 San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Eastings  

 

 


 

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Figure 14.30 San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Gold, Eastings

   

 

Figure 14.31 San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Eastings  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.32 San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Silver, Elevation  

 

 

Figure 14.33 San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Gold, Elevation  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.34 San Gonzalo Vein, Swathplot for Copper, Elevation  

 

 


 

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Figure 14.35 through Figure 14.40 displays the swath plots for oxide tailings deposit, comparing block model estimates and sample grades.

 

Figure 14.35 Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Silver, Easting  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.36 Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Gold, Easting  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.37 Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Silver, Northing  

 

 

Figure 14.38 Oxide Tailings Deposits, Swathplot for Gold, Northing  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.39 Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Silver, Elevation

 

 

Figure 14.40 Oxide Tailings Deposit, Swathplot for Gold, Elevation

 

 

 

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The swath plot comparisons show reasonable correspondence between block estimates and sampling data. As expected, the OK and ID estimates show less extreme values than the NN estimates particularly near the edges of the models.

 

14.12 MINERAL RESOURCE CLASSIFICATION

 

14.12.1 INTRODUCTION

 

CIM Definition Standards (adopted by the CIM Council on May 10, 2014) for reporting on mineral resources are stated below:

 

Mineral Resource

 

Mineral Resources are sub-divided, in order of increasing geological confidence, into Inferred, Indicated and Measured categories. An Inferred Mineral Resource has a lower level of confidence than that applied to an Indicated Mineral Resource. An Indicated Mineral Resource has a higher level of confidence than an Inferred Mineral Resource but has a lower level of confidence than a Measured Mineral Resource.

 

A Mineral Resource is a concentration or occurrence of solid material of economic interest in or on the Earth’s crust in such form, grade or quality and quantity that there are reasonable prospects for eventual economic extraction.

 

The location, quantity, grade or quality, continuity and other geological characteristics of a Mineral Resource are known, estimated or interpreted from specific geological evidence and knowledge, including sampling.

 

Material of economic interest refers to diamonds, natural solid inorganic material, or natural solid fossilized organic material including base and precious metals, coal, and industrial minerals.

 

The term Mineral Resource covers mineralization and natural material of intrinsic economic interest which has been identified and estimated through exploration and sampling and within which Mineral Reserves may subsequently be defined by the consideration and application of Modifying Factors. The phrase ‘reasonable prospects for eventual economic extraction’ implies a judgment by the Qualified Person in respect of the technical and economic factors likely to influence the prospect of economic extraction. The Qualified Person should consider and clearly state the basis for determining that the material has reasonable prospects for eventual economic extraction. Assumptions should include estimates of cutoff grade and geological continuity at the selected cut-off, metallurgical recovery, smelter payments, commodity price or product value, mining and processing method and mining, processing and general and administrative costs. The Qualified Person should state if the assessment is based on any direct evidence and testing.

 

Interpretation of the word ‘eventual’ in this context may vary depending on the commodity or mineral involved. For example, for some coal, iron, potash deposits and other bulk minerals or commodities, it may be reasonable to envisage ‘eventual economic extraction’ as covering time periods in excess of 50 years. However, for many gold deposits, application of the concept would normally be restricted to perhaps 10 to 15 years, and frequently to much shorter periods of time.

 

 

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Inferred Mineral Resource

 

An Inferred Mineral Resource is that part of a Mineral Resource for which quantity and grade or quality are estimated on the basis of limited geological evidence and sampling. Geological evidence is sufficient to imply but not verify geological and grade or quality continuity.

 

An Inferred Mineral Resource has a lower level of confidence than that applying to an Indicated Mineral Resource and must not be converted to a Mineral Reserve. It is reasonably expected that the majority of Inferred Mineral Resources could be upgraded to Indicated Mineral Resources with continued exploration.

 

An Inferred Mineral Resource is based on limited information and sampling gathered through appropriate sampling techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes. Inferred Mineral Resources must not be included in the economic analysis, production schedules, or estimated mine life in publicly disclosed Pre-Feasibility or Feasibility Studies, or in the Life of Mine plans and cash flow models of developed mines. Inferred Mineral Resources can only be used in economic studies as provided under NI 43-101.

 

There may be circumstances, where appropriate sampling, testing, and other measurements are sufficient to demonstrate data integrity, geological and grade/quality continuity of a Measured or Indicated Mineral Resource, however, quality assurance and quality control, or other information may not meet all industry norms for the disclosure of an Indicated or Measured Mineral Resource. Under these circumstances, it may be reasonable for the Qualified Person to report an Inferred Mineral Resource if the Qualified Person has taken steps to verify the information meets the requirements of an Inferred Mineral Resource.

 

Indicated Mineral Resource

 

An Indicated Mineral Resource is that part of a Mineral Resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape and physical characteristics are estimated with sufficient confidence to allow the application of Modifying Factors in sufficient detail to support mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit.

 

Geological evidence is derived from adequately detailed and reliable exploration, sampling and testing and is sufficient to assume geological and grade or quality continuity between points of observation.

 

An Indicated Mineral Resource has a lower level of confidence than that applying to a Measured Mineral Resource and may only be converted to a Probable Mineral Reserve.

 

Mineralization may be classified as an Indicated Mineral Resource by the Qualified Person when the nature, quality, quantity and distribution of data are such as to allow confident interpretation of the geological framework and to reasonably assume the continuity of mineralization. The Qualified Person must recognize the importance of the Indicated Mineral Resource category to the advancement of the feasibility of the project. An Indicated Mineral Resource estimate is of sufficient quality to support a Pre-Feasibility Study which can serve as the basis for major development decisions.

 

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Measured Mineral Resource

 

A Measured Mineral Resource is that part of a Mineral Resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape, and physical characteristics are estimated with confidence sufficient to allow the application of Modifying Factors to support detailed mine planning and final evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit.

 

Geological evidence is derived from detailed and reliable exploration, sampling and testing and is sufficient to confirm geological and grade or quality continuity between points of observation.

 

A Measured Mineral Resource has a higher level of confidence than that applying to either an Indicated Mineral Resource or an Inferred Mineral Resource. It may be converted to a Proven Mineral Reserve or to a Probable Mineral Reserve.

 

Mineralization or other natural material of economic interest may be classified as a Measured Mineral Resource by the Qualified Person when the nature, quality, quantity and distribution of data are such that the tonnage and grade or quality of the mineralization can be estimated to within close limits and that variation from the estimate would not significantly affect potential economic viability of the deposit. This category requires a high level of confidence in, and understanding of, the geology and controls of the mineral deposit.

 

The Avino resource has estimates for silver, gold, copper, zinc, and lead but reports silver, gold and copper. Silver, gold and copper are recovered from the Avino material and gold and copper are included in the silver equivalent calculation.

 

The San Gonzalo resource estimates silver, gold, copper, zinc, and lead but reports only silver and gold. This is because copper, lead and zinc are not current payable metals at San Gonzalo and only gold is additional in the silver equivalent estimate.

 

Resource classification for both Avino and San Gonzalo is in part based on kriging variance, geological consideration and the practical geometry of distance from data.

 

The 2014 CIM Definition Standards of indicated Mineral Resources includes the phrase that “quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape and physical characteristics are estimated with sufficient confidence to allow the application of Modifying Factors in sufficient detail to support mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit”.

 

 

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Aranz has noted that, in our opinion, the current information available for estimating in situ density is insufficient to support localized (block) estimates to the same level of detail as the metal grades. However, the current data shows that the wall-rock and vein material of the Avino and San Gonzalo deposits have small differences (density difference of vein to wall-rock less than 2%) and very low variability within the veins as measured by the coefficient of variation (less than 0.08, see Table 14.5). The variability of the metal grades shows levels of variability orders of magnitude higher as measured by the coefficient of variation (between 0.4 and 4.4, see Table 14.2). It would be ideal to have density measurements sufficient for local block estimation. However, potential error resulting from the use of a global density mean is likely to be less than 2%. No significant density anomalies have been reported during the current phase of production at the Avino property. Based on the data from the Avino and San Gonzalo veins, grade is a much more material risk factor than the density information. Aranz considers the restricted amount of density information to be less material and significant than the metal grade variability. Aranz used the kriging variance of the silver grade estimates as the main factor for resource classification.

 

Aranz has also noted that, despite the lack of metallurgical bulk sampling, there have been several years of metal production from ore from all operating levels on the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins using current processing facilities and that there has been no report of unforeseen metallurgical recovery issues. Aranz considers that this production history mitigates the lack of a formal bulk sampling programme or density data and has allowed mineral resources to be defined with sufficient confidence to support detailed mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit.

 

Table 14.15 Criteria for Classification of Underground Mineral Resources

 

Avino

Measured:

Ag_kvar <=0.15 (up to 20 m from sampled development)

Indicated:

Ag_kvar <=0.24 (30m from sampling, contiguous with development and measured)

Inferred:

Up to 250m from sampling data (with demonstrated vein continuity)

San Gonzalo

Measured:

Ag_kvar <=0.18 (up to 15 m from sampled development)

Indicated:

Ag_kvar <=0.24 (up to 40m from sampling, contiguous with development and measured)

Inferred:

Up to 250m from data (with demonstrated vein continuity)

 

14.13 MINERAL RESOURCE TABULATION

 

14.13.1 CUT-OFFS AND SILVER EQUIVALENT CALCULATIONS

 

The San Gonzalo and Avino reported Mineral Resources are tabulated on the basis of Ag_Eq cut-offs (Table 14.16).

 

 

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Table 14.16 Silver Equivalent Based Metal Prices and Operational Recovery Parameters

 

Metal

Price

Unit

Recovery

(%)

Rev.

($/t)

Ag_Eq

per Grade

Unit

San Gonzalo Vein System

Ag

19.50

$/oz

83

0.52

1.00

Au

1,250.00

$/oz

73

29.34

56.38

Avino Vein System

Ag

19.50

$/oz

86

0.54

1.00

Au

1,250.00

$/oz

75

30.14

55.90

Cu

2.10

$/lb

85

39.35

72.99

Avino - Oxide Tailings

Ag

19.50

$/oz

73

0.46

1.00

Au

1,250.00

$/oz

79

31.75

69.37

 

Silver equivalent was calculated from metal grade estimates using operational recovery parameters and the metal prices based on price trends over the last three years. The gold price used is $1250/oz, $80/oz. less than July 2016 levels. The silver price used is $19.50/oz. which is $0.45/oz less than the average daily spot price for July 2016. The copper price used is $2.10/lb, which is lower than the average over the last three years average which was $2.75/lb. Copper was only used in the equivalent calculation for the Avino System, the only mineralization where the copper grade justifies extraction.

 

A PEA should not be considered to be a Prefeasibility or Feasibility study, as the economics and technical viability of the Project have not been demonstrated at this time. The PEA is preliminary in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves. Furthermore, there is no certainty that the conclusions or results reported in the PEA will be realized. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

 


 

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Table 14.17 Mineral Statement for the Avino Property

 

Resource Category

Deposit

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq

g/t)

Metric Tonnes

(t)

Grade

Metal Contents

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

Ag

(million

tr oz)

Au

(thousand

tr oz)

Cu

(t)

Avino Mine: Measured & Indicated Mineral Resources

Measured

Avino System

55

950,000

143

74

0.33

0.69

2.3

10.0

6,550

Measured

San Gonzalo System

125

170,000

357

272

1.50

0.00

1.5

8.2

0

Total Measured

All Deposits

-

1,120,000

176

105

0.51

0.58

3.8

18.2

6,550

Indicated

Avino System

55

500,000

129

68

0.36

0.56

1.1

5.7

2,800

Indicated

San Gonzalo System

125

320,000

310

237

1.30

0.00

2.4

13.3

0

Indicated

Oxide Tailings

50

1,330,000

124

98

0.46

0.00

4.2

19.8

0

Total Indicated

All Deposits

-

2,150,000

152

111

0.56

0.13

7.7

38.8

2,800

Total Measured & Indicated

All Deposits

-

3,270,000

160

109

0.54

0.29

11.5

57.0

9,350

Avino Mine: Inferred Mineral Resources

Inferred

Avino System

55

5,790,000

155

81

0.57

0.58

15.1

105.8

33,550

Inferred

San Gonzalo System

125

540,000

403

314

1.58

0.00

5.5

27.5

0

Inferred

Oxide Tailings

50

1,810,000

113

88

0.44

0.00

5.1

25.6

0

Total Inferred

All Deposits

-

8,140,000

162

98

0.61

0.41

25.6

158.9

33,550

Notes:

Figures may not add to totals shown due to rounding.

 

Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

 

The Mineral Resource estimate is classified in accordance with the CIM Definition Standards for Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves” (May 2014) incorporated by reference into NI 43-101 "Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects".

 

Mineral Resources are reported at cut-off grades 50 g/t, 55 g/t, and 125 g/t Ag_Eq.

 

Silver equivalent grades were calculated using conversion formulas Ag_Eq = Ag + 55.9 * Au + 72.99 * Cu for Avino Vein and Ag_Eq = Ag + 56.38 * Au for San Gonzalo Vein System and oxide tailings

 

Cut-off grades were calculated using current costs, silver price of US$19.50/oz., gold price of US$1,250/oz. and copper price of US$2.10/lb

 

 

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14.13.1 GRADE-TONNAGE TABLES

 

Table 14.18 to Table 14.25 inclusive, provide a summary of the grade and tonnage for the Avino, San Gonzalo and Tailings models at a series of cutoffs. These tables show the grade and tonnages for mineralized material at confidence levels of confidence (see Table 14.14) equivalent to measured, indicated and inferred for the three deposits. Each table contains a yellow-highlighted line that represents the selection used for the Mineral Resource summarized in Table 14.17.

 

Table 14.18 Avino Vein - High Confidence/Measured

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

30

1,019,980

136.17

70.36

0.31

0.67

40

1,007,882

137.38

71.05

0.31

0.67

50

971,719

140.84

73.11

0.32

0.68

55

953,309

142.56

74.19

0.33

0.69

60

898,408

147.76

77.63

0.34

0.70

70

827,990

154.83

82.48

0.37

0.71

80

770,524

160.76

86.55

0.38

0.72

90

739,951

163.90

88.21

0.39

0.74

100

698,528

168.02

90.47

0.41

0.75

110

639,419

173.81

93.80

0.43

0.77

120

573,669

180.51

97.62

0.45

0.79

130

518,439

186.41

101.44

0.46

0.81

140

475,307

191.14

104.91

0.47

0.82

150

424,679

196.58

108.23

0.48

0.84

 

Table 14.19 Avino Vein - Medium Confidence/Indicated

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

30

524,291

125.50

65.94

0.34

0.55

40

520,806

126.08

66.26

0.34

0.56

50

513,705

127.22

66.95

0.35

0.56

55

503,579

128.71

67.92

0.36

0.56

60

498,385

129.46

68.39

0.36

0.56

70

462,354

134.36

71.79

0.38

0.57

80

430,137

138.85

74.07

0.40

0.58

90

377,602

146.30

77.75

0.44

0.61

100

332,695

153.18

81.26

0.47

0.62

110

299,163

158.60

84.23

0.50

0.63

120

266,748

163.90

86.66

0.53

0.65

130

232,361

169.68

90.16

0.55

0.67

140

215,529

172.36

91.19

0.55

0.69

150

180,484

177.79

93.03

0.56

0.73

 

 

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Table 14.20 Avino Vein - Low Confidence/Inferred

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

Cu

(%)

20

5,837,088

154.14

80.43

0.56

0.58

30

5,830,973

154.28

80.50

0.56

0.58

40

5,825,582

154.39

80.56

0.57

0.58

50

5,816,640

154.55

80.65

0.57

0.58

55

5,785,540

155.10

80.97

0.57

0.58

60

5,747,865

155.73

81.35

0.57

0.58

70

5,603,347

158.07

82.74

0.58

0.59

80

5,401,560

161.16

84.45

0.60

0.59

90

5,144,675

164.95

86.57

0.61

0.61

100

4,837,425

169.42

89.17

0.63

0.62

110

4,416,559

175.51

92.30

0.66

0.63

120

4,025,084

181.44

95.22

0.69

0.65

130

3,688,575

186.59

97.96

0.72

0.66

140

3,239,700

193.71

101.12

0.77

0.68

150

2,814,692

201.06

104.51

0.81

0.70

 

Table 14.21 San Gonzalo Vein - High Confidence/Measured

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

10

229,763

286.77

218.54

1.21

20

228,317

288.49

219.86

1.22

30

223,846

293.76

223.92

1.24

40

217,600

301.19

229.68

1.27

50

211,781

308.22

235.10

1.30

60

207,474

313.52

239.21

1.32

70

203,003

318.97

243.42

1.34

80

197,612

325.62

248.53

1.37

90

193,009

331.38

252.95

1.39

100

186,336

339.85

259.43

1.43

110

183,212

343.85

262.47

1.44

120

175,059

354.44

270.52

1.49

125

173,218

356.89

272.34

1.50

130

170,358

360.74

275.24

1.52

140

164,671

368.49

281.23

1.55

150

159,016

376.41

287.10

1.58

 

