ROKMASTER RESOURCES CORP. Pinaya Project, Peru. Corporate Presentation January 2013

ROKMASTER RESOURCES CORP. Pinaya Project, Peru Corporate Presentation January 2013 Cautionary Statement This presentation contains “forward-looking...
Author: Guest
1 downloads 0 Views 5MB Size
ROKMASTER RESOURCES CORP. Pinaya Project, Peru

Corporate Presentation January 2013

Cautionary Statement This presentation contains “forward-looking information” within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities regulations and “forwarding-looking statements” within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (collectively, “forward-looking information”). The forward-looking information contained in this presentation is made as of the date of this presentation. Except as required under applicable securities legislation, ROKMASTER Resources Corp. (“ROKMASTER”) does not intend, and does not assume any obligation, to update this forward-looking information. Forward-looking information includes, but is not limited to, statements with respect to the future price of minerals and the effects thereof, the estimation of mineralization, the timing and amount of estimated capital expenditures, costs and timing of proposed activities, plans and budgets for and expected results of exploration activities, permitting time-lines, requirements for additional capital, government regulation of mining operations, environmental risks, reclamation obligations and expenses, title disputes or claims, adequacy of insurance coverage, the availability of qualified labour, acquisition plans and strategies, the payment of dividends in the future, and ROKMASTER’s use of the proceeds of the Offering. Often, but not always, forward-looking information can be identified by the use of words such as “plans”, “expects”, “is expected”, “budget”, “scheduled”, “estimates”, “forecasts”, “intends”, “anticipates”, or “believes” or the negatives thereof or variations of such words and phrases or statements that certain actions, events or results “may”, “could”, “would”, “might” or “will” be taken, occur or be achieved. This forward-looking information is based on certain assumptions that ROKMASTER believes are reasonable, including that the current price of and demand for minerals being targeted by ROKMASTER will be sustained or will improve, the supply of minerals targeted by ROKMASTER will remain stable, that ROKMASTER ’s current exploration programs and objectives can be achieved, that general business and economic conditions will not change in a material adverse manner, that financing will be available if and when needed on reasonable terms and that ROKMASTER will not experience any material accident, labour dispute, or failure of plant or equipment. While ROKMASTER considers these assumptions to be reasonable based on information currently available to it, they may prove to be incorrect. Forward-looking information involves known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of ROKMASTER to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking information. Such factors include, among others, the risk that actual results of exploration activities will be different than anticipated, that cost of labour, equipment or materials increase more than expected, that the future price of minerals targeted by ROKMASTER will decline, that changes in project parameters as plans continue to be refined may result in increased costs, that plant, equipment or processes will fail to operate as anticipated, that accidents, labour disputes and other risks generally associated with mining may occur, that unanticipated delays in obtaining governmental approvals or financing or in the completion of development or construction activities may occur, as well as those factors discussed in the section entitled “Risk Factors” in this Presentation. Although ROKMASTER has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual actions, events or results to differ materially from those described in forward-looking information, there may be other factors that cause actions, events or results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. There can be no assurance that forward-looking information will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking information due to the inherent uncertainty thereof.

1

Why (“RKR”) Head office in Vancouver, Canada. Trading on the Toronto Venture Exchange (“TSX.V”) - symbol: RKR; listing on Lima Bolsa (“BVL”) and U.S. Over the Counter, International Exchange (“OTC.QX”), in progress for 2013. Our focus is simple… develop remarkable opportunities in mining friendly jurisdictions that provide superb infrastructure in North, Central and South America. Management’s key strengths are dynamic:  proven business acumen  abundance of experience in exploration & mineral project development  proven economic production history Outstanding growth project, the PINAYA, located in Peru, is a new acquisition with exploration commencing September 2012. The plan is to enhance and define existing multi-million ounce shallow, gold-rich oxide, shallow copper-gold porphyry and skarn deposits and explore for deeper super-giant sulphide porphyry targets. Past work by previous operators included over 46,000 meters of Diamond Drilling in 160 holes from 2004 to 2008, including the preparation of a National Instrument 43-101 (“NI 43-101”) compliant resource estimate for the Pinaya Project. Preparation of updated NI 43-101 compliant Independent Technical Report on the Pinaya Property and Resource Update, July 26, 2012.

