Sierra Azul (formerly CESAR) is a district-scale copper-silver project spanning 120-km along the 200-km-long Cesar Basin in the mining region of northeastern Colombia. This region provides access to major infrastructure resulting from oil & gas and mining operations, including Cerrejón, the largest coal mine in Latin America, held by global miner Glencore. Max’s mining concessions cover an area in excess of 180-km².
On May 30, 2024, Max received exchange approval for an earn-in agreement with Freeport-McMoRan Inc. for a two-stage option to acquire up to an 80% ownership interest in the Sierra Azul Project by funding cumulative expenditures of C$50 million and making cash payments to Max of C$1.55 million.
2024 exploration at Sierra Azul is fully funded by Freeport-McMoRan Inc. and includes:
Drill Target Development Focused exploration to prepare selected targets for drilling
Regional Exploration Systematic reconnaissance exploration covering the project to identify new target areas for follow-up
Exploration is currently focused on three districts at Sierra-Azul:
Results from 10 mineralized outcrops from the Cedro Valley include:
Classification and size potential
Primary copper minerals observed at Mantos Blancos include native copper and chalcocite (80% copper by weight). These minerals indicate the depositional environment was sulphur poor, thus leading to the precipitation of these high-grade copper minerals
Future exploration at AM-13 will look to establish the continuity of mineralization between the Cedro valley and Mapurito valley outcrops with detailed mapping, soil sampling and ground geophysical surveys.
CON-02 Priority Target
URU-C Highlights
URU-CE Highlights