 

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Table 14.22 San Gonzalo - Medium Confidence/Indicated

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

10

588,232

195.71

150.10

0.81

20

587,148

196.04

150.36

0.81

30

576,891

199.05

152.71

0.82

40

542,733

209.38

160.74

0.86

50

487,208

228.01

175.05

0.94

60

423,003

254.36

195.12

1.05

70

398,281

266.12

204.04

1.10

80

379,838

275.44

211.05

1.14

90

363,828

283.88

217.36

1.18

100

350,875

290.88

222.61

1.21

110

335,950

299.17

228.91

1.25

120

320,071

308.31

235.67

1.29

125

316,751

310.24

237.13

1.30

130

307,184

315.93

241.47

1.32

140

285,092

329.91

252.03

1.38

150

272,271

338.61

258.57

1.42

 

Table 14.23 San Gonzalo - Low Confidence/Inferred

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

10

1,139,119

221.44

170.95

0.90

20

1,138,691

221.52

171.01

0.90

30

1,060,515

235.82

182.12

0.95

40

968,399

254.83

196.92

1.03

50

875,790

277.07

214.14

1.12

60

787,849

302.02

233.38

1.22

70

714,933

326.02

252.31

1.31

80

654,015

349.37

271.04

1.39

90

614,335

366.44

284.67

1.45

100

596,813

374.43

291.04

1.48

110

559,500

392.49

305.45

1.54

120

548,585

398.02

309.88

1.56

125

537,999

403.44

314.29

1.58

130

520,214

412.87

321.87

1.61

140

498,977

424.70

331.26

1.66

150

470,178

441.86

345.05

1.72

 

 

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Table 14.24 Oxide Tailings - Medium Confidence/Indicated

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

50

1,329,680

123.69

97.85

0.46

90

1,329,680

123.69

97.85

0.46

100

1,246,533

125.43

99.52

0.46

110

1,113,074

127.88

101.94

0.46

120

817,672

132.45

105.81

0.48

130

412,200

140.02

111.51

0.51

140

165,903

148.05

117.76

0.54

150

49,547

156.67

126.68

0.54

 

Table 14.25 Oxide Tailings - Low Confidence/Inferred

 

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq g/t)

Tonnes

(t)

Ag_Eq

(g/t)

Ag

(g/t)

Au

(g/t)

50

1,810,640

112.51

87.91

0.44

70

1,810,640

112.51

87.91

0.44

80

1,672,985

115.39

88.76

0.48

90

1,630,901

116.14

88.82

0.49

100

1,580,804

116.71

89.23

0.49

110

994,997

123.72

95.01

0.51

120

541,494

131.80

102.11

0.53

130

290,153

137.97

107.37

0.55

140

112,432

143.11

111.60

0.56

150

3,657

154.09

122.29

0.57

 

14.13.2 GRADE-TONNAGE GRAPHS

 

Figure 14.41 to Figure 14.48 show the grade-tonnage curves for the mineralized material in the Avino and San Gonzalo Vein systems and the oxide tailings. The graphs correspond to the information shown in Table 14.18 to Table 14.25 inclusive, provide a summary of the grade and tonnage for the Avino, San Gonzalo and Tailings models at a series of cut-offs. These tables show the grade and tonnages for mineralized material at confidence levels of confidence (see Table 14.14Table 14.14) equivalent to measured, indicated and inferred for the three deposits. Each table contains a yellow-highlighted line that represents the selection used for the Mineral Resource summarized in Table 14.17.

 


 

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Figure 14.41 Grade Tonnage Graph of Avino Vein Material at Measured Confidence Level

 

 

 

Figure 14.42 Grade Tonnage Graph of Avino Vein Material at Indicated Confidence Level  

 

 


 

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Figure 14.43 Grade Tonnage Graph of Avino Vein Material at Inferred Confidence Level  

 

 

Figure 14.44 Grade Tonnage Graph of San Gonzalo Vein Material at Measured Confidence Level  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.45 Grade Tonnage Graph of San Gonzalo Vein Material at Indicated Confidence Level  

 

 

Figure 14.46 Grade Tonnage Graph of San Gonzalo Vein Material at Inferred Confidence Level  

 

 

 

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Figure 14.47 Grade Tonnage Graph of Oxide Tailings Material at Indicated Confidence Level  

 

 

Figure 14.48 Grade Tonnage Graph of Oxide Tailings Material at Inferred Confidence Level  

 

 


 

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14.14 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

There is no current resource estimate for the sulphide tailings (The upper bench of the tailings heap shown in Figure 14.6).

 

Some sampling was carried out in 2005 by means of hand-dug pits on the “upper bench” of sulphide tailings but this information does not provide an unbiased sample, being restricted to the top surface of the deposit and consequently no estimation can be carried out with any confidence on the sulphide tailings.

 

The volume of the deposit can be estimated with but the tonnage and recoverable metal are not quantifiable. At best, the sulphide tailings are considered a target for further exploration.

 

No Mineral Resource for the sulphide tailings is disclosed in this Technical Report.

 

 

 

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15.0 MINERAL RESERVE ESTIMATES

 

 

 

There are currently no Mineral Reserves on the Property.

 

 

 

 

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16.0 MINING METHODS

 

 

A PEA should not be considered to be a Prefeasibility or Feasibility study, as the economics and technical viability of the Project have not been demonstrated at this time. The PEA is preliminary in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves. Furthermore, there is no certainty that the conclusions or results reported in the PEA will be realized. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

  

16.1 AVINO VEIN

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure, which are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts. Information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

Avino is currently mining on the Avino Vein using longhole stoping and sublevel caving mining methods. Avino has not yet developed a LOM plan for the Avino Vein; however, mine development and production have been scheduled on a monthly basis for 2015 and 2016.

 

From 1997 to 2001, mining in the Avino Vein consistently yielded 1,000 t/d of mill feed. During that period, mine production was comprised of ore development mining (drift and slash) and longhole stoping. In contrast, Avino’s strategy for 2015 and 2016 was to produce 1,000 t/d of mill feed by ore development mining until reaching Level 17. The longhole stoping and sublevel caving will then be employed to extract the mineralized material between Levels 9.5, when mining ceased in 2001, to Level 17. In Q4 2014, approximately 35,000 t of mill feed was stockpiled near the mine portal as operations started ramping up. The average mining rate during the first 12 days of January 2015 was 700 t/d and a steady state mining rate of 1,100 t/d has been achieved since then.

 

Production from the Avino Vein is summarized in Table 16.1.

 

 

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Table 16.1 Recent Production from the Avino Vein

 

Production Description

2015

2016

Q1 2017

Mill Feed Tonnage

Tonnes Milled (t)

396,113

429,289

116,553

Feed Grade

Silver (g/t)

65

67

61

Gold (g/t)

0.29

0.42

0.50

Copper (%)

0.62

0.50

0.44

Recovery

Silver (%)

87

85

86

Gold (%)

75

64

67

Copper (%)

87

90

91

Total Metal Produced

Silver Produced (oz)

717,901

789,372

195,562

Gold Produced (oz)

2,757

3,691

1,252

Copper Produced (lb)

4,743,691

4,206,585

1,024,853

Ag_Eq Produced (oz)

1,801,997

1,606,272

439,163

 

Source: Avino (2017a; 2017b)

 

16.2 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure, which are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts. Information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

Avino is currently mining on the San Gonzalo Vein using cut-and-fill and shrinkage stoping methods.

 

Production from the San Gonzalo Vein is summarized in Table 16.2.

 

 

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Table 16. 2 Recent Production from the San Gonzalo Vein

 

Production Description

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Q1 2017

Mill Feed Tonnage

Total Mill Feed (t)

19,539

78,415

79,729

121,774

115,047

20,133

Feed Grade

Silver (g/t)

259

288

337

279

267

229

Gold (g/t)

1.04

1.34

1.88

1.48

1.25

1.19

Recovery

Silver (%)

79

83

84

83

83

84

Gold (%)

70

73

78

75

74

76

Total Produced

Silver (oz)

128,607

602,233

724,931

907,384

822,689

124,520

Gold (oz)

455

2,473

3,740

4,326

3,427

585

Ag_Eq Produced (oz)

151,372

751,462

958,702

1,218,351

1,073,062

165,480

 

Source: Avino (2017a; 2017b)

 

16.2.1 BULK SAMPLE PROGRAM

 

Note that information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

No formal Prefeasibility study has been commissioned, but a 10,000 t bulk sample program was carried out in 2011, and in July 2011 the results were announced. The bulk sample was intended to allow Avino to assess the economics of the zone by confirming mineral grades obtained through earlier diamond drilling. The bulk sample program was completed during Q1 2011.

 

The overall bulk sample feed grade was 261 g/t silver and 0.9 g/t gold. Silver and gold recoveries were 76% and 59%, respectively, and 232 dry tonnes of flotation concentrate were produced, of which 188 t were sold for net proceeds of US$1.83 million. If the entire production were sold under the same contract terms, the net proceeds would have been US$2.26 million.

 

Evaluation costs relating to mining, milling, and overhead for the bulk sample program were US$567,045 or US$7.62/oz Ag_Eq, including the costs for the raises and stopes. The cost per tonne produced was US$53.91 and proceeds on 188 t of concentrate sold at US$1.83 million. (The contract prices per ounce of silver and gold were US$36.75 and US$1,511.31, respectively.)

 

On the basis of internal modelling of the bulk sampling program, Avino proceeded with their mine plan to develop the third, fourth, and fifth levels and to provide mill feed at the rate of 250 t/d on a sustained basis.

 

It should be noted this production decision is being made without Mineral Reserves or any studies of economic viability that have been prepared in accordance with NI 43-101.

 


 

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16.2.2 PRODUCTION

 

Note that information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

Recent production for the Avino Vein and San Gonzalo Vein are summarized in Table 16.1 and Table 16.2, respectively.

 

Concentrate has been sold on a regular basis to a concentrate-trading firm, with shipments taking place monthly. The Q1 2017 financial results indicated that the cost as cash per ounce silver for the San Gonzalo and Avino Veins was US$8.01. Mining and milling operations continue, even though there has been no Prefeasibility or Feasibility study commissioned after the bulk sample program.

 

16.2.3 MINE DESIGN

 

Note that information in this section was provided by Avino.

 

Access to the underground mining on the San Gonzalo Vein is via a 4 m by 4 m decline developed at -12%. Ground conditions are good. Ground support is mainly bolting, as required.

 

San Gonzalo uses shrinkage mining for the narrower material, approximately 1.4 m in width, and cut-and-fill mining for mineralized material wider than 2 m.

 

During shrinkage mining, miners use hand-held jacklegs and stopers to drill and blast in stopes. Material is drilled and blasted using jacklegs to breast horizontally, with two miners from two ends of the stope, with several breasts worked on at once. After each blast, the swell (approximately 40% of the broken material) is mucked from the extraction drift below to allow room for the miners to drill the next lift. Materials and supplies are carried into the stopes by hand down a small raise equipped with steel ladders and a rope. Only 40% of the material is extracted during mining, with the remainder extracted after all mining has been completed; meaning more stopes are required in the development stage at one time to sustain production targets. Scoops are used to muck from the extraction drift below and the material is trammed to a mineralized material pass.

 

Cut-and-fill mining is more mechanized, as access for scoops is maintained in the stopes from the main ramp by a smaller access attack decline/incline ramp. This access means less manhandling of materials and provides material on a steady basis from each lift while mining takes place. This method requires that waste fill be placed after each lift of material has been mined prior to mining the next lift. Stopers are used to drill vertical holes, with half the stope being blasted at once. A two-yard scoop is used in the stope to place waste and muck material. It is 1.2 m wide and requires 2.0 m wide to operate. No mill discharge is used for backfilling.

 

The mine is able to achieve a production rate of 230 t/d, with three shrinkage stopes and one cut-and-fill stope developed/mined at once, plus two headings in mineralized material or the shrinkage undercut. The mine works 6 d/wk, or 26 d/mo. A mining contractor has been hired for material haulage.

 

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16.3 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

The oxide tailings Mineral Resource will be mined/moved using a conventional truck/loader surface mining method. The production cycle consists of loading and trucking.

 

16.3.1 SCHEDULE

 

The production schedule has been developed for the oxide tailings based on a treatment rate of 500 kt/a. This would be equivalent to a throughput rate of 1,370 t/d. This will give an overall Project duration of approximately eight years. This eight-year period includes one year of pre-production and excludes the time required for remediation of the heap after the leaching process has been completed. Only oxide tailings will be considered for treatment, while sulphide materials will be considered waste. The production schedule is shown in Table 16.3.

 

Table 16.3 Mining Production Schedule

 

Year

Mineralized

Material

(t)

Head Grade

Waste

(t)

Total Material

Moved

(t)

Ag (g/t)

Au (g/t)

-1

-

-

-

500,000

500,000

1

350,000

88.83

0.51

558,906

908,906

2

500,000

100.11

0.48

497,101

997,101

3

500,000

94.95

0.44

498,995

998,995

4

500,000

78.28

0.45

75,148

575,148

5

499,673

82.99

0.44

500,327

1,000,000

6

500,000

87.95

0.36

295,829

795,829

7

272,641

76.27

0.28

12,405

285,046

LOM

3,122,314

87.75

0.43

2,938,711

6,061,025

 

16.3.2 EQUIPMENT

 

The mining operations include loading and trucking. Loading/trucking operations will be conducted in two, 12 h shifts per day. A 3.85 m 3 rated (5.0 yd 3 ) front-end loader will be used to load 3, 24 t articulated truck that will either deliver the sulphide tailings to the sulphide waste stockpile or the oxide tailings to the oxide tailings hopper.

 


 

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16.3.3 MODIFYING SITE CONSIDERATIONS

 

Certain areas of the tailings might contain high amounts of moisture that can lead to equipment getting stuck. To mitigate this challenge, wider, oversized tires with chains will be installed on the front-end loader. Also, the front-end loader bucket will be downsized to 3.06 m 3 (4.0 yd 3 ). This will lighten the load on the front tires preventing them from sinking into saturated material. The trucks will not enter the soft zones so there will be no modifications to the trucks.

 

16.4 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is not currently conducting treatment activity on the sulphide tailings. In this study, sulphide tailings are considered as waste.

 

 

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17.0 RECOVERY METHODS

 

 

17.1 INTRODUCTION

 

As mentioned in Section 13.0, there are three separate mineralization sources in the Property, including the Avino and San Gonzalo mines, which are currently in operation, and the potential tailings resource from previous milling operations. The San Gonzalo Mine entered commercial production in October 2012, followed by reopening the Avino Mine in January 2015. The two mines feed a conventional flotation mill that has three separate circuits and a capacity of 1,500 t/d. Currently, there is no operation for the tailings resource.

 

17.2 AVINO VEIN

 

Prior to the mine shutting down in 2001, Avino operated a 1,000 t/d processing plant, producing a copper concentrate that was sold to a smelter in San Luis Potosi for approximately 27 years. From 1997 to 2001, the mill process rate averaged 1,000 t/d and achieved up to 1,300 t/d. The mine and mill operations were then suspended. Following several years of redevelopment, Avino completed the Avino Mine and mill expansion in Q4 2014. On January 1, 2015, full scale operations commenced and commercial production was declared effective April 1, 2016 following a 19 month advancement and test period.

 

The plant consists of a conventional three-stage crushing circuit with the tertiary crusher in closed circuit with a screen. The crushed material is fed to a ball mill and classified with a hydrocyclone at a grind size of approximately 65% passing 200 mesh. Lime is added in the ball mill to raise the flotation pH to about 10.5 to depress pyrite. Flotation reagents used include Aeroflot 208, 404 and Aerophine 3418, together with a glycol frother. The concentrates from the rougher and scavenger circuits are upgraded in a cleaner circuit with the final concentrate reporting to a dewatering circuit. The final concentrate is dewatered to approximately 8% moisture and then shipped to the smelter. Flotation tailings is pumped to the permitted tailings impoundment where decant water is reclaimed for process use.

 

A single stage of cleaning is used for the rougher and scavenger concentrates to produce a final copper concentrate grading 20 to 25% copper. Typical copper recoveries range from 85 to 90%, silver in the mid 80’s, and gold between 60 and 70% depending on the source of the material. Process optimization should focus on reducing the bismuth content in the concentrate and on improving gold recovery.