2

Property Location Located in southern Peru 110 km north-northeast of Arequipa, 7 km off of Xstrata’s Tintaya Mine road. The 192 sq. km Pinaya property covers a 25 km south-east portion of the newly emerging 300 km long Andahuaylas-Yauri PorphyrySkarn Belt, along the northeastern edge of the Western Andean cordillera, an extension of the Chilean porphyry copper belt. This prolific Peruvian belt is host to the producing Tintaya Mine and an additional nine world class gold, silver, copper and molybdenum porphyry deposits containing over 6 billion tonnes of drilled and developed resources. 3

Major Porphyry Deposits

*See Appendix III for deposit figure references 4

World Class Porphyry Deposits (+/- Au, Ag, Mo within 200 km of Pinaya)

Name

Owner/Operator

Las Chancas (1)

Southern Peru

Contained lbs Cu x 000’s * 7,100,000

New Investment x 000’s ($US) * $1,300,000

355 Mt @ 1% Cu, 0.07% Mo

Cotabambas (2)

Panoro

1,260,000

Exploration

90 Mt 0.70% Cu, 0.42 g/t Au

Las Bambas (3)

Xstrata

20,520,000

$5,200,000

1.71 Bt @ 0.60% Cu

Haquira (4)

First Quantum

8,000,000

$2,000,000

>700 Mt @ >0.50% Cu

Constancia (5)

Hudbay

3,500,000

$1,500,000

372 Mt @ 0.39% Cu, 0.01% Mo

Tintaya (3)

Xstrata

8,064,000

$1,400,000

720 Mt @ 0.56% Cu

Antapaccay (3)

Xstrata

9,800,000

$1,047,000

1.0 Bt @ 0.49% Cu

Coroccohayco (3)

Xstrata

6,026,000

Exploration

324 Mt @ 0.93% Cu

Chucapaca (6)

Goldfields

7.6M oz/AuEq

$1,200,000

83.7 Mt @ 1.9 g/t AuEq

Quecha (7)

Pan Pacific

5,168,000 680 Mt @ 0.38% Cu

5

*See Appendix III for deposit figure references

$850,000

Andahuaylas-Yauri Distribution of Prophyry Clusters

6

Project Infrastructure

7



7 km to Tintaya Mine access road



22 km to Hwy 30B and 142 km to Arequipa



50 km to 138 Kv power line



40 km to rail



250 km to port

Major Co.’s Adjoining Pinaya Concessions

The 25km long Pinaya concession package (48,000 acres) is bounded to the west by BHP and to the east by Orion/Newmont. Target areas circled in white. 8

First Option Terms Rokmaster has a two part option to earn up to 75% interest in the Pinaya Gold/Copper project.  First Option (to earn 51% interest): Annual commitments to earn initial 51% Year Effective Date

Payments to AM Gold Exploration (all amounts in $CDN) Expenditures $400,000 (Paid)

Meters Drilling

-

-

-

Year. 1

$400,000

$1,000,000

Year. 2

$400,000

$2,500,000

Year. 3

$400,000

$3,500,000

Year. 4

$1,300,000

$5,100,000

TOTALS

$2,900,000

$12,100,000

3,000 7,000 10,000

After having earned a 51% interest, RKR may elect to Joint Venture on a 51%/49% basis or increase its interest to 75% by way of a second option.

9

Second Option Terms  Second Option (to earn an additional 24% interest): •

Pay AM Gold an additional $1,300,000.



Incurring no less than an additional $9,700,000 in Expenditures, within 5 years, including a Preliminary Economic Assessment.

NOTE: Any party whose interest in the Joint Venture dilutes below 10% will have its interest converted into a 3% net smelter returns royalty (“NSR”) which NSR may be reduced from 3% to 2% by paying the NSR holder $2,000,000, and which NSR may be further reduced from 2% to 1% by paying the NSR holder a further $5,000,000.