 

A summary of the mill production and balance for 2015, 2016, and Q1 2017 is provided in Table 17.1.

 

 

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Table 17.1 Avino Vein Mill Production

 

Production Description

2015

2016

Q1 2017

Mill Feed Tonnage

Tonnes Milled (t)

396,113

429,289

116,553

Feed Grade

Silver (g/t)

65

67

61

Gold (g/t)

0.29

0.42

0.50

Copper (%)

0.62

0.50

0.44

Recovery

Silver (%)

87

85

86

Gold (%)

75

64

67

Copper (%)

87

90

91

Total Metal Produced

Silver Produced (oz)

717,901

789,372

195,562

Gold Produced (oz)

2,757

3,691

1,252

Copper Produced (lb)

4,743,691

4,206,585

1,024,853

Ag_Eq Produced (oz)

1,801,997

1,606,272

439,163

Source: Avino (2017a; 2017b)

 

The simplified flowsheet, including grinding and flotation circuits, is shown in Figure 17.1.

  

 

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Figure 17.1 Simplified Flowsheet - Avino and San Gonzalo Veins

 

 

 

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17.3 SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

The San Gonzalo Mine entered commercial production in October 2012. The current process plant consists of crushing and grinding facilities, followed by a flotation process circuit to recover and upgrade silver and gold from the feed material. Aeroflot 208 and Aerophine 3418, together with a glycol frother, are used within the flotation circuit. The flotation concentrate is thickened, filtered to approximately 8% moisture content, and sent to the concentrate stockpile for subsequent shipping to customers. A gravity concentrator has been incorporated into the grinding circuit to recover electrum and to improve the overall silver and gold recoveries.

 

The final flotation tailings is disposed of in the tailings pond. A summary of the material and metallurgical balances from April 2013 is outlined in Table 17.2. The process flowsheet is similar to the one used for the Avino vein as shown in Figure 17.1.

 

Table 17. 2 San Gonzalo Vein Mill Production

 

Production Description

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Q1 2017

Mill Feed Tonnage

Total Mill Feed (t)

19,539

78,415

79,729

121,774

115,047

20,133

Feed Grade

Silver (g/t)

259

288

337

279

267

229

Gold (g/t)

1.04

1.34

1.88

1.48

1.25

1.19

Recovery

Silver (%)

79

83

84

83

83

84

Gold (%)

70

73

78

75

74

76

Total Produced

Silver (oz)

128,607

602,233

724,931

907,384

822,689

124,520

Gold (oz)

455

2,473

3,740

4,326

3,427

585

Ag_Eq Produced (oz)

151,372

751,462

958,702

1,218,351

1,073,062

165,480

Source: Avino (2017a; 2017b)

  

17.4 TAILINGS RESOURCES

 

There are two types of the tailings produced from the previous mining operations: oxide tailings and sulphide tailings. Currently there is no operation to recover metals from both the tailings resources.

 

This PEA focuses on the oxide tailings treatment for the recovery of silver and gold from the tailings dam. The sulphide tailings have been excluded from this study.

 

 

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17.4.1 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

TREATMENT SELECTION

 

A PEA was conducted in 2012 (Tetra Tech 2013) to compare three potential processing treatment routines for the oxide tailings retreatment project, including:

 

 

·

cyanidation (tank leaching) of the oxide tailings without regrinding

 

 

 

 

·

cyanidation (tank leaching) of the oxide tailings with regrinding

 

 

 

 

·

heap leaching of the oxide tailings without regrinding.

 

A preliminary economical evaluation, at a mill feed rate of 1,370 t/d, shows that heap leaching treatment is more favourable than the other two treatment options, in terms of initial capital cost and operating cost. This PEA update will be based on the heap leaching treatment technology that was used for the previous PEA (Tetra Tech 2013).

 

PROCESS FLOWSHEET

 

The proposed treatment plant will consist of agglomeration and cyanide heap leaching, followed by a Merrill-Crowe process to recover silver and gold from pregnant solution. The process plant will operate on a 24 h/d, 365 d/a basis, with an overall utilization of 90%.

 

The simplified flowsheet is shown in Figure 17.2.

 

 

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Figure 17.2 Simplified Process Flowsheet

 

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MAJOR DESIGN CRITERIA

 

The heap leach has been designed to process 0.5 Mt/a of oxide tailings. This would be equivalent to a throughput rate of 1,370 t/d and equivalent to 63.4 t/h at a 90% running time.

 

The major criteria used in the design are outlined in Table 17.3.

 

Table 17.3 Major Design Criteria

 

Criteria

Unit

Number

Operating Year

d

365

Overall Plant Availability

%

90

Annual Processing Rate

t

500,000

Daily Processing Rate

t/d

1,370

Tailing Bulk Density

t/m 3

1.605

Agglomerated Tailing Bulk Density

t/m 3

1.24

Agglomerated Feed Size, P 80 Passing

µm

225

Agglomerated Product Size, P 80 Passing

mm

6 to 15

Moisture Content of Agglomerated Feed

%

12.5

Total Loading/Curing/Leaching/Rinsing Cycle

d

142

Cyanide Solution Strength

g/L

0.5

 

The design parameters are based on test work results obtained by PRA but directed by MMI, using the results from Huang (2005) and Slim (2005d).

 

PROCESS PLANT DESCRIPTION

 

For an oxide tailings treatment rate of 0.5 Mt/a, an equivalent throughput rate of 1,370 t/d or 63.4 t/h is required. This will give an overall Project duration of approximately seven years. This seven-year period will exclude the time required for site establishment and remediation of the heap after the leaching process has been completed.

 

The mining equipment will operate on a different schedule than the process plant. Loading operations will be conducted during one 8 h shift per day, 365 d/a. A 3.85 m 3 rated (5.0 yd 3 ) front-end loader will be used to load a 24 t articulated truck that will either deliver the sulphide tailings to the sulphide stockpile or the oxide tailings to the 160 t oxide tailings hopper. Once the hopper is filled, excess tailings will be stockpiled around the hopper to be loaded by the process plant group.

 

Certain areas of the tailings might contain high amounts of moisture that can lead to equipment getting stuck. To mitigate this challenge, wider, oversized tires with chains will be installed on the front-end loader. Also, the front-end loader bucket will be downsized to 3.06 m 3 (4.0 yd 3 ). This will lighten the load on the front tires preventing them from sinking into saturated material. The trucks will not enter the soft zones so there will be no modifications to the trucks.

 

 

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A dribble chute will feed the tailings from the hopper onto a conveyor belt. Cement and lime will be added to the tailings at controlled addition rates. Although some operations add solid dry, flake cyanide to the agglomerator feed material, this option will not be exercised in this case. The cement and lime will be added from their respective bulk storage silos. A 50 t capacity cement storage silo equipped with a dust collection filter and a cement blower will be required, as well as a 30 t capacity lime storage silo similarly equipped with a dust collection filter and a lime blower. Each reagent delivery system will be controlled by a weightometer prior to feeding the reagents to the tailings material conveyor belt feeding the agglomerator drum. The design treatment rate will be 63.4 t/h of tailings material with an average moisture content of 10%. Water, or barren solution, will be added to the agglomerator to provide for an overall moisture content of approximately 12.5 to 15% to the leach pad feed material. Two 1 t capacity cyanide mixing and storage tanks will be positioned at the Merrill-Crowe facility. Cyanide preparation system will produce a cyanide solution with a strength of 20% sodium cyanide. The cyanide solution will then injected into the solution distribution system going to the heap pad and precipitation filter press.

 

The agglomerator will be a drum type unit with a diameter of 1.8 m and a length of 6.7 m rotating at 10.5 rpm and with a variable angle of 2.5, 5.0 or 7.5°. Agglomerated material will be discharged onto a conveyor belt, then on to a series of jump conveyors, and then deposited on the heap leach pad by a radial telestacker. A curing time of 5 d will be allowed before spraying of the agglomerates with cyanide-bearing leach solution commences.

 

There will be only one leach pad. The leach heap pad dimensions are estimated to be 288 m wide and 428 m long and includes a surrounding berm of 6.5 m in width. There will be four lifts over the seven-year treatment period. Each lift will be 6.5 m high giving the heap an overall height of 26 m.

 

The heap leach process will operate with three solution ponds:

 

 

·

a barren solution pond

 

 

 

 

·

a pregnant solution pond

 

 

 

 

·

an event or overflow pond.

 

Solution from the barren solution pond will be pumped to the leach heap. Concentrated cyanide solution will be added to the barren solution pond where it will be mixed to give a controlled cyanide concentration of approximately 0.5 g/L sodium cyanide strength. The pH will be maintained at 10.5. This solution will be distributed over the leach pad using irrigation pipes and drips for an overall solution feeding rate of approximately 7.3 L/h/m 2 (0.002 L/s/m 2 ). A total leaching duration of 130 d will be allowed, followed by a wash/rinse cycle of seven days resulting in a total loading, leaching and rinsing cycle of 142 d.

 

The total calculated amount of area of pad under irrigation per day will be approximately 22,000 m 2 , with 1,210 m 2 being rinsed every day. The calculated volume of solution pumped to the heap will be 173 m 3 /h of which a nominal 9 m 3 /h will be rinse solution. A total solution evaporation loss of 10% is assumed.

 

 

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The 173 m 3 /h pregnant solution collected from the leach pad will be directed to the pregnant solution pond. The solution from the pregnant solution pond will be pumped to the Merrill-Crowe plant for silver and gold recovery by precipitation with zinc dust and filtration of the precipitate. The barren solution will then be returned to the barren solution pond. Solution from the pregnant solution pond can overflow into the barren solution pond should this be required. Solution from the barren solution pond can also overflow into the overflow solution pond. This overflow solution pond will also collect excess water and drainage solution from the heaps and the plant environs. The overflow solution pond will also supply make-up water to the process by pumping the water back to the barren solution pond. Alternatively, excess solution from this pond will be treated with calcium hypochlorite in an agitated treatment tank to reduce the cyanide levels to acceptable limits prior to discharging this water to the environment, or re-using this water as process water.

 

The Merrill-Crowe section will receive the pregnant solution, which will be pumped to the clarifier filter together with filter aid pre-coat and body feed. The slurry from the backwash cycles will be pumped to an inactive part of leach heap. The clarified solution will be pumped to the de-aeration tower where the solution will be de-oxygenated and a slurry of zinc dust, lead nitrate, cyanide and filter aid will be pumped into the de-aerated solution after the tower but ahead of the precipitate filters. The zinc dust, lead nitrate and filter aid will be made up into a slurry at the required dosage rate in the precipitate mixing tank and cyanide will be added as needed. The cementation reaction occurs at the point of introduction of the slurry to the de-aerated solution. This reaction normally requires approximately 2 to 5 minutes for completion. The reaction should be complete by the time the new-barren solution exits the precipitate filter to barren solution tank and from there it will flow into the barren solution pond where the pH will be adjusted to 10.5 with lime if necessary and then be pumped back to the heap pad for leaching after cyanide concentration is adjusted to approximately 0.5 g/L sodium cyanide.

 

The addition of zinc dust has been calculated on the basis of 10 g of zinc dust per 1 g of silver plus gold in order to ensure that the cementation reaction will be driven to completion. Although precipitation efficiencies are normally considered to be higher than 99.5%, in this case 96% has been selected since no test work has been conducted on the pregnant solution from this material. The cyanide concentration of the pregnant solution should be a minimum of about 100 mg/L as free cyanide, and will be monitored on a regular basis. The lead nitrate addition will be added to improve the precipitation efficiency and its dosage is based on approximately 2 mg lead nitrate per litre of solution. Approximately 50% of the total required amount of the lead nitrate will be added to the pregnant solution prior to the clarifier filter where impurities present in the solution will be removed by the clarifier filter. Although no anti-scalant reagents have been included in the study, any reagents of this nature should be tested to determine its effect on the precipitation efficiency.

 

 

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The silver-rich precipitate which contains the gold and excess zinc will flow to the acid vat tank where the excess zinc can be dissolved by mixing with adequate amount of sulphuric acid and from there it will be pumped to the digest precipitate filter press. This precipitate from the filter press will be dried in an oven prior to being melted in a smelting furnace for doré production. It is anticipated that the total metal precipitate production per day will be approximately 420 kg (dry basis) with approximately 20% of silver and gold, or approximately 85 kg of silver and gold.

 

HEAP LEACH LAYOUT

 

The heap layout, heap lift height, and number of lifts have been assumed for the purposes of this study and are detailed in the section above. The maximum height has been restricted to 26 m as a result of the proximity of the proposed heap leach facility to the community of San Jose de Avino and possibly weak compressive strength of the agglomerates. This proposed height for the heap would require geotechnical verification. The relatively low heap pad height proposed has resulted in a relatively large surface area being required for the leach pad. The site layout and available space, site drainage, and pad size have been designed according to the area topography and the best available information. However, the close proximity of the proposed heap leach facility to the community of San Jose de Avino, and its agricultural workings, may yet result in site and/or layout revisions.

 

17.5 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the sulphide tailings. Because some of the oxide tailings and sulphide tailings were co-deposited, and the oxide tailings are partially covered by younger unconsolidated sulphide tailings on the northwest side of the tailings storage dam, the sulphide tailings materials will be reclaimed as required during the oxide tailings reclamation. The reclaimed sulphide tailings are planned for storage in a separate sulphide tailings storage facility for further exploration. While some of the sulphide tailings could be used for constructing the heap leach pad and facilities for the oxide tailings retreatment, no quantities have been estimated at this stage. In addition, no recovery methods are currently proposed for the sulphide tailings. The sulphide tailings has been excluded from this study.

 

 

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18.0 PROJECT INFRASTRUCTURE 

 

 

18.1 INTRODUCTION

 

The history of operations at the Avino Mine provides ample evidence of sufficient infrastructure and services in the area. The San Gonzalo Mine entered commercial production in October 2012, followed by reopening the Avino Mine in January 2015. The two mines feed a conventional flotation mill that has three separate circuits and a capacity of 1,500 t/d. The existing tailings deposition facility has been upgraded and is fully permitted and operational for approximately another 500,000 t of tailings. The offices, miner’s quarters, secured explosives storage facilities, warehouse, laboratory and other associated facilities are all in place.

 

The tailings leach facilities are planned to be located southeast of the existing tailings storage pond. The preliminary arrangement for these facilities are shown in Figure 18.1.

 

18.2 ACCESSIBILITY

 

The Property is easily accessible by road and is an important part of the local community from which skilled workers are available. Access is provided by Highway 40, a four-lane highway leading from Durango, past the airport and on to the city of Torreon in Coahuila. Successive turn-offs for the Property are at Francisco I Madero, Ignacio Zaragoza, and San Jose de Avino (Slim 2005d). The Avino mineral concessions are covered by a network of dirt roads which provide easy transport access between the San Gonzalo deposit and the mill at the main Avino Mine (Gunning 2009). In 2008, a 1.7 km road accessing to the San Gonzalo deposit was widened and upgraded so it would be suitable for use by the mineralized material haul trucks and heavy equipment.

 

18.3 POWER

 

The Avino Mine was connected to the local power grid with a line capacity quoted at 4 MW when the mine last operated in 2001. With the shutdown, much of this excess power was diverted to the surrounding towns in the district. Before 2016, the existing power line provides only 1,000 kW of power with 500 kW servicing the mill, 400 kW for San Gonzalo and the balance for the well at Galeana, employee accommodation facility, and water reclaim from the tailings dam. The San Gonzalo power line was built in 2009 to replace the contractor’s diesel generator used during mine development.

 

In June 2016, a newly constructed dedicated power line to the mine site was energized and tested on June 8 th , 2016. The test was successful and the line was then fully functional at the design capacity of 5 MW. Current power consumption at the mine is approximately 2 MW, leaving sufficient additional power for potential future expansion projects, including the proposed oxide tailings retreatment project using heap leach followed by gold and silver recovery by Merrill-Crowe precipitation and possible expansion or upgrading of the processing plant. Additionally, the existing power line was left in place to service local communities and provide backup power for the mine.

 

A C-27 CAT diesel power generator, which produces 700 kW, is now used as backup.

 

 

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Figure  18.1 Overall Tailings Heap Leach Facility Layout
 

 

 

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18.4 WATER SUPPLY

 

While water supply was found to be limiting in the past, Avino has taken the necessary steps to secure adequate supply. To supplement the 1 Mm 3 dam built by Avino in 1989, a well (Galeana) was drilled to the west of the mine site in 1996 to a depth of 400 m and is reported to have a water level at 40 m below the collar. From this, a pipeline connection has been installed to the mine. Additionally, CMMA, in cooperation with the government, has repaired a government dam (El Caracol) and raised the dam wall by 6 m. A pipeline to the mine has also been installed. This dam is shared with the population of Pánuco de Coronado for their irrigation needs, as 60% for the mine and 40% for the town, with government setting the annual total take to which percent sharing applies. Mine site water use is from a combination of tailings water reclaim, El Caracol, and Galeana with preference given to mine site sources for which no water conservation charge was applicable (Slim 2005). The dewatered water from San Gonzalo and Avino underground mines are used as mill processing and agricultural irrigation.

 

18.5 WATER TREATMENT PLANT

 

Underground mine water at the Avino Mine is acidic. Since October 2012, dewatering of the Avino Mine began and a water treatment plant using lime to raise the pH and to precipitate the heavy metals was constructed and built. The water treatment facility is a typical Mexican design and the effluent water quality had to meet the agricultural standards for discharge. Test results to date show the results do meet the required agricultural standards and being discharged to the El Caracol Dam via gravity. Treatment of the Avino underground water had been completed with the commencement of production in 2015. The water treatment plant is in place for treating excess water before discharging to El Caracol Dam. The effluent is being monitored on a daily basis when the treatment plant is operational. Sludge, which is considered low density, is sent to the tailings dam.

 


 

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19.0 MARKET STUDIES AND CONTRACTS

 

 

19.1 MINED MATERIAL HAULAGE FROM UNDERGROUND

 

Haulage of the materials from the San Gonzalo and Avino mines is contracted out and the contract terms are within industry norms.

 

19.2 FLOTATION CONCENTRATES

 

There is a ready market for both the San Gonzalo silver/gold flotation concentrate and the Avino copper, silver, and gold flotation concentrate. These concentrates are currently being sold under contract to Samsung C&T UK Ltd. The terms and conditions of these contracts are based on industry norms and the terms have been used to establish the revenues from both mining operations.

 

Under the terms of the agreement, the concentrates are delivered by truck to the Port of Manzanillo, located on the Pacific coast of Mexico, loaded into containers and shipped to smelters located overseas.

 

The metal prices used for the payable metals namely copper, silver and gold are based on the average market prices of the first month after the month of delivery to the loading port.

 

In 2016, Avino announced that the concentrate prepayment agreement with Samsung C&T UK Ltd. had been extended from July 2017 to July 2018.

 

19.3 GOLD-SILVER DORÉ

 

For the doré produced from the proposed oxide tailings retreatment project, in the absence of letters of interest or letters of intent from potential smelters or buyers of gold and silver doré, the following smelter terms for similar projects have been applied.

 

 

· gold - pay 99% on the gold less a refining charge of $8.00/accountable troy oz.

 

 

 

 

· silver - pay 95% on the silver less a refining charge of $1.00/accountable troy oz.

   

 

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20.0 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES, PERMITTING, AND SOCIAL OR COMMUNITY IMPACT

 

20.1 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

 

Avino has received all necessary permits to build the new tailings storage facility and construction planning with a contractor is underway. A new tailings storage facility is necessary to allow the existing tailings storage facility to be decommissioned, which will enable Avino to begin assessing the upper sulphide bench, as well as the lower oxide bench, in areas that are currently being used to store tailings from active operations.

 

The assessment work currently underway is part of the recommendations contained in the 2013 PEA (Tetra Tech 2013), intended to advance the tailings resource towards a production decision for a Merrill-Crowe precipitation heap leach operation.

 

In November 2015, in order to get a head start on the assessment work, Avino began a program of sampling the lower oxide bench in areas not in use. The program consisted of using a hydraulic drill with a 2 m split spoon auger to drill vertical holes to a depth of 20 to 30 m; 12 holes were drilled by the end of 2015 totalling 227 m. By the end of February 2016, a further 40 holes had been drilled, totalling over 650 m; assays have been received and are currently being compiled.

 

Once the new tailings storage facility is complete, Avino will decommission the current tailings storage facility and begin installing wells that will be used to pump out the retained water in the dam. This will speed up the sonic drilling program planned for the upper benches, provide samples for the metallurgical program, and increase confidence in the oxide resource located below the sulphide tailings.

 

20.1.1 ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING

 

Flora and fauna of the surrounding San Gonzalo Property is anticipated to be similar to what may be found in the area of oxide tailings, although presence of these species has not been confirmed at the oxide tailings site. Vegetation observed on the San Gonzalo Property at the time of permitting includes catclaw mimosa; cactus species, such as paddle cactus and desert christmas cactus; needle bush, gobernadora; and persimmon trees.

 

Within the adjacent San Gonzalo Mine Project area, there were 15 species of major mammals, 51 species of birds, 10 species of reptiles, and 3 species of amphibious reported at the time of permitting. Of these species, four mammal species, 14 species of birds, 9 reptiles, and 3 amphibians species are listed by Official Mexican Standard NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) (Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources [MENR 2008a) (Table 20.1 to Table 20.4).

 

 

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Table 20.1 Mammal Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine

 

Common Name

Gender and Species

Status under NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001

or CITES

Squirrel*

Sciurus aberti

Resident. Endemic. Special Protection

Mouse

Neotoma albigula

Resident. Endemic. Threatened.

Desert Fox

Vulpex velox

Resident. Endemic. Threatened.

Badger

Taxidea Taxus

Resident. Threatened.

Notes: *No English Common Name translation

 

Source:

MENR (2008a)

 

 

Table 20.2 Bird Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine

 

Common Name

Gender and Species

Status under NOM-059-SEMARNAT-200

or CITES

Heron

Ardea herodias

Migratory. Special protection.

Cerceta aliazul

Anas discors

Migratory. Special protection. Hunting.

Black eagle

Buteogallus anthracinus

Resident. Special Protection. Indicator.

Red tailed eagle

Buteo jamaicensis

Resident. Indicator.

Owl with horns

Bubo virginianus

Resident. Threatened.

Cernicalo

Falco sparverius

Resident. Indicator.

Quail with flakes

Callipepla squamata

Resident. Endemic. Self-consume.

Blue mulato

Melanotis caerulescens

Resident. Endemic. Threatened. Esthetic.

Northern cenzontle

Mimus polyglotos

Resident. Esthetic.

Cuitlacoche with curved beak

Toxostoma curvirostre

Resident. Esthetic.

Gray capulinero

Ptilogonys cinereus

Resident. Endemic.

Golden vireo

Vireo hypochryseus

Resident. Endemic.

Desert cardinal

Cardinalis sinuatus

Resident. Esthetic.

Colorin seven colours

Passerina ciris

Migratory. Esthetic.

Source: MENR (2008a)

  

 

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Table 20.3 Reptile Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine

 

Common Name

Gender and Species

Status under NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001

or CITES

Black iguana

Ctenosaura pectinata

Resident. Endemic. Threatened.

Chivilla *

Xantusia bolsonae

Resident. Endemic. Threatened.

Lizard *

Sceloporus horridus

Resident. Endemic.

Water snake

Nerodia melanogaster

Resident. Endemic. Threatened.

Chirrionera snake

Pituophis deppei

Resident. Endemic. Threatened.

Water snake

Thamnophis eques

Resident. Threatened.

Rattle snake

Crotalus atrox

Resident. Special protection.

Rattle snake

Crotalus molossus

Resident. Special protection.

Water turtle

Chrysemys scripta

Resident. Special protection.

Notes:

*No English common name translation

Source:

MENR (2008a)

 

Table 20.4 Amphibian Species Listed by NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001 or in CITES within the San Gonzalo Mine

 

Common Name

Gender and Species

Status under NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001

or CITES

Ajolote (Mexican mole lizard)

Ambystoma rosaceum

Resident. Endemic. Special protection.

Toad *

Bufo mazatlensis

Resident. Endemic.

Frog *

Rana pustulosa

Resident. Endemic. Special protection.

Notes:

*No English common name translation

Source:

MENR (2008a)

  

20.2 ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITTING

 

Permits and authorizations required for the Project operation include:

 

· an operating permit

· an application for surface tenures

· a waste water discharge registration

· a hazardous waste generator's registration.

 
An environmental impact assessment (EIA) or Evaluación de Impacto Ambiental under the Ley General del Equilibrio Ecológico y la Protección al Ambiente (LGEEPA), article 28 (General Law of Ecological Equilibrium and Environmental Protection), is required by the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (Secretaría de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (SEMARNAT)). Prior to this EIA, an authorization regarding environmental impact matters is required by the SEMARNAT.

 

Additional surface tenures will likely be required for the re-location of any tailings to areas outside of the current surface tenure rights.

 

 

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20.2.1 CURRENT PERMITS FOR THE OXIDE TAILINGS

 

There are no current operating permits for the mining and exploitation of the oxide tailings. However, a conditionally approved Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) (Manifestación de Impacto Ambiental (MIA)) for the exploitation and associated transmission line is in place for the Avino Mine where the tailings are located. Changes to the operating methods may be required if mining of the tailings was not included in the original mining plan. Based on this information, revisions to the permits will be required. If new operating permits are required, an EIA and EIS (MIA) will be mandatory.

 

20.2.2 CURRENT PERMITS FOR THE SAN GONZALO MINE (ADJACENT)

 

In order to obtain an authorization regarding environmental impact matters, Avino must prepare an EIS or MIA. Avino prepared an EIS, known as “Manifestación de Impacto Ambiental, modalidad Particular” (MIA-P) for the San Gonzalo Mine and submitted it to the MENR in August of 2008. The applicable regulations fall under Federal jurisdiction, Article 28, sections II, III and VII of the LGEEPA and the Reglamento en Materia de Evaluacion del Impacto Ambiental (REIA), sections K, L and O (Environmental Impact Assessment Matter Regulation).

 

Given the planned activities for the site, the Ministry also required an assessment in “Environmental Impact Matter for Change of Land Use” (Materia de Impacto Ambiental para el Cambio de Uso de Suelo) for forested areas and mining infrastructure and electrification, for a surface area of 9.08 ha.

 

The authorization from the Ministry also requires the mine to present mitigation measures for all potential environmental impacts, as per Article 30, LGEEPA and Article 44, REIA, which Avino detailed in its EIS to the authorities.

 

Based on the information provided by Avino to the Mexican authorities, a conditional authorization was granted, subject to additional prevention and mitigation measures in order to avoid, minimize, or compensate for any environmental impacts during the different stages of the adjacent San Gonzalo Mine (Article 35, section II, LGEEPA), which include an assessment of the “Environmental Impact Matter for Change of Land Use” described above. This permit is valid for 11 years from the date it was issued, to perform various activities on-site. Any modification to the Project must be sent to the MENR in writing before commencing changes.

 

Aside from complying with all prevention, protection, control and mitigation measures laid out in the proposed MIA-P, Avino must develop an Environmental Quality Monitoring Program (EQMP) or ‘Programa de Seguimiento de la Calidad Ambiental’. The proposed EQMP must be presented to the MENR within six months of receiving the conditional authorization. Once the MENR has assessed the monitoring program, Avino needs to deliver progress reports semi-annually for a period of at least five years. Lastly, Avino must obtain proper authorization from the MENR for “Change of Land Use” as well as the corresponding “Change of Use for Forested Ground to Mining Infrastructure”.

 

 

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It is important to note that the current conditional authorization can be cancelled for many reasons, one of them includes improper disposal of liquid/solid waste (hazardous or non-hazardous).

 

A second permit for “Change of Forest Land Use to Mining Infrastructure” (Cambio de Utilización de Terreno Forestal a Infraestructura Minera) was requested to the SEMARNAT and granted in September of 2008 for the adjacent San Gonzalo Mine. The corresponding legislation is Article 62, section IX of the “Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable” (General Law for Sustainable Forest Development) and Article 27 of the Regulation. . In addition, the Official Mexican Standard NOM-060-SEMARNAT-1994 and NOM-061-SEMARNAT-1994 must be adhered to. As per the authorization, Avino must complete its change in land use within 18 months of the date of the permit.

 

20.2.3 APPLICABLE LEGISLATION

 

In order to remain in compliance with current permits for the San Gonzalo Mine, the following eight applicable Official Mexican Standards for the Project must be complied with:

 

· Official Mexican Standards NOM-001-SEMARNAT-1996, which establishes the maximum limits allowed for contaminants in waste water discharges in national waters and goods

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-041-SEMARNAT-1999; which establishes the maximum limits allowed for the emission of polluted gas generated from the exhaust pipe of automotive vehicles circulating, which utilize gas as fuel

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-043-SEMARNAT-1993, which establishes the maximum levels allowed for emissions from fixed sources of solid particles to the atmosphere

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-045-SEMARNAT-1996, which establishes the maximum levels of emission (smokes opacity) generated from of automotive vehicles circulating, which utilize diesel or mixtures that include diesel as fuel

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-052-SEMARNAT-2005, which establishes the characteristics, the process of identification, classification and listing of hazardous waste

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-054-SEMARNAT-1993, which establishes the procedure to determine the incompatibility between two or more types of residues considered as harmful by NOM-052-SEMARNAT-2005

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001, which regulates the environmental protection-Mexico’s native species of wild flora and fauna and specifications for their inclusion, exclusion or change-list of species in risk

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-060-SEMARNAT-1994, which establishes protection measures for forestry grounds.

 

 

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In addition, other Official Mexican Standards regarding change in land use and mining must be followed and may include:

 

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-061-SEMARNAT-1994, which refers to the specifications to mitigate the adverse effects caused to the Wild Animals and Uncultivated Vegetation as a result of the forestry utilization, and which nomenclature was modified

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-062-SEMARNAT-1994 establishes specifications to mitigate adverse effects on biodiversity that are caused by change of land use in forested areas

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-120-SEMARNAT-1997 establishes environmental protection specifications for mining exploration activities in dry and temperate climate regions

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-141-SEMARNAT-2003 establishes requirements for tailings characterization, and specifications and criteria for site preparation, design, construction, operation and post-operation of tailings dams.

 

Dependent on the mining plan, additional Official Mexican Standards for mining operations will also be required for the Project:

 

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-147-SEMARNAT/SSA1-2004, which establishes criteria for determining the concentrations of remediation of soils contaminated with arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium, hexavalent chromium, mercury, nickel, silver, lead, selenium, thallium and/or vanadium; published in the Official Gazette on March 2, 2007

· Draft Official Mexican standard, PROY-NOM-XXX-SEMARNAT-2009, which establishes the elements and procedures to implement management plans for mining waste

· Draft Official Mexican Standard NOM-155-SEMARNAT-2007, which establishes environmental protection requirements for systems leaching gold and silver ores

· General Law for the Prevention and Management of Waste (Ley General para la Prevención y Gestión Integral de los Residuos (LGPGIR)) and applicable regulations, which regulated the following registrations and authorizations:

· Hazardous Waste Generator's Registration and other compliance documents; such as Manifest, Monthly Log of Hazardous Waste Generation; Ecological Waybills for the Importation and/or Exportation of hazardous Materials and Wastes; Semi-annual Report on Hazardous Wastes Sent to Recycling, Treatment or Final Disposition; and Accidental Hazardous Waste Spill Manifest

· LGEEPA

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-023-STPS-2003, which establishes standards for work in mines and health and safety conditions at these sites

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-055-SEMARNAT-2003, which establishes the requirements to be met by sites that will use a hazardous waste landfill

· Official Mexican Standard NOM-147-SEMARNAT/SSA1-2004, which establishes criteria for determining the concentrations of remediation of soils contaminated by arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium, chromium.

 

 

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20.3 ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND REPORTING

 

The conditional authorization sets out the requirements for environmental monitoring and reporting, on a semi-annual basis, for a minimum of five years. Details are provided in Section 20.2.

 

20.4 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT

 

Brownfields, or site recycling as it is called within the Mexican environmental legislation, looks at the environmental liabilities (pasivos ambientales) as per Articles 68, 69 and 70 of the Ley General Para la Prevención y Gestión Integral de Residuos (LGPyGIR) or General Law for the Prevention and Comprehensive Management of Waste. It is based on the “polluter pay” principle, according to the LGEEPA, and the LGPyGIR. The federal government coordinates with both provincial and municipal authorities to manage the environmental liabilities, whether the sites are orphaned or not. The LGPyGIR requires complete clean-up of contaminated sites.

 

20.5 WATER MANAGEMENT

 

Fresh water for the Project is available from a well drilled in 1996, west of the mine site and surface water from a dam which is divided 60%/40% with the town of Panuco de Coronado. The Project has previously been charged annually for water use. Piping infrastructure from these water sources is still in place.

 

Additional water was also obtained from underground workings, and re-circulation from the tailings. There is potential for the water from the underground workings to be acid producing (Slim 2005d). Treatment of water from the underground workings may be required prior to use depending on the water quality.

 

20.6 SULPHIDE TAILINGS MANAGEMENT

 

ABA tests have indicated that mild acid generation may already have started on the tailings dam. A gap analysis and additional tests to further characterize current conditions of the tailings should be completed to properly design a tailings management plan.