10

Why PINAYA? 1. The Pinaya Porphyry copper-gold system lies at the SE end of the well known, but newly emerging Andahaylas-Yauri Porphyry copper-gold belt. 2. Pinaya’s total Au Equivalent Resources from the Western Porphyry Zone (“WPZ”), Northwestern Porphyry Zone (“NWPZ”) and Gold Oxide Skarn Zones (“GOSZ”): • Measured & Indicated – 1,164,946 oz AuEq (Au+Cu) Contained in 38,669,000 tonnes. (See Appendix III) • Inferred – 949,563 oz AuEq (Au+Cu) Contained in 37,795,000 tonnes. (See Appendix III) • (equivalent determinations used U.S. $1,600 per oz Au, U.S. $3.00 per lb Cu., metallurgical recoveries and net smelter costs not considered.) 3. The Pinaya drill ready targets include those targets which have “hanging” or open ended drill intersections of significant gold or copper mineralized zones which have not been closed off by historical drill patterns. Significant open, drill indicated width, mineralized intersections include: • Montana de Cobre Y Oro gold oxide zone: Drill hole PDH 41 cuts 46.85 m @ 0.79 g/t Au and 0.15% Cu from 35.3 82.15 m and PDH 43 cuts 56.5 m @ 1.12 g/t Au, nil Cu from 9.0 – 65.5 m, all open to east.

• Southern Extension of WPZ: Drill hole PDH 106 cuts 52.5 m @ 1.55 g/t Au and 0.08% Cu from 185.5 to 238.0 m and PDH 137 cuts 53.0 m @ 0.64 g/t Au and 0.12% Cu from 9.0 to 62.0 m, zone open to north. 4. Throughout many portions of the Pinaya claims the rock mass is significantly gold enriched over broad intervals which is suggestive of strong regional scale crustal-metallogenic endowment. Isolated drill holes and trenches contain thick intervals of low grade gold mineralization at many times crustal abundances. This level of potentially distal gold “noise” suggests the presence of a robust, large scale gold mineralizing system within the Pinaya concession. 5. Several large copper-gold geochemical anomalies, many several km in size and of similar intensity to the geochemical anomalies overlying the principle mineralized zones, remain untested. Two mineralized trends may be suggested: a Cu-Au trend (Cu dominant) and an Au-Cu trend (Au dominant). Taken together, these two mineralized zones may have strike lengths which may exceed 32 km. Over 90% of this total strike length remains untested. 11

Why PINAYA, cont. 6. Several untested high grade epithermal gold-silver rich vein zones need excavator trenching and drilling. 7. IP, Mag, and ZTEM targets are identified and are locally coincident with copper and soil geochemical targets. With a rapid and limited amount of ground truthing these targets could be drill ready. 8. There is significant evidence, principally based on metal ratios and alteration assemblages, that three styles of mineralization are identified within the claims. This would include intrusive related copper-gold mineralized zones, plus or minus proximal skarns and more distal low sulphidation epithermal gold mineralized zones. The data suggests especially the presence of adularia associated with gold mineralized zones, that emplacements depths of this mineralized system are quite shallow. If the adularia-sericite low sulphidation gold zones are roughly contemporaneous with the development of copper gold porphyry mineralization, than shallow emplacement depths of the porphyry system, less than 500 m might be suggested. It is also possible that epithermal processes have been telescoped onto the porphyry system. 9. All occurrences exhibit superb structural controls. Wide brittle-ductile structural zones, often exceeding 100 m in true width are common throughout the concession. These north-northwest trending, sub-vertically dipping structural zones are likely regional scale. Mineralized intrusions are elongate in the plane of these structural zones and may be syn-deformational. 10. The porphyry copper-gold zones and gold oxide skarn zone resource area is open along strike and to depth.

11. Less than 10% of the prospective area has been explored in detail.

12

Property Geology A portion of the Property overlies three significant areas of mineralization including: (i) Intrusive hosted porphyry copper-gold mineralization associated with mineralized diorite to monzonite composition rock. Mineralization in these rocks is associated with stockwork and sheeted quartz veins locally with potassic and argillic alteration zones. The NWPZ and WPZ contain significant copper and gold contents with Measured, Indicated, and Inferred mineral resources* shown in the table below:

Combined West and Northwest Cu/Au Porphyry Zones ("WPZ" & "NWPZ") Cut-off Grade

WPZ + WPZ 0.3% CuEq

% CuEq

Contained oz Gold 000's

Contained lbs Copper 000's

0.493

0.703

88

53,526

0.384

0.423

0.610

364

226,213

32,268

0.393

0.435

0.626

452

279,739

35,412

0.402

0.270

0.546

307

313,911

759

593,650

Class

Tonnes 000's

% Cu

g/t Au

Measured

5,530

0.439

Indicated

26,738

Meas+Ind Inferred

Totals

13

Geology, cont. ii) Calc-silicate skarn assemblages developing in the protolith rocks in the proximal hanging wall to the main WPZ, the Gold Oxide Skarn Zone ("GOSZ") contains Measured, Indicated, and Inferred mineral resources* shown in the table below: Gold Oxide Skarn Zone ("GOSZ") Cut-off Grade GOSZ