 

 

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Three preliminary options have been identified for the management of the sulphide tailings:

 

·

reprocessing the tailings

·

retreating of the tailings on the heap

·

re-location and treatment for remediation.

 

The feasibility of these options are not known at this stage.

 

The absence of complete sulphide tailings metallurgical information makes identification of feasibility of the options difficult. A detailed trade-off study should be undertaken to characterize current conditions of the tailings and to determine whether the retreatment of this material would contribute to the profitability of the Project. However, at this stage only limited metallurgical test data is available since no detailed metallurgical test work was undertaken on this material during the MMI 2004 test program.

 

Alternatively, the treatment of the sulphide tailings for gold recovery will afford an opportunity to recover silver and gold from the material as well as treating this material with the lime to ensure that this material will not be a net acid producer. Indications are that the sulphide tailings will also require treatment for environmental remediation purposes in the future. These costs could be partially or completely be off-set by treating this material separately or together with the oxide material by the heap leach process.

 

Re-locating the sulphide tailings may afford a more expedient option to address this potential environmental problem. For the purposes of this preliminary economic assessment, it will be assumed that the sulphide tailings will be moved to another location north-east of the proposed site for the leach pad.

 

20.7 MINE CLOSURE AND RECLAMATION

 

An updated mine closure plan and reclamation will be required for the Project. The mine closure plan should include information; such as:

 

· justification for the closure plan considering technical, environmental and legal aspects

· objectives and how they will be met

· photo evidence and details of the environmental situation prior to commencing closure activities

· schedule of activities

· the progressive reclamation of the site during the life of the operation

· the design of tailings disposal areas

· the reclamation and re-vegetation of the surface disturbances wherever practicable

· a cost estimate of the work required to close and reclaim the mine

· a plan for ongoing and post-closure monitoring and reporting at the site.

 

 

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No cost estimates have been generated at this time to ensure the Project meets the environmental requirements once the processing of the heap material has been terminated.

 

As per federal regulations, under LGEEPA, both the SEMARNAT and Procuraduría Federal de Proteccíon al Ambiente (PROFEPA) (Federal Attorney for Environmental Protection) ministries require Avino to present in its first semi-annual report for a General Plan to Remediate the Site dates, activities, techniques, costs that will guarantee restoration of affected areas, considering complete reforestation of impacted sites, removal of foundations and infrastructure that is no longer useful, roads that no longer have any use, remove all rubbish and properly dispose of, closing off adits that are no longer needed and restoration of the tailings facility when its operational life is finished. Avino will also need to present a reforestation program for the entire surface area affected during mining operations. This program will include caveats to safeguard flora and fauna.

 

20.8 SOCIO-ECONOMIC AND COMMUNITY CONSIDERATIONS

 

This socio-economic section of the PEA:

 

· identifies communities that may potentially be affected by the development of the Project

· identifies potential positive and adverse effects of the Project on local communities

· advises on further study requirements.

 

20.8.1 PROJECT LOCATION

 

The Project is located approximately 82 km northeast of the City of Durango, in the state of Durango. The Property lies between the communities of Panuco de Coronado and San Jose de Avino.

 

20.8.2 CONSULTATION WITH COMMUNITIES

 

The implementation of an effective community engagement program is fundamental to the successful environmental permitting of mining projects. As part of a comprehensive community engagement program, should be initiated as soon as possible. Consultation will include addressing concerns of the leap-leach pile that may be present within or adjacent to the Property.

 

Consultation and the development of a working relationship with local communities typically involves the development of a series of agreements that lay the groundwork for conversations. These include:

 

 

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· memorandums of understanding

· protocol agreements

· community consultation/participation agreements.

 

As project exploration and development proceeds, other agreements will become necessary, including:

 

· socio-economic/community economic benefits agreements

· environmental monitoring agreements

· training agreements

· accommodation/impact benefit agreements.

 

POTENTIAL POSITIVE EFFECTS ON LOCAL COMMUNITIES

 

Potential positive effects of the proposed project development include:

 

· long-term, meaningful employment in mining operations and related positions (e.g., environmental monitors, service industry sector)

· economic development and contract opportunities for local communities (existing and new businesses), and community infrastructure improvements.

 

POTENTIAL ADVERSE EFFECTS ON LOCAL COMMUNITIES

 

For potential adverse effects of the proposed project development, it will be assumed that the sulphide tailings will be moved to another location northeast of the proposed site for the leach pad. Again, it should also be mentioned that this proposed site is very close to the town of San Jose de Avino and this may result in objections from the local community.

 

 

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21.0 CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS

 

The estimated capital costs for the construction of the heap leach pad and the treatment facilities has been calculated to be US$28.8 million (US$24.4 million of initial capital plus US$4.4 million sustaining capital) and the estimated operating cost is US$15.06/t.

 

21.1 CAPITAL COSTS

 

21.1.1 INTRODUCTION

 

The updated capital costs for the Project have been developed based on 1,370 t/d or 500,000 t/a treatment of oxide tailings and construction of the heap leach pad in two phases.

 

The updated capital cost estimate includes the following items:

 

 

· An updated equipment list was generated with process engineering and new quotations for major equipment were obtained and replace the previous costs.

 

 

 

 

· Other items in the previous estimate in 2012 were escalated to reflect the current costs.

 

21.1.2 BASIS OF ESTIMATE

 

This estimate is a PEA, Class IV estimate prepared in accordance with industry standard. The accuracy of the estimate is -25%/+40% which is suitable for client review and a NI 43-101 report.

 

PRICING AND CURRENCY

 

This PEA estimate is prepared with a base date of Q4 2016 and has not included any escalation beyond this date.

 

For major equipment, costing is based on budgetary quotations from vendors. Other mechanical equipment costs are based on in-house data.

 

All capital costs are expressed in US dollars. No provision was made for fluctuations in the currency exchange rates.

 

The currency exchange rates used in the estimate are shown in Table 21.1.

 

 

 

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Table 21.1 Currency Exchange Rate

 

Currency

Exchange

CDN$1.00

US$0.7454

MXN$19.23

US$1.0000

 

CONSTRUCTION LABOUR RATES

 

A blended labour rate of US$13.50/h has been used used and calculated based on the assessment of current labour conditions as compared to the labour rate of US$12.68 in the previous estimate from 2012.

 

INFLATION RATE

 

An inflation rate has been applied to reflect the current cost of the Project (Table 21.2). The escalation is based on inflation rate (consumer prices) in Mexico (Trading Economics 2016 www.tradingeconomics.com).

 

Table 21.2 Inflation Rates in Mexico

 

Year

Rate (%)

2013

4.4

2014

5.6

2015

2.7

2016

3.5

 

An average rate of inflation from 2012 to 2016 is 17%. Due to a combination of factors such as inflation, supply/demand, and other effects such as environmental, technological, and political changes, an escalation of 2% per year was applied in the updated capital cost estimate.

 

DIRECT COSTS

 

The equipment list has been updated based on the process flow diagram document. The cost of equipment was estimated based on changes to the process flow diagram.

 

Disciplines other than mechanical equipment used costs from the previous cost estimate, with escalation applied only.

 

INDIRECT COSTS

 

All indirect costs were estimated based on a percentage of direct costs.

 

 

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CONTINGENCY AND RISK

 

A contingency assessment was completed and applied to various areas of the direct and indirect costs to meet anticipated, foreseen, but incompletely defined costs to satisfy the approved scope.

 

Table 21.3 Contingency by Area

 

Contingency (%) by Area

12.0% of Mining, Agglomeration & Pad Loading

20.0% of Process Facilities

15.0% of Reagents / Auxiliary Services

15.0% of Buildings

30.0% of Leach Pad & Infrastructure

20.0% of Power Supply and Distribution

15.0% of EPCM & Vendor Representatives

15.0% of Freight & Construction Indirects

10.0% of Owners Costs

 

21.1.3 CAPITAL COST SUMMARY

 

The capital cost for the Project has been assessed at US$28.8 million (including initial capital of US$24.4 million) and is summarized in Table 21.4.

 

Table 21.4 Capital Cost Summary

 

Item/Description

Total Initial

Capital Cost

(US$000)

Total Sustaining

Capital Cost

(US$000)

Direct Costs

Mining, Agglomeration, and Pad Loading

2,899

818

Process Facilities

3,979

Reagents/Auxiliary Services

526

Buildings

1,003

Leach Pad and Infrastructure

4,522

1,819

Power Supply and Distribution

1,571

Total Direct Costs

14,500

2,637

Indirect Costs

Engineering, Procurement, Construction Management, Quality Assurance and Vendor Representatives

2,338

386

Freight and Construction Indirects

2,898

430

Owner’s Costs

725

132

Contingency

3,902

767

Total Indirect Costs

9,863

1,715

Total Capital Costs

24,363

4,352

 

 

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MINING, AGGLOMERATION AND PAD LOADING

 

These costs include the facilities required for transferring the tailings from the existing tailing dam to the dump bin for oxide tailings and to the sulphide stockpile for the sulphide tailings, using the front-end loader and trucks. It also includes the facilities required for the loading of the tailings into a bin to feed the conveyor to the agglomerator, and includes the agglomerator and its structural supports as well as the ancillary equipment. These costs also includes the lime and cement silos.

 

PROCESS FACILITIES

 

The costs in this section include the various items of equipment, the tanks and their attendant pumps and agitators (if equipped), the Merrill-Crowe circuit (supplied as a modular package unit) and other miscellaneous process-related equipment. The process equipment is estimated as new cost items.

 

REAGENTS AND AUXILIARY SERVICES

 

The costs derived for this section include reagent preparation and holding tanks and related equipment as well as civil construction costs. Water will be supplied from the existing sources, namely from the dams and/or the wells. The costs shown for the fresh water supply includes the refurbishing of the equipment and pumps. Safety items related to reagent handling have also been included.

 

BUILDINGS

 

The existing buildings and offices of the Avino Mine will be utilized for the Project. An allowance has been included for the refurbishment of these facilities. No costs have been allocated for the truck shop since it is intended to have a transport contractor to provide all the transportation needs for the Project. An allowance has been included for the procurement/refurbishing of laboratory equipment. The costs for constructing building to house the Merrill-Crowe circuit and reagent preparation related equipment have been included in the cost estimates.

 

LEACH PAD AND INFRASTRUCTURE

 

The civil construction costs of upgrading the roads and constructing the leach pad and ponds are given in this section. The leach pad with liners and a leak detection system will be constructed in two phases. The barren, pregnant and event solution ponds will all be lined. Also included is the cost of fencing off the plant area, the telephone system, sewage disposal, water supply and treatment, and fuel storage facilities. The existing fuel storage facilities will be used but this will require refurbishing and this cost has been provided in this section.

 

POWER SUPPLY AND DISTRIBUTION

 

The refurbishing and expanding of the existing electrical power supply system, along with lighting, has been included in this section. It also includes power to the agglomerated area and the Merrill-Crowe area.

 

 

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INDIRECT COSTS

 

Indirect costs have been included as costs associated with construction services, consulting services, spare parts, and freight. Contingency has been included in the indirect costs.

 

No sunk costs or taxes have been added to the capital cost estimate.

 

21.2 OPERATING COSTS

 

The LOM overall operating costs for the Project, including the costs for mining, process and G&A, have been estimated to be approximately $15.06/t milled. Table 21.5 gives the LOM overall unit operating cost summary, based on a nominal processing rate of 1,370 t/d. The operating cost estimate is reported in US dollar with an exchange rate of Mexican Peso to US Dollar at 19.23.

 

Table 21.5 LOM Unit Operating Cost Estimate Summary

 

Description

Personnel

Unit Cost

(US$/t treated)

Mining

15 *

1.13

Process

39

12.53

G&A

11

1.41

Total Operating Cost

65

15.06


Note: * labour requirement for trucking of the tailings and waste is excluded as it will be by a contractor.

 

21.2.1 MINING OPERATING COSTS

 

Mining production cycle consists of loading, hauling and unloading, no drilling or blasting is required. Oxide tailing materials will be loaded using a 3.8 m 3 wheel loader and hauled to the leach pad using a 24 t articulated truck. Sulphide tailing materials are treated as waste and will be hauled to the waste dump. Trucking of oxide and sulphide materials will be performed by a contractor. Table 21.6 summarizes the mining operating costs.

 

Table 21.6 Mining Cost Summary

 

Mining Cost Item

LOM Cost *

(US$ 000)

Unit Cost

(US$/t mined)

Loading

226

0.037

Hauling

969

0.160

Support Equipment

649

0.107

Ancillary Equipment

274

0.045

Dewatering

252

0.042

Labour

1,153

0.190

Total Costs

3,523

0.581

Note: * excludes pre-production costs

 

 

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21.2.2 PROCESS OPERATING COST ESTIMATE

 

The process operating cost for the Project includes the costs for agglomeration, heap leaching, solution handling and Merrill-Crowe refinery plant to produce a silver/gold doré.

 

Table 21.7 gives the overall LOM process operating cost summary based on a nominal processing rate of 1,370 t/d with an availability of 90% and 365 operating days per year.

 

The LOM annual average operating cost for the process facilities is estimated to be US$6.0 million per year or US$12.53/t of tailings treated.

 

Table 21.7 LOM Process Operating Cost

 

Description

Personnel

Annual Cost

(US$)

Unit Cost

(US$/t treated)

Process Manpower

Maintenance Labour

7

105,200

0.221

Operations Labour

25

318,100

0.667

Laboratory

7

89,600

0.188

Subtotal

39

512,900

1.076

Process Supplies

Operating Supplies

-

4,617,600

9.679

Maintenance Supplies

-

569,000

1.193

Power Supply

-

276,900

0.581

Subtotal

-

5,463,500

11.453

Total Process Operating Costs

39

5,976,400

12.529

 

The annual operating cost includes the following:

 

 

· staffing and maintenance manpower complements, and base salaries including an average burden of 60% (salary information is based on staffing complements, similar project salary costs as supplied by Avino, and Tetra Tech in-house data)

 

 

 

 

· power consumption based on the estimated power drawn by the equipment

 

 

 

 

· reagent consumption rates and associated costs have been based on test work results and recent prices received from reagent suppliers

 

 

 

 

· estimated maintenance costs based on approximately 10% of equipment costs.

 

MANPOWER

 

Table 21.8 shows the estimated operating and maintenance manpower requirements for the process plant.

 

The manpower operating costs have been determined using the operating plant complement required to run and maintain the plant facilities. The base salaries include an average burden of approximately 60%.


  

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Table 21.8 Process Plant Manpower Requirements

 

Description

Manpower

Loaded

Annual

Salary (US$)

Total Annual

Cost Payroll

(US$)

Unit Cost

(US$/t

milled)

Plant Maintenance

Maintenance Manager

1

42,162

42,162

0.088

Leach Plant Maintenance Foreman

1

19,443

19,443

0.041

Mechanics

1

8,382

8,382

0.018

Welders

1

8,382

8,382

0.018

Electricians

1

10,059

10,059

0.021

Apprentices

2

8,382

16,765

0.035

Subtotal

7

105,194

0.221

Operations

Plant Superintendent

1

58,446

58,446

0.123

Engineering and Planning Manager

1

42,162

42,162

0.088

Plant Shift Foremen

3

19,443

58,330

0.122

Plant Operator: Agglomerator/Conveyors

6

7,960

47,762

0.100

Plant Operator: Merrill Crowe

6

7,960

47,762

0.100

Day Crew Reagents

2

7,960

15,921

0.033

Day Crew Heap Piping

6

7,960

47,762

0.100

Subtotal

25

318,146

0.667

Laboratory

Chief Assayer

1

17,110

17,110

0.036

Assayer

6

12,074

72,444

0.152

Subtotal

7

89,554

0.188

 

ELECTRICAL POWER AND SUPPLIES

 

Table 21.9 gives the annual electrical power requirement for the process facility based on the preliminary load list and operating hours. The unit cost of electrical power used for the estimate is US$0.070/kWh as provided by Avino. LOM average unit operating cost for the power consumed is estimated to be US$0.58/t of tailings processed.

 

Table 21.9 Process Power Supply

 

Plant Power Supply

~500 kW Running

kWh/a

Unit Cost

(US$/kWh)

Total Cost

(US$/a)

Unit Cost

(US$/t milled)

Plant Power

3,955,975

0.070

276,918

0.581

Total Power Supply

-

-

276,918

0.581

 

The annual maintenance supplies requirement for the process plant has been estimated for each of the process facilities based on approximately 10% of equipment costs. These costs are shown in Table 21.10. The process plant cost of maintenance supplies has been estimated to be US$569,000 per year, or US$1.19/t of oxide tailings treated.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 21.10 Process Maintenance Supplies

 

Area

Total

Cost

(US$/a)

Unit Cost

(US$/t

milled)

Conveyors

183,000

0.384

Agglomerator

90,000

0.189

Leach Plant and Refinery Supplies, and Maintenance

246,000

0.516

Others

50,000

0.105

Total Maintenance Supplies

569,000

1.193

 

The annual estimated process plant operating supplies requirements are provided in Table 21.11. The total annual cost of operating supplies for the process plant has been determined to be US$4.6 million, or US$9.68/t of tailings treated. The main operating supply cost is the expenditure for the reagents,

 

Table 21.11 Plant Operating Supplies

 

Supplies

Consumption

(kg/t milled)

Unit Cost

(US$/kg)

Total Cost

(US$/a)

Unit Cost

(US$/t milled)

Reagents

Cement

10.90

0.13

675,955

1.417

Lime

6.87

0.10

327,483

0.687

Cyanide

0.93

2.25

996,044

2.088

Zinc Dust

0.96

4.00

1,831,806

3.840

Lead Nitrate

0.19

3.74

338,979

0.711

Filter -Aid

0.10

0.73

34,823

0.073

Pre-Coat

0.10

0.09

4,293

0.009

Sodium Hydroxide

0.09

0.80

34,346

0.072

Sulphuric Acid

0.76

0.42

152,269

0.319

Calcium Hypochlorite

0.05

3.00

71,555

0.150

Subtotal Reagents

4,467,555

9.365

Other Operating Supplies

150,000

0.314

Subtotal Other Supplies

150,000

0.314

Total Operating Supplies

-

-

4,617,555

9.679

 

21.2.3 G&A COST ESTIMATE

 

Average LOM G&A operating cost is estimated to be US$672,000 per year, or US$1.41/t of tailings treated. Table 21.12 and Table 21.13 detail the manpower requirement estimates, annual G&A expenses and LOM unit G&A expenses operating cost.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Table 21.12 G&A Manpower Requirements

 

Description

Manpower

Annual Cost/

Employee

(US$)

Total Annual

Cost Payroll

(US$)

Unit Cost

(US$/t

milled)

General Manager

1

64,514

64,515

0.135

Administration Manager

1

35,574

35,574

0.075

First Aid Attendant

1

10,821

10,821

0.023

Purchasing Agent

1

17,380

17,380

0.036

Office Clerk

1

9,623

9,623

0.020

Computer Technician

1

9,623

9,623

0.020

Safety and Security

2

22,650

45,300

0.095

Warehouse Staff

2

10,663

21,325

0.045

Environmental Supervisor

1

22,650

22,650

0.047

Total G&A Manpower

11

-

236,811

0.496

 

Table 21.13 G&A Expenses

 

Description

Total Cost

(US$/a)

Unit Cost

(US$/t milled)

Communications

36,000

0.076

Consulting

30,000

0.063

Human Resources and Employee Costs

10,000

0.021

Vehicle Costs

15,000

0.032

Site Costs

24,000

0.050

Office Costs

24,000

0.050

Safety and Security

24,000

0.050

Travel

36,000

0.076

Water Costs

24,000

0.050

Housing Costs

30,000

0.063

Insurance

60,000

0.126

General & Others

50,000

0.105

Environmental

Consumables and Supplies

24,000

0.050

Permitting

24,000

0.050

Water Analysis

24,000

0.050

Total G&A Expenses

435,000

0.912

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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21.3 AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEINS

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins. There is no cost estimate applicable and all costs below are based on actual expenditure.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure, which are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

21.3.1 CAPITAL COSTS

 

The actual capital expenditures to date on the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins are summarized in Table 21.14 and Table 21.15, respectively.

 

Mine and mill capital costs were attributed to equipment purchases.

 

Table 21.14 Capital Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

 

Description

Q1 2017

2016

2015

2014

Office Furniture

5,531

8,625

7,093

6,521

Computer Equipment

1,415

14,913

17,233

33,178

Mill Machinery and Processing Equipment

3,315

70,653

525,067

2,832,627

Mine Machinery and Transportation Equipment

106,659

1,985,446

1,918,764

2,125,229

Buildings and Construction

99,334

485,757

590,639

313,875

San Gonzalo Vein Mineral Property

0

0

0

0

Elena Toloso Mineral Property

233,772

4,330,125

0

0

Total Capital Costs

450,026

6,895,518

3,058,796

5,311,429

Source: Avino

 

Table 21.15 Capital Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

 

Description

Q1 2017

2016

2015

2014

Office Furniture

5,212

7,248

3,725

6,521

Computer Equipment

1,368

12,575

17,233

32,937

Mill Machinery and Processing Equipment

139,499

188,884

100,537

264,178

Mine Machinery and Transportation Equipment

143,758

40,294

133,248

646,981

Buildings and Construction

101,559

443,135

55,819

356,300

San Gonzalo Vein Mineral Property

133,723

1,080,889

577,462

697,107

Elena Toloso Mineral Property

0

0

0

0

Total Capital Costs

525,119

1,773,024

888,024

2,004,023

Source: Avino

 

 

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21.3.2 OPERATING COSTS

 

The mine and milling costs included operating and maintenance labour together with the operation associated consumable supplies. The cost for electrical power was included in the milling costs. The geological component was mostly related to technical labour.

 

Table 21.16 Operating Costs for the Avino Vein (US$)

 

Description

Q1 2017

Q4 2016

Q3 2016

Q2 2016

Mining Cost

1,711,570

1,402,941

2,232,967

1,670,300

Milling Cost

947,743

922,639

1,082,387

942,560

Geological and Other

710,786

711,391

847,942

740,911

Royalties

160,468

202,790

219,658

188,349

Depletion and Depreciation

367,658

301,433

354,249

264,074

Total Direct Costs

3,898,225

3,541,194

4,737,202

3,806,193

G&A

777,487

742,572

1,516,352

558,332

Total Operating Costs

4,675,712

4,283,766

6,253,555

4,364,525

Source: Avino

 

Table 21.17 Operating Costs for the San Gonzalo Vein (US$)

 

Description

Q1 2017

Q4 2016

Q3 2016

Q2 2016

Q1 2016

Mining Cost

451,288

1,798,503

793,057

1,419,545

313,684

Milling Cost

70,962

212,467

208,665

358,227

221,803

Geological and Other

149,192

318,843

141,618

200,997

103,299

Royalties

0

0

0

0

0

Depletion and Depreciation

97,352

485,732

148,105

271,972

72,053

Total Direct Costs

768,794

2,815,545

1,291,445

2,250,740

710,839

G&A

293,096

607,351

635,649

281,192

666,121

Total Operating Costs

1,061,890

3,422,897

1,927,094

2,531,933

1,376,960

Source: Avino

 

 21.4 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property. No capital or operating costs have been estimated for any potential mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property.

 

 

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22.0 ECONOMIC ANALYSIS  

 

 

22.1 INTRODUCTION

 

A PEA should not be considered to be a Prefeasibility or Feasibility study, as the economics and technical viability of the Project have not been demonstrated at this time. The PEA is preliminary in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves. Furthermore, there is no certainty that the conclusions or results reported in the PEA will be realized. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

 

No economic analysis has been performed for the Avino Vein, the San Gonzalo Vein or the sulphide tailings. Tetra Tech prepared an economic evaluation for the oxide tailings retreatment based on a pre-tax financial model. Metal prices used in the base case were:

 

 

· gold - US$1,250/oz

 

 

 

 

· silver - US$18.50/oz.

 

The pre-tax financial results are:

 

 

· 48.4% IRR

 

 

 

 

· 2.0-year payback period

 

 

 

 

· US$40.5 million NPV at an 8% discount rate.

 

Avino commissioned PwC in Vancouver to prepare the tax component of the model for the post-tax economic evaluation for this updated PEA with the inclusion of applicable income and mining taxes.

 

The following post-tax financial results were calculated:

 

 

· 32% IRR

 

 

 

 

· 2.6-year payback period

 

 

 

 

· US$22.2 million NPV at an 8% discount rate.

 

 

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22.2 PRE-TAX MODEL

 

22.2.1 MINE/METAL PRODUCTION IN FINANCIAL MODEL

 

The life-of-project average material tonnages, grades and metal production are shown in Table 22.1.

 

Table 22.1 Metal Production from the Avino Mine Tailings Retreatment

 

Description

Value

Total Tonnes to Mill (000 t)

3,122

Annual Tonnes to Mill (000 t)

500

Mine Life (years)

7

Average Grades

Gold (g/t)

0.43

Silver (g/t)

87.75

Total Production

Gold (000 oz)

33

Silver (000 oz)

6,173

Average Annual Production

Gold (000 oz)

4.66

Silver (000 oz)

881.92

 

Note: Excluding one-year pre-production period.

 

22.2.2 BASIS OF FINANCIAL EVALUATIONS

 

The production schedule has been incorporated into the 100% equity pre-tax financial model to develop annual recovered metal production from the relationships of tonnage processed, head grades, and recoveries.

 

Gold and silver payable values were calculated based on base case metal prices. Net invoice value was calculated each year by subtracting the applicable refining charges from the payable metal value. At-mine revenues are then estimated by subtracting transportation and insurance costs. Operating costs for mining, processing, and G&A were deducted from the at-mine revenues to derive annual operating cash flow.

 

Initial and sustaining capital costs as well as working capital have been incorporated on a year-by-year basis over the mine life. Salvage value and mine reclamation costs are applied to the capital expenditure in the last production year. Capital expenditures are then deducted from the operating cash flow to determine the net cash flow before taxes.

 

Initial capital expenditures include costs accumulated prior to first production of doré. Sustaining capital includes any capital expenditures required during the production period. Initial and sustaining capital costs applied in the economic analysis are US$24.36 million and US$4.35 million, respectively.

 

 

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Working capital is assumed to be three months of the annual operating cost and fluctuates from year to year based on the annual cost. The working capital is recovered at the end of the mine life.

 

The salvage value is assumed to be 3% of the capital costs and recovered at the end of mine life.

 

Mine closure and reclamation is assumed to be US$0.10/t mined and incurred at the end of mine life.

 

Pre-production period is assumed to be one year. NPV and IRR reported in this section are estimated at the start of this one-year period.

 

The undiscounted annual net cash flow (NCF) and cumulative net cash flow (CNCF) are illustrated in Figure 22.1.

 

Figure 22.1 Undiscounted Annual and Cumulative Net Cash Flow  

 

 

22.3 SUMMARY OF FINANCIAL RESULTS

 

Tetra Tech evaluated the base case using gold and silver prices of US$1,250/oz and US$18.50/oz, respectively.

 

The pre-tax financial model was established on a 100% equity basis, excluding debt financing, and loan interest charges. The financial results for the base case are presented in Table 22.2.

 

 

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Table 22.2 Summary of Pre-tax Financial Results

 

Description

Base

Case

Gold Price (US$/oz)

1,250

Silver Price (US$/oz)

18.5

Total Payable Metal Value (US$000)

148,892

Refining (US$000)

6,123

Transportation, Insurance (US$000)

214

At-mine Revenue (US$000)

142,555

Operating Costs (US$000)

47,034

Operating Cash Flow (US$000)

95,521

Initial Capital (US$000)

24,363

Sustaining Capital (US$000)

4,352

Salvage Value (US$000)

-861

Reclamation Cost (US$000)

606

Total Capital Expenditure, Including Reclamation and Salvage (US$000)

28,460

Net Cash Flow (US$000)

67,061

Discounted Cash Flow NPV (US$000) at 5.00%

48,922

Discounted Cash Flow NPV (US$000) at 8.00%

40,554

Discounted Cash Flow NPV (US$000) at 10.00%

35,786

Payback (years)

2.0

IRR (%)

48.4

 

22.4 SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS

 

Sensitivity of the Project’s NPV, IRR and payback period to the Project key variables was investigated. Using the base case as a reference, each of the key variables was changed between -30%/+30% at 10% intervals, while holding the other variables constant. The following are the key variables investigated:

 

 

· capital costs (CAPEX)

 

 

 

 

· operating costs (OPEX)

 

 

 

 

· gold price (AuP)

 

 

 

 

· silver proce (AgP)

 

As shown in Figure 22.2, the Project NPV, calculated at an 8% discount, is most sensitive to the silver price and, in decreasing order, operating costs, gold price, and capital costs.

 

 

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Figure 22.2 NPV Sensitivity Analysis

   

 

As shown in Figure 22.3, the Project IRR is most sensitive to capital costs and silver price, followed by operating costs and gold price.

 

Figure 22.3 IRR Sensitivity Analysis

 

 

As shown in Figure 22.4, the payback period is also most sensitive to the silver price, followed by capital costs, operating costs, and the gold price.

 

 

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Figure 22.4 Payback Period Sensitivity Analysis

 

 

22.5 POST-TAX ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

 

Avino commissioned PwC in Vancouver to prepare the tax component of the model for the post-tax economic evaluation for this updated PEA, with the inclusion of applicable income and mining taxes.

 

The following general tax regime was recognized as applicable at the time of report writing.

 

22.5.1 MEXICAN INCOME TAX REGIME

 

Federal income taxes in Mexico are calculated using the currently enacted corporate rate of 30%.

 

Taxable income is gross income, which includes any kind of income unless specifically excluded, less allowed deductions and unexpired net operating loss carryovers from prior years.

 

In general terms, all “strictly indispensable”, fully documented business expenses are deductible, with the restrictions, exceptions and special requirements for specific expenses established in the tax law and its regulations. For purposes of this model there is no determination of any non-deductible expense incurred as part of the operating costs.

 

The government’s fiscal year is the calendar year, which must also be used by all taxpayers for corporate, legal, and income tax purposes.

 

 

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An operating loss declared for a tax purposes can be carried forward and deducted from otherwise taxable profits of the ten subsequent years. Such deductible loss carried forward will also be indexed (increased) for inflation. Operating loss carry back is not allowed.

 

The income tax law allows the deduction of the costs of investments in tangible property or intangible assets only through annual charges for depreciation or amortization. The straight-line method, without recognition of estimated salvage values, is the only acceptable method for tax purposes.

 

In general, all types of fixed assets except land are depreciable for tax purposes, as long as they can be shown to have been acquired for the business purposes of the corporation itself.

 

The rates used for a tax purposes may be less than the legal maximum straight-line rates but, once adopted, may be changed only once in a five-year period. Depreciation may commence in the fiscal year in which the assets are placed in use or in the following year, at the election of the taxpayer.

 

When an asset is disposed of or becomes useless the remaining undepreciated historical cost may also be deducted after application of the appropriate inflation adjustment factor to the undepreciated historical cost.

 

Straight-line depreciation computed at the rates specified by the Law, based on the estimated useful lives of the different types of assets, may be increased by the application of the percentage increases in the National Consumer Price Index since the month of acquisition of the asset. For purposes of the tax model the average inflation per year either for the tax losses or the depreciation is 3%, which is consistent with the Mexican inflation rate in recent years. Also, specific annual depreciation rates are established for certain industries. Machinery and equipment are amortized at 12% straight-line in the mining industry. The top percentage authorized for other constructions (buildings) is 5%.

 

Exploration and development expenses and the cost of mining claims incurred prior to the commencement of commercial operations of a mine are treated as pre-operating expenses which are amortizable at 10% per annum.

 

For purposes of the model, depreciation and inflation for the additions were determined based on full years.

 

Interest on loans can be deducted if the proceeds of the loans have been invested in the business of the company and proper withholding taxes, if applicable, have been paid. Based on the model, there is not intercompany interest expense to be considered.

 

The Mexican Labor Law has a mandatory requirement whereby employers must share 10% of their profits with employees. However, to mitigate this requirement, companies have traditionally set up two separate entities in Mexico: one to run the business with limited employees and the other one to hire and lease out employees to the business. For purposes of the model we are not determining any profit sharing to be distributed.

 

 

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22.5.2 MEXICAN MINING DUTIES REGIME

 

A special mining duty (SMD) of 7.5% is applied to net profits derived by a concession holder from the sale or transfer of extraction activities. Profits for purposes of the SMD are determined in a manner similar to the calculation of general taxable income, with some exceptions (e.g. interest is not included in income and deductions are not available for interest and investments in fixed assets other than exploration expenses). The SMD must be paid annually by the last business day of March of the year following the tax year. The SMD payment is deductible for tax purposes, resulting in an effective tax rate of 5.25%.

 

Owner of mining concessions are also required to pay an additional 0.5% tax on gross income derived from the sale of gold, silver and platinum. This extraordinary mining duty is due annually by the last business day of March of the year following the tax year. This duty is also deductible for tax purposes so that the effective rate is 0.35%.

 

22.5.3 TAXES AND POST-TAX FINANCIAL RESULTS

 

At the base case gold and silver prices used for this study, total estimated taxes payable are $26.32 million over the seven-year LOM, as shown in Table 22.3.