0.25 g/t Au

Class

Tonnes 000's

g/t Au

% Cu

Contained oz Gold 000's

Measured

2,178

0.920

0.093

64

4,465

Indicated

4,223

0.735

0.092

100

8,565

Meas+Ind

6,401

0.798

0.092

164

13,030

Inferred

2,383

0.597

0.081

46

4,256

210

17,286

Totals

Contained lbs Copper 000's

* The mineral resources were estimated using ordinary kriging for the GOSZ and the WPZ zones and by the inverse distance squared method for the NWPZ. Classified blocks were constrained by an optimized pit shell. Cut-off values utilized are 0.25 grams gold per tonne ("g/t Au") and 0.3 percent copper equivalent ("%CuEq"), with overall recovery assumed to be 80%. The copper equivalent determination is based upon metal values of US$3.00/lb copper and US$1,100/oz gold. The resource estimate is effective May 30, 2011 and was prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 -- Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") as well as commensurate with CIM definitions (2005) and were previously disclosed by AM Gold and may be referenced on their website at (www.amgold.ca and www.sedar.com, and are disclosed by Rokmaster at www.sedar.com) in NI 43-101 Technical Report on the Pinaya Gold/Copper Property dated July 26, 2012 for Rokmaster Resources Corp.

14

PDH – 16 and 17 Porphyry Holes  Stockwork and sheeted veins are common in the mineralized diorite to monzonite dykes and sills which form the core of the NWPZ and WPZ mineralized zones.  The strong relationship between hematite altered fault and shear zones, at many of the occurrences, may also be noted in PDH 16. (Excerpted from Acero 2006 Power Point Pinaya Copper Gold Porphyry Project Southern Peru, March 2006)

15

Geology, cont.

(iii) Gold mineralization characterized by epithermal quartz-adularia-sericite mineral assemblages. Careful documentation of alteration assemblages associated with several of these mineralized zones shows distinctly epithermal gold signatures may be overprinting earlier porphyry and skarn assemblages. These zones are typically gold dominant and are commonly identified several hundreds of meters into the hanging wall of the main porphyry mineralized zones. The three mineralized areas are all open both along strike and to depth and exhibit superb structural controls.

16

Minas Jorge Zone, Epithermal High Grade Au-Ag

Drill target area. Values to 46.0 g/t Au, 4,281 g/t Ag from grab samples, 1.2 km east of the resource area, along a 3.5km long structural corridor. 17

Drill Ready and Short Term Opportunities Within the central portions of the claim block and within moderately well defined mineralized zones, Drill Ready Target opportunities include: a. Montana de Cobre y Oro Zone Target b. Southeastern Extensions of the Western Porphyry Zone, PDH’s 106 & 137 Target a. Montana de Cobre y Oro Zone The most successful drill holes within this mineralized area, defined by regional scale copper soil geochemistry, trench results and IP chargeability anomalies are PDH 041 and 043. PDH 041 is collared closest to the “loam – greywacke/arenite contact and cores a sequence of fine to coarse grained clastic sediments which locally have well developed calc-silicate (andradite-albite bands). From 35.30 – 82.15 m PDH 041 cuts 46.85 m (drill indicated width) @ 0.79 g/t Au, 28.07 g/t Ag and 0.15% Cu. Within this interval the drill hole also cuts a higher grade mineralized zone from 65.8 – 74.8 m, 9.0 m @ 2.72 g/t Au and 0.45% Cu. PDH 043 cut 56.50 m (drill indicated width) @ 1.12 g/t Au and nil Cu, from 9.0 – 65.5 m.

b. Go to slide 20.