 

Table 22.3 Components of the Various Taxes Applicable

 

 

Unit

Base Case

Gold

US$/oz

1,250.00

Silver

US$/oz

18.50

Extraordinary Mining Duty

US$ million

0.714

Special Mining Duty

US$ million

7.164

Income Tax

US$ million

18.440

Total Tax

US$ million

26.318

 

Post-tax financial results are summarized in Table 22.4.

  

 

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Table 22.4 Summary of Post-tax Financial Results

 

 

Unit

Base Case

Gold

US$/oz

1250.00

Silver

US$/oz

18.50

Undiscounted NCF

US$ million

40.743

NPV (at 5%)

US$ million

28.006

NPV (at 8%)

US$ million

22.187

NPV (at 10%)

US$ million

18.892

IRR

%

32.0

Payback

years

2.6

 

22.6 ROYALTIES

 

Avino advised that there is no private royalties applicable to this project. Therefore, no royalties are considered in this economic analysis.

 

22.7 SMELTER TERMS

 

In the absence of letters of interest or letters of intent from potential smelters or buyers of gold and silver doré, smelter terms for similar projects have been applied.

 

 

· gold - pay 99% on the gold less a refining charge of $8.00/accountable troy oz.

 

 

 

 

· silver - pay 95% on the silver less a refining charge of $1.00/accountable troy oz.

 

22.8 TRANSPORTATION LOGISTICS

 

Transportation costs for gold and silver doré are assumed to be included in the refining charges.

 

22.8.1 INSURANCE

 

An insurance rate of 0.15% was applied to the provisional invoice value of the doré.

 

 

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23.0 ADJACENT PROPERTIES

 

 

There are no material properties adjacent to the Property.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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24.0 OTHER RELEVANT DATA AND INFORMATION

 

 

There is no additional information or explanation necessary to make the technical report understandable and not misleading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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25.0 INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS

 

 

25.1 GEOLOGY

 

The Property is located in Durango State in North Central Mexico, within the Sierra Madre Silver Belt, and 82 km northeast of Durango City. The current Property is comprised of 23 mineral concessions, totalling 1,103.934 ha.

 

The Property is located within a large caldera which hosts numerous epithermal veins and breccias, grading into a “near porphyry” environment. The dominant rock types in the region of the Avino Mine include andesitic, rhyolitic and trachytic pyroclastic rocks. The area was intruded by monzonite dykes and stocks, which appear to be related to mineralization. Silver- and gold-bearing veins crosscut the various lithologies and are generally oriented north-northwest to south-southeast and northwest to southeast. The rocks have been weathered and leached in the upper sections from contact with atmospheric waters, resulting in an oxidized and a reduced, or sulphide, portion of the mine.

 

Four deposits are present on the Property: the Avino Vein, the San Gonzalo Vein, and the tailings dam (which includes an oxide and a sulphide portion). Current Mineral Resource estimates are reported in this study for the Avino and San Gonzalo veins, as well as the oxide tailings.

 

25.2 RESOURCE ESTIMATES

 

The Mineral Resources of the Property are summarized in Table 25.1.

 

It must be noted that no Mineral Resource has been estimated for the sulphide tailings portion of the Property.

 

A PEA should not be considered to be a Prefeasibility Study or Feasibility Study, as the economics and technical viability of the Project have not been demonstrated at this time. The PEA is preliminary in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves. Furthermore, there is no certainty that the conclusions or results reported in the PEA will be realized. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

 

 

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Table 25.1 Mineral Resources at the Avino Mine Property

 

Resource Category

Deposit

Cut-off

(Ag_Eq

g/t)

MTonnes
(t)

Grade

Metal Contents

Ag_Eq
(g/t)

Ag
(g/t)

Au
(g/t)

Cu
(%)

Ag

(million

tr oz)

Au

(thousand

tr oz)

Cu
(t)

Avino Mine: Measured & Indicated Mineral Resources

Measured

Avino System

55

950,000

143

74

0.33

0.69

2.3

10.0

6,550

Measured

San Gonzalo System

125

170,000

357

272

1.50

0.00

1.5

8.2

0

Total Measured

All Deposits

-

1,120,000

176

105

0.51

0.58

3.8

18.2

6,550

Indicated

Avino System

55

500,000

129

68

0.36

0.56

1.1

5.7

2,800

Indicated

San Gonzalo System

125

320,000

310

237

1.30

0.00

2.4

13.3

0

Indicated

Oxide Tailings

50

1,330,000

124

98

0.46

0.00

4.2

19.8

0

Total Indicated

All Deposits

-

2,150,000

152

111

0.56

0.13

7.7

38.8

2,800

Total Measured & Indicated

All Deposits

-

3,270,000

160

109

0.54

0.29

11.5

57.0

9,350

Avino Mine: Inferred Mineral Resources

Inferred

Avino System

55

5,790,000

155

81

0.57

0.58

15.1

105.8

33,550

Inferred

San Gonzalo System

125

540,000

403

314

1.58

0.00

5.5

27.5

0

Inferred

Oxide Tailings

50

1,810,000

113

88

0.44

0.00

5.1

25.6

0

Total Inferred

All Deposits

-

8,140,000

162

98

0.61

0.41

25.6

158.9

33,550

 

Notes: Figures may not add to totals shown due to rounding.

 

Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability.

The Mineral Resource estimate is classified in accordance with the CIM Definition Standards

For Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves incorporated by reference into NI 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects.

Mineral Resources are reported at cut-off grades 50 g/t, 55 g/t, and 125 g/t silver equivalent grade.

Silver equivalent grades were calculated using conversion formulas Ag_Eq = Ag + 55.9 * Au + 72.99 * Cu for Avino Vein and Ag_Eq = Ag + 56.38 * Au for San Gonzalo Vein System and oxide tailings.

Cut-off grades were calculated using current costs, silver price of US$19.50/oz., gold price of US$1,250/oz. and copper price of US$2.10/lb.

 

 

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25.3 MINERAL PROCESSING

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activities on the Avino Vein and the San Gonzalo Vein, including processing of the materials from both the properties at the flotation processing plant at the Avino Vein site. Production decisions for both the existing operations were being made without Mineral Reserves or any studies of economic viability that have been prepared in accordance with NI 43-101. As a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure, which are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

For the oxide tailings, the preliminary test results indicate that the tailings samples responded well to cyanide leaching, including column leaching treatment. The processing method was developed according to the preliminary test work. The proposed gold and silver extraction is by heap leaching. The treatment plant will consist of agglomeration and cyanide heap leaching, followed by a Merrill-Crowe process to recover silver and gold from pregnant solution. The process plant will operate on a 24 h/d, 365 d/a basis, with an overall utilization of 90%.

 

For the sulphide tailings, Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the tailings. No recovery methods are currently proposed for the sulphide tailings. The gold and silver recovery from the sulphide tailings has been excluded from this study.

 

25.4 MINING

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the San Gonzalo and the Avino Veins. Both cut and fill and shrinkage stoping are used to feed the mill (more information can be found in Section 16.0).

 

The oxide tailings Mineral Resource will be mined/moved using a conventional truck/loader surface mining method. The production cycle will consist of loading and trucking. The production schedule has been developed for the oxide tailings based on a treatment rate of 500 kt/a; this would be equivalent to a throughput rate of 1,370 t/d.

 

25.5 CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS

 

25.5.1 OXIDE TAILINGS

 

 

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CAPITAL COSTS

 

The capital cost for the oxide tailing tailings part of the Property has been developed based on the treatment of 1,370 t/d, or 500,000 t/a of oxide tailings. A total initial capital cost of US$24.4 million, including contingency, was estimated for the oxide tailings retreatment by the proposed heap leaching processing. The breakdown of the estimate is shown in Table 25.2. The exchange rate used for the cost estimates is Mexican Peso to US Dollar at 19.23.

 

Table 25.2 Capital Cost Summary

 

Item/Description

Total Initial

Capital Cost

(US$ 000)

Total Sustaining

Capital Cost

(US$ 000)

Direct Costs

Mining, Agglomeration, and Pad Loading

2,899

818

Process Facilities

3,979

Reagents/Auxiliary Services

526

Buildings

1,003

Leach Pad and Infrastructure

4,522

1,819

Power Supply and Distribution

1,571

Total Direct Costs

14,500

2,637

Indirect Costs

Engineering, Procurement, Construction Management, Quality Assurance and Vendor Representatives

2,338

386

Freight and Construction Indirects

2,898

430

Owner’s Costs

725

132

Contingency

3,902

767

Total Indirect Costs

9,863

1,715

Total Capital Costs

24,363

4,352

 

OPERATING COSTS

 

The LOM overall operating cost for the oxide tailings retreatment, including costs for mining, process and G&A, has been estimated to be approximately US$15.06/t milled and is detailed in Table 25.3. The LOM overall unit operating cost estimate is based on a nominal processing rate of 1,370 t/d.

 

Table 25.3 LOM Unit Operating Cost Estimate Summary

 

Description

Personnel

Unit Cost

(US$/t treated)

Mining

15 *

1.13

Process

39

12.53

G&A

11

1.41

Total Operating Cost

65

15.06

 

Note: *labour requirement for trucking of the tailings and waste is excluded as it will be by a contractor.

 

 

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25.5.2 AVINO VEIN AND SAN GONZALO VEIN

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activity on the Avino and San Gonzalo veins. There is no cost estimate applicable and all costs are based on actual expenditures. The capital and operating costs are detailed in Section 21.0.

 

Avino has not based its production decisions on a Feasibility study or Mineral Reserves demonstrating economic and technical viability, and as a result there is increased uncertainty and multiple technical and economic risks of failure, which are associated with these production decisions. These risks, among others, include areas that would be analyzed in more detail in a Feasibility study, such as applying economic analysis to Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves, more detailed metallurgy, and a number of specialized studies in areas such as mining and recovery methods, market analysis, and environmental and community impacts.

 

25.5.3 SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Avino is not currently conducting mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property. No capital or operating costs have been estimated for any potential mining activity on the sulphide tailings portion of the Property.

 

25.6 ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

 

No economic analysis has been performed for the Avino Vein, the San Gonzalo Vein or the sulphide tailings. Tetra Tech prepared an economic evaluation for the oxide tailings retreatment based on a pre-tax financial model. Metal prices used in the base case were:

 

 

·

gold - US$1,250/oz

 

 

 

 

·

silver - US$18.50/oz.

 

The pre-tax financial results are:

 

 

· 48.4% IRR

 

 

 

 

· 2.0-year payback period

 

 

 

 

· US$40.5 million NPV at an 8% discount rate.

 

Avino commissioned PwC in Mexico to prepare the tax component of the model for the post-tax economic evaluation for this updated PEA with the inclusion of applicable income and mining taxes.

 

The following post-tax financial results were calculated:

 

 

· 32.0% IRR

 

 

 

 

· 2.6-year payback period

 

 

 

 

· US$22.2 million NPV at an 8% discount rate.

 

 

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26.0 RECOMMENDATIONS

 

 

26.1 INTRODUCTION

 

Tetra Tech recommends that Avino proceed with the next phase of work in order to identify potential cost savings and additional revenue generating opportunities, and to further assess the viability of the tailings retreatment project.

 

26.2 GEOLOGY

 

Aranz’s recommendations are itemized in the following subsections. These recommendations are not required for continued mine development on the Property, and therefore a cost estimate for this work is not provided.

 

26.2.1 DATABASE MANAGEMENT

 

Tetra Tech has the following recommendations regarding Avino database management:

 

Tetra Tech (2013) previously recommended that all drillhole data (including collar, survey, assay, geology, and specific gravity data) should be maintained in a single, compiled database for both the Avino and San Gonzalo Veins. The data has been not consolidated to date. Aranz reiterates this recommendation but goes further to recommend that tailings sampling data also be included.

 

Aranz recommends that underground channel sampling and QA/QC data be incorporated into the same unified system together with the exploration drilling data to form a single repository or “version of the truth”.

 

Avino currently possess Surpac software that should be adequate to manage a more centralized database. The ability to select data by type and location for assaying and logging should be managed through the judicious use of codes to allow selective extraction and summarization as and when required.

 

26.2.2 UNDERGROUND SAMPLING

 

Aranz has the following recommendations regarding Avino geology data and interpretation:

 

 

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Aranz recommends that channel sampling strategy at the Avino Vein be revised. Currently the face sampling of the development drifts is sampled across the width (4 m wide) during the initial development. This information is used to make decisions on whether or not to consider the development muck to be mineralized and also for resource estimation. The Avino Vein is very wide (in excess of 30 m in places) and subsequent to development, sampling of the ledging to expose the full width of the orebodies, prior to stoping is less systematic. There is a risk of sampling bias towards the hanging and footwall drifts. A preliminary suggestion is that a scissor truck could provide access to the hanging wall, would enable sampling access to the entire hanging wall of the exposed vein. Sampling 30 m of channel samples one metre at a time by means of manual maul and hammer chipping is exhausting and is likely to result in poor sampling, so mechanical assistance such as a rock saw (compressed air-driven or electrical) should be considered.

 

The stratigraphy of the country rock on the margins of the Avino and San Gonzalo should be determined using multi-element analyses to provide geochemical signatures for the volcanic units. This would help to identify vertical intervals where the development of the veining and mineralization is likely to have been affected favourably or unfavourably by the geochemistry and thus to assist in prospecting for vein extensions or blind veins not intersected in the underground development. Grab samples from the underground exposures could be obtained rapidly to make a start. There may be an advantage to seek involvement with an academic researcher (for example at the University of British Columbia) to get work done relatively cheaply using the latest techniques.

 

26.2.3 SURVEY DATA

 

Aranz recommends that survey data be reviewed during the course of drilling campaigns to avoid duplication in the database.

 

26.2.4 SPECIFIC GRAVITY SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS

 

Aranz recommends that Avino continues to develop the database for specific gravity data using drill cores. Aranz also recommends that grab samples from controlled underground exposures (location, and lithology description) be used to supplement the data. Aranz further recommends that some large samples be cut from the faces of the oxide tailings deposit weighed and measured to determine specific gravity for the deposit.

 

26.2.5 QA/QC SAMPLING

 

Aranz recommends that standards and blank submissions be included in the master database for the Property to avoid the difficulty of locating such data when it is resides in separate spreadsheet reports.

 

Aranz recommends that QA/QC performance graphs be updated on a monthly basis to allow questionable sample batches to be repeated timeously.

 

 

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26.2.6 SULPHIDE TAILINGS DRILLING

 

Drill the sulphide tailings when it has been dewatered. A hole spacing of 80 to 100 m (based on experience with the oxide tailings) should be sufficient to allow an Inferred Mineral Resource to be declared, provided sufficient mineralization is present.

 

26.2.7 DENSITY MEASUREMENTS

 

The current density measurements are sparse and not well distributed enough to provide the basis for meaningful spatial density estimation in the opinion of Aranz. Aranz recommends that further density measurements be generated. Access to most of the levels in the Avino Mine and San Gonzalo Mine provides the opportunity to rapidly supplement density measurements from underground exposures in the form of grab samples from known positions for the major vein units. Density measurements from the accessible oxide tailings heap can be obtained by carefully removing and measuring volumes of material and drying and weighing the material. Aranz suggests representative volumes of 0.5 m x 0.5 m x 0.5 m adjacent to the collars of every second drill hole should be captured.

 

26.2.8 RESOURCE ESTIMATION

 

A Mineral Resource estimate for the sulphide tailings should be completed for mine planning purposes, in addition to an updated oxide tailings Mineral Resource estimate following the drilling program recommended above (Section 26.2.6).

 

An internal capacity to perform mineral resource estimation, using geostatistical methods should be developed. The Surpac software should provide the tools to be able to do this in the long term.

 

26.2.9 STRATEGIC EXPLORATION ASSESSMENT

 

Aranz recommends that a global assessment of the potential of the secondary veins such as La Estella, San Jorge, Guadalupe and Santa Ana be carried out and compiled into a long-term exploration plan. This will enable a pipeline of opportunities to be generated and inform strategic decision-making to take full advantage of existing infrastructure and help to optimize cash flow in the face of fluctuating metal prices.

 

26.3 PROCESS

 

26.3.1 AVINO AND SAN GONZALO VEINS

 

Avino is currently conducting mining activities on the Avino and San Gonzalo veins, including metal recovery using flotation processes. Tetra Tech recommends that Avino further optimize the processing conditions, including further metallurgical tests, to improve metallurgical performances for both the Avino and San Gonzalo vein mill feeds.