Short-term Target opportunities are those project areas which have no historic drill testing but which have the geophysical, geochemical, structural, and alteration signatures of a potentially significant mineralized zone. In this case, short-term suggests that significant drill targets could be defined with very limited < 2 - 3 months additional field – technical work. The Sur del Denuncio and Saitocco areas could rapidly be drill ready with very limited additional technical work: • Target specific ground IP surveys established over zones of strongest geochemistry. • Rapid reconnaissance geological transects. Identification of structural controls, documentation of the nature of hydrothermal alteration assemblages, and the distribution of intrusive phases would be rapidly documented. 18

Montana Oxide Au Target Area a. The position of the five drill holes collared in the Montana De Cobre Y Oro area is identified by the yellow numbers 45, 43, 41, 40, 38. The assay data from approximately the upper 70 m of each drill hole clearly indicates an increasing strength of gold copper mineralization towards the “loam” (grey color) contact.

PDH-043 – 56.5 m @ 1.12 g/t Au, From 9.0-65.5 m down hole.

PDH-041 – 46.85 m @ 0.79 g/t Au, 0.15% Cu, 28.07 g/t Ag from 35.3 to 82.15 m down hole, and 26.3 m @ 0.72 Au, 0.03% Cu from 154.5 to 180.8 m down hole.

19

PDH’s 106 & 137 Strike Extension Target b. Two strongly mineralized drill holes, PDH 106 (185.5 to 238.0 m – 52.5 m @ 1.55 g/t Au and 0.08% Cu) and PDH 137 (9.0 to 62.0 m – 53.0 m @ 0.64 g/t Au and 0.12% Cu and from 113.0 m to 143.0 m – 30.0 m @ 0.64 g/t Au, nil Cu) are the last drill holes cored along the southeasterly projection of the WPZ and its related GOSZ. No other existing drill holes terminate these mineralized zones to the southeast leaving the strike extensions of this zone available for immediate drill testing. Large grids are 500 m. All widths drill indicated. 20

Induced Polarization (“IP”) Survey Anomalies The extent of ground IP surveys, to date, over the Pinaya concessions is very limited. •



21

Extensive copper and gold geochemical anomalies significantly exceed the size of the existing surveys. The main resource area, and an additional few square km’s have been covered by standard IP surveys. The surveys clearly define the location of two large chargeability anomalies, one of which has been tested by drill hole PDH – 160 and the other which overlies the Montana de Cobre y Oro zone. The topography of this locale and the size of the target is ideally suited to the use of reconnaissance IP surveys, or surveys utilizing 400 m line spacing's.

ZTEM Airborne Survey The property has been covered by property scale airborne ZTEM surveys which may provide useful mapping tools but their interpretation relative to other geophysical approaches may be problematic. Interpretations of the 2011 ZTEM airborne data suggest that area of the main porphyry resource is underlain by a strongly resistive body which is flaring at depth. Shallow depth of emplacement of strongly plagioclase phyric diorite and monzonite dykes is implied by: • These intrusions have quenched aphanitic and typically very potassic rich matrices, they have likely cooled rapidly which suggests emplacement at shallow crustal levels. • The presence of adularia in the eastern gold zone alteration assemblages is a key indicator for high level adulariasericite low sulphidation gold occurrences. Most low sulphidation gold occurrences will form at depths infrequently exceeding 750 m of depth.

These data would be compatible with preservation of a potentially larger and deeper porphyry copper-gold system at depth or alternatively with broad scale enhanced silicification within quartz rich clastic sediments.

22

NWPZ and WPZ - ZTEM Target ZTEM interpretation of the main NWPZ and WPZ resource area. The 2-D section on flight line 1790 cuts the area between the NWPZ and WPZ. These data suggest that a resistivity high extending below the mineralized zone is flaring or increasing at depth. The relatively shallow depth of drilling in this area, typically in the 150 to 200 m vertical depth range, is indicated on the light grey line noted just below the topographic profile.

23

Gold-silver soil & rock Geochem Trends  Twinned zones of anomalous gold in rock are noted in the northwestern map area corresponding to the NWPZ/WPZ and Montana de Oro and Minas Jorge Zones systems.