 

 

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26.3.2 OXIDE AND SULPHIDE TAILINGS

 

Further tests are recommended to evaluate the metallurgical performances of the tailings samples, including the sulphide tailings samples. The test work should be conducted on samples that better represent the tailings Mineral Resources. The test work should include:

 

 

· head characterization and mineralogical determination

 

 

 

 

· leaching condition optimization, including cyanide concentration, leaching retention time, agglomeration binding material types and dosages

 

 

 

 

· determination of the effect of the particle size distribution on metal extraction and agglomeration

 

 

 

 

· further confirmation of the effect of flotation pre-concentration on improving overall metal recovery

 

 

 

 

· residual cyanide management tests, including residual cyanide management and valuable metal recoveries from the barren solution.

 

For the sulphide tailings, systematic test work should be conducted to effectively recover silver and gold values from the tailings, including co-processing of the sulfide tailings with the oxide tailings.

 

The estimated costs for the test work, excluding sampling, is approximately Cdn$150,000.

 

26.3.3 REFURBISHED EQUIPMENT

 

The suitability and/or the possibility of refurbishing the existing equipment at the Avino Mine needs to be further evaluated. Some water pumps and possibly some conveyors could be returned to service, and some of the existing tanks could be used for water storage/supply. The general availability of used equipment from other locations in the Durango district, or in Mexico, would need to be investigated.

 

26.4 ENVIRONMENTAL

 

The cost of permitting has not been considered at this stage of the Project. Government agencies should be consulted prior to the permitting process to determine if current permits for the San Gonzalo Mine can been revised. The cost of expropriating agricultural land for the leach pad, and the cost of water which would have to be redirected to the heap leach project but which is currently used for agricultural purposes have also not been assessed. Once the mine plan, site layout and tailings management plan are further along and have definitive locations, the cost of these factors should be addressed. The cost for monitoring environmental effects post mine closure needs to be estimated.

 

 

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A detailed trade-off study should be undertaken to characterize current conditions of the sulphide tailings and to determine whether the re-treatment of this material would contribute to the profitability of the Project.

 

26.5 MINING

 

Potential for handling sulphide tailings as a mineralized material, rather than waste material, should be investigated based on appropriate metallurgical tests. Further optimization of the mine plan for the oxide tailings should be conducted.

 

26.6 PROJECT DEVELOPMENT

 

Tetra Tech recommends that a preliminary economic assessment be completed for the entire Property, including the Avino Vein, the San Gonzalo Vein, the oxide tailings, and the sulphide tailings.

 

26.7 PROJECT SCHEDULE

 

A suggested high-level schedule of the oxide tailings retreatment project execution plan has been prepared and is provided in Figure 26.1.

 

 

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Figure 26.1 Tailings Retreatment Project Suggested High-level Schedule

 

 

 

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27.0 REFERENCES  

 

 

Audited Annual Financial Report & MD&A for the year ended December 31, 2015.

 

Audited Annual Financial Report & MD&A for the year ended December 31, 2016.

 

Avino Annual Reports www.avino.com.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd., 2001. Internal Report - Avino Operating Records, October 2001.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd., 2011a. News Release: Avino Reports Results of San Gonzalo Bulk Sample July 11, 2011.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd., 2011b. Consolidated Financial Statements for the years ended December 31, 2011 and 2010. Retrieved July 17, 2013 from www.avino.com.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd., 2012. Consolidated Financial Statements for the years ended December 31, 2012, 2011, and 2010. Retrieved July 17, 2013 from www.avino.com.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd., 2013a. Avino May Production Report June 06, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2013 from www.avino.com.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd., 2013b. Condensed Consolidated Interim Financial Statements for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2013 and 2012. Retrieved July 17, 2013 from www.avino.com.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. 2016a. News Release: Avino Reports New Power Line Energized and Final Permits Received for New Tailings Storage Facility. June 13, 2016.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. 2016b. News Release: Avino Announces Extension of Concentrates Prepayment Agreement with Samsung C&T. June 29, 2016.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. 2017a. News Release: Avino Announces Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2016 Production Results from its Avino Property. January 17, 2017.

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. 2017b. News Release: Avino Announces Q1 2017 Production Results. April 13, 2017.

 

Benitez, Sanchez, 1991. Memorandum: Informe Final de la Cubicacion de Presa de Jales. Prepared for Ing. Rene Cuellar Torres, Cia Minera Mexicana de Avino, S.A. de C.v. June 6, 1991, 5 pages.

 

 

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Bermúdez Fernández, Jesús, 2012. Legal agreement between Minerales de Avino, Sociedad Anónima de Capital Variable and Compañía Minera Mexicana de Avino, Sociedad Anónima de Capital Variable on the La Platosa Concession. Volume seven hundred and twenty-six/mbq* number fifteen thousand one hundred and ninety-seven. February 18, 2012, 14 pages.

 

Emsley, J., 2003. Nature’s Building Blocks: an A-Z Guide to the Elements. Oxford University Press, 538 pages.

 

Gallegos, J.I., 1960. Durango Colonial, 1563-1821, Mexico City: Editorial Jus, p. 78.

 

González Olguin, Juan Manuel, 2017. Current title opinion prepared by Bufete González Olguin S.C. Law Firm for Avino Silver and Gold Mines, Ltd. February 3, 2017, 9 pages.

 

Gunning, D., 2009. Resource Estimate on the San Gonzalo Vein - A Part of the Avino Mine, Durango, Mexico, for Avino Silver and Gold Mines Ltd. Prepared by Orequest. Effective date August 31, 2009.

 

Hall, R., 2006. Technical Report: Tailings Retreatment - Process Option. Prepared by Ron Hall, Wardrop Engineering Inc. for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. March 31, 2006

 

Huang, J. and Tan, G., 2005. Metallurgical Test Work on Avino Tailings, Durango, Mexico. Project No, 0406407. Report prepared by John Huang and Gie Tan, Process Research Associates Ltd. for Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. March 28, 2005.

 

Huang, J., 2003. Flotation and Cyanidation Scoping Tests and Specific Gravity. Project No. 0302303. Report prepared by John Huang, Process Research Associates Ltd. for Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. March 28, 2003.

 

Index Mundi 2011 http://www.indexmundi.com/

 

Paulter, J., 2006. Regional Exploration Evaluation and Recommendations. Unpublished internal report for Avino.

 

Paulter, J., 2006. Regional Exploration Evaluation and Recommendations. Unpublished internal report for Avino.

 

QG Australia (Pty) Ltd. (2016). Amended Resource Estimte Update for the Avino Property Durango, Mexio. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. October 27, 2016.

 

Servicios Administratos Luismin, 1993. Unpublished Report on the Potential of the Avino Property. SA de CV, the engineering branch of Cía Minera de San Luis Exploration

 

Slim, B., 2003. Tailings Valuation. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Report prepared by Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. November 2003.

 

Slim, B., 2005a. Preliminary Feasibility. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Report prepared by Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. May 2005.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

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Slim, B., 2005b. Tailings Valuation. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Report prepared by Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. May 2005.

 

Slim, B., 2005c. A Tailings Resource. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Report prepared by Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. July 21, 2005.

 

Slim, B., 2005d. A Tailings Resource. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Report prepared by Bryan Slim, MineStart Management Inc. October 25, 2005.

 

Tetra Tech, 2012. Technical Report on the Avino Property. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Effective Date: July 24, 2012. www.sedar.com

 

Tetra Tech, 2013. Technical Report on the Avino Property. Prepared for Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. Effective Date: July 19, 2013. www.sedar.com Document No. 1251920100-REP-R0001-02.1

 

VSE, 1977. Vancouver Stock Exchange Review. September 1979.

 

Wikipedia Durango entry: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durango

 

 

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28.0 CERTIFICATES OF QUALIFIED PERSONS

 

 

28.1 MICHAEL F. O’BRIEN, P.GEO., M.SC., PR.SCI.NAT., FAUSIMM, FSAIMM

 

I, Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM, of Vancouver, British Columbia, do hereby certify:

 

 

·

I am a Senior Principal Consultant with Aranz Geo Expert Services located at 506-1168 Hamilton Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6B 2S2.

 

 

 

 

·

This certificate applies to the technical report entitled “Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico” dated 11 th April 2017 (the “Technical Report”).

 

 

 

 

·

I am a graduate of the University of Natal, (B.Sc. Hons. Geology, 1978) and the University of the Witwatersrand (M.Sc. Engineering, 2002). I am a member in good standing of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia (#41338). I am a member in good standing of the South African Council for Natural Scientific Professions (South Africa, 400295/87). My relevant experience is 36 years of experience in operations, mineral project assessment and I have the experience relevant to Mineral Resource estimation of metal deposits. I have estimated Mineral Resources for greenstone-hosted gold, diatreme complex epithermal gold deposits, porphyry copper-gold, volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits and shear zone-hosted deposits. I am a “Qualified Person” for the purposes of National Instrument 43-101 (the “Instrument”) under the Accepted Foreign Associations and Membership Designations (Appendix A).

 

 

 

 

·

My most recent personal inspection of the Property was June 6 to 7, 2016 inclusive. To the best of my knowledge, there has been no further technical work carried out on the tailings material which is the subject of this Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am responsible for Sections 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, 7.0, 8.0, 9.0, 10.0, 11.0, 12.0, 14.0, 23.0, 25.1, 25.2, 26.2, 27.0, and 28.1 of the Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am independent of Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. as defined by Section 1.5 of the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

I have prior involvement with the Property that is the subject of the Technical Report. I co-authored the report entitled “Amended Resource Estimate Update for the Avino Property Durango, Mexico” and dated October 27, 2016.

 

 

 

 

·

I have read the Instrument and the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for have been prepared in compliance with the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

As of the date of this certificate, to the best of my knowledge, information and belief, the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for contains all of the scientific and technical information that is required to be disclosed to make the Technical Report not misleading.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

28-1

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

 

Signed and dated this 18 th day of May 2017 at Vancouver, British Columbia.

 

 

“Original document signed and sealed by

Michael F. O’Brien, P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat.,

FAusIMM, FSAIMM

 

 

 

 

Michael F. O’Brien,

P.Geo., M.Sc., Pr.Sci.Nat., FAusIMM, FSAIMM

Senior Principal Consultant

Aranz Geo Expert Services

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

28-2

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

28.2 HASSAN GHAFFARI, P.ENG.

 

I, Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng., of Vancouver, British Columbia, do hereby certify:

 

 

·

I am a Director of Metallurgy with Tetra Tech Canada Inc. located at Suite 1000, 10 th Floor, 885 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6C 1N5.

 

 

 

 

·

This certificate applies to the technical report entitled “Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico” dated 11 th April 2017 (the “Technical Report”).

 

 

 

 

·

I am a graduate of the University of Tehran (M.A.Sc., Mining Engineering, 1990) and the University of British Columbia (M.A.Sc., Mineral Process Engineering, 2004). I am a member in good standing of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia (#30408). My relevant experience includes 27 years of experience in mining and plant operation, project studies, management, and engineering. As the lead metallurgist for the Pebble Copper/Gold Moly Project in Alaska, I am coordinating all metallurgical test work and preparing and peer reviewing the technical report and the operating and capital costs of the plant and infrastructure for both the scoping and prefeasibility studies. For the Ajax Copper-Gold Project in BC, I was the Project Manager responsible for the process, infrastructure and overall management of the 60,000 t/d mill. As well, I was the Project Manager responsible for ongoing metallurgical test work and technical assistance for the La Joya Project Copper/Silver/Gold Project in Durango, Mexico. I am a “Qualified Person” for the purposes of National Instrument 43-101 (the “Instrument”).

 

 

 

 

·

My most recent personal inspection of the Property that is the subject of this Technical Report was March 30, 2011 for one day.

 

 

 

 

·

I am responsible for Sections 1.1, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.11, 2.0, 3.0, 18.0, 19.0, 20.0, 21.1, 21.3, 21.4, 24.0, 25.5, 26.1, 26.4, 26.6, 26.7, 27.0, and 28.2 of the Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am independent of Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. as defined by Section 1.5 of the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

I have prior involvement with the Property that is the subject of the Technical Report. I co-authored the report entitled “Amended Resource Estimate Update for the Avino Property Durango, Mexico” and dated October 27, 2016.

 

 

 

 

·

I have read the Instrument and the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for have been prepared in compliance with the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

As of the date of this certificate, to the best of my knowledge, information and belief, the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for contains all of the scientific and technical information that is required to be disclosed to make the Technical Report not misleading.

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

28-3

735-1651920100-REP-R0001-03

Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

Signed and dated this 18 th day of May 2017 at Vancouver, British Columbia.

 

 

“Original document signed and sealed by

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.”

   

 

 

Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng.

Director of Metallurgy

Tetra Tech Canada Inc.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

28-4

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

  

 

28.3 SABRY ABDEL HAFEZ, PH.D., P.ENG.

 

I, Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng., of Vancouver, British Columbia, do hereby certify:

 

 

·

I am (formerly) a Senior Mining Engineer with Tetra Tech Canada Inc. located at Suite 1000, 10 th Floor, 885 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6C 1N5.

 

 

 

 

·

This certificate applies to the technical report entitled “Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico” dated 11 th April 2017 (the “Technical Report”).

 

 

 

 

·

I am a graduate of Assiut University (B.Sc Mining Engineering, 1991; M.Sc. in Mining Engineering, 1996; Ph.D. in Mineral Economics, 2000). I am a member in good standing of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia (#34975). I have more than 23 years of experience in the evaluation of mining projects, advanced financial analysis, and mine planning and optimization. My capabilities range from the conventional mine planning and evaluation to the advanced simulation-based techniques that incorporate both market and geological uncertainties. I have recently been involved in the technical reports for the Copper Fox’s Schaft Creek project feasibility study, Pretium Resources’ Brucejack project feasibility study, AQM’s Zafranal PEA, Castle Resources’ Granduc project PEA study and Seabridge’s KSM project prefeasibility study. I have been involved in the technical studies of several base metals, gold, coal, and aggregate mining projects in Canada and abroad. I am a “Qualified Person” for purposes of National Instrument 43-101 (the “Instrument”).

 

 

 

 

·

I have not completed a personal inspection of the Property that is the subject of this Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am responsible for Sections 1.6, 1.10, 15.0, 16.0, 21.2.1, 22.0, 25.4, 25.6, 26.5, and 28.3 of the Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am independent of Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. as defined by Section 1.5 of the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

I have prior involvement with the Property that is the subject of the Technical Report. I co-authored the report entitled “Amended Resource Estimate Update for the Avino Property Durango, Mexico” and dated October 27, 2016.

 

 

 

 

·

I have read the Instrument and the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for have been prepared in compliance with the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

As of the date of this certificate, to the best of my knowledge, information and belief, the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for contains all of the scientific and technical information that is required to be disclosed to make the Technical Report not misleading.

 

Signed and dated this 18 th day of May 2017 at Vancouver, British Columbia.

 

 

“Original document signed and sealed by

Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng.”

 

 

 

Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

28-5

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Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico

 
 
 
 

 

 

28.4 JIANHUI (JOHN) HUANG PH.D., P.ENG.

 

I, Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng., of Coquitlam, British Columbia, do hereby certify:

 

 

·

I am a Senior Metallurgist with Tetra Tech Canada Inc. located at Suite 1000, 10 th Floor, 885 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6C 1N5.

 

 

 

 

·

This certificate applies to the technical report entitled “Technical Report on the Avino Property, Durango, Mexico” dated 11 th April 2017 (the “Technical Report”).

 

 

 

 

·

I am a graduate of North-East University, China (B.Eng., 1982), Beijing General Research Institute for Non-ferrous Metals, China (M.Eng., 1988), and Birmingham University, United Kingdom (Ph.D., 2000). I am a member in good standing of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia (#30898). My relevant experience includes over 30 years involvement in mineral processing for base metal ores, gold and silver ores, and rare metal ores. I am a “Qualified Person” for purposes of National Instrument 43-101 (the “Instrument”).

 

 

 

 

·

I have not completed a personal inspection of the Property that is the subject of this Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am responsible for Sections 1.5, 2.0, 13.0, 17.0, 21.2.2, 21.2.3, 25.3, 26.3, and 28.4 of the Technical Report.

 

 

 

 

·

I am independent of Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd. as defined by Section 1.5 of the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

I worked on two test work programs for the samples from the properties, one in 2003 and the other in 2005.

 

 

 

 

·

I have read the Instrument and the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for have been prepared in compliance with the Instrument.

 

 

 

 

·

As of the date of this certificate, to the best of my knowledge, information and belief, the sections of the Technical Report that I am responsible for contains all of the scientific and technical information that is required to be disclosed to make the Technical Report not misleading.

 

Signed and dated this 18 th day of May 2017 at Vancouver, British Columbia.

 

 

“Original document signed and sealed by

Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng.”

  

 

 

Jianhui (John) Huang

Senior Metallurgist

Tetra Tech Canada Inc.

 

 

 

Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.

28-6

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