24

Copper soil Geochem-Contoured  Significant copper geochemical anomalies have a strike length exceeding 16 km with termination of soil coverage to the north clearly noted on this diagram.  No significant sub-surface testing has been conducted on the lower 8 km of the known soil geochemical values.  In the Resource Area contours in orange are above 66 ppm Cu and external to the Resource Area orange contours are above 50 ppm Cu (J. Michaelis, per comm. June 2012).  On the regional scale, significant open-ended anomalous copper mineralized zones are identified to the north and south; or continuation of the defined anomaly trends within this extensive claim block.  Sub-surface drill testing of these anomalies has occurred along strike distances of approximately 2500 m. The majority of these anomalies are open ended for many km.  On the extreme southeastern portions of the claim block an abundance of silver in rock anomalies is identified but gold is not identified. Its likely that this portion of the claims has had only preliminary Niton (XRF) field determination of precious metals values. Although a correlation between silver and gold likely exists in this area that will not be defined until ICP – MS results are compiled for the southern Pinaya claim areas. These anomalies are associated with the historic Spanish mine workings at or near Saitocco.  Many of these untested geochemical anomalies provide “ready made” short to near term mineral exploration targeting opportunities. 25

Copper Soil Geochem, continued

26

Historical Diamond Drill Core Results Pinaya Project Assay Results (Intercepts of Note)*

(all widths drill indicated) *intercepts prior to the 2006 NI 43-101.

27

Sur del Denuncio Untested Porphyry Target

Figure 12. Resistive siliceous ledges, Sur del Denuncio area, south-eastern Pinaya concessions. Grab sample number 20481 carried 0.71% Cu. The siliceous ledge is exposed over a distance of approximately 75 m, strikes approximately 110 degrees and is enveloped in a broad zone of orange brown weathering iron rich clastic sediments and porphyritic intrusions.

28

Southern Targets

Coincident ZTEM Anomalies over both the Sur Del Denuncio and Saitocco Areas with the top ranked anomaly target being proximal to the Saitocco area of historical Spanish mine workings, 12 km SE of the resource area. 29

Resource Area, Block Model Classification within Optimized Pit Shell

Figure 14.19

30

Peru – Mining Friendly Country



Over $12 billion invested in mining projects 2006-2011.



During 2011, GDP grew at a 6.9% rate, similar to the last eight years average. Peruvian Central Bank estimates a GDP growth rate at 5.7% for 2012. During Q2, the Peruvian Nuevo Sol continued it’s appreciating trend and as of August 31st, 2012, exchange rate closed at 2.61 USD/PEN. (reference site: http://exchangerate360.com/USD-PEN-history.htm)



Peru is the third largest country in South America after Brazil and Argentina at 1.29 million km .



Population of approx. 29 million people, 9 million in Lima, Peru’s political and financial capital.



Recent initiatives to train exploration personnel and miners is paying off in 2012. Production recoveries are forecast.



Constitutional republic with power balanced between executive, legislative and judicial branches.



Ollanta Humala elected President 2011 for 5 years.



Humala has continued to implement investor-friendly policies.



Investment grade of BBB.



Trade agreements with Canada and the United States.

2

World Rankings in Metal Production in 2011 • • • • 31

#2 Silver, Copper & Zinc production #6 Gold production #3 Tin #4 Lead

Metal Prices CHARTS SHOWING CUMULATIVE AVERAGES DURING THE PAST 4 to 6 YEARS: (Data source Kitco.com & Kitcometals.com)

Gold $2,000.00 Gold

$1,000.00

Trend Line $2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Copper $6.00 $4.00

Copper

$2.00

Trend Line

$2008

2009

2010

2011

Scotia Bank 2013 projections are $1,650 p/oz Au and $3.45 p/lb Cu.

32

Share Structure • Trading Symbol: RKR (TSX.V) • Shares outstanding: – 26,491,539 • Fully diluted shares: – 36,406,649 • Working Capital: – Approximately $1M

33

Appendix I, Directors and Management John M. Mirko, President, CEO, and Director Mr. Mirko has 40 years of extensive experience in the mining industry. His most recent work was with Roca Mines Inc. as a founding Director for nine years, where he was instrumental in putting into production a 500 tonne per day (TPD) mine and concentrator. He was co-recipient of Association for Mineral Exploration BC's "E.A. Scholtz Medal" (2008) for excellence in mine development, and the Mining Association of BC's "Mining and Sustainability Award" (2009) for Roca Mines' MAX Molybdenum Mine. From 1986 to 2010, Mr. Mirko was a founding Director of Auckland Exploration Inc., Pacific Rim Mining Corp., Frontier Pacific Mining Corp., and Stikine Energy Corp. In addition, he held management positions with Skylark Resources Ltd., Solitare Minerals Corp. and Calypso Uranium Corp. Mr. Mirko has been self-employed since 1977 through his company, Canam Mining Corp., as a mining contractor and prospector involved in the exploration, development and construction of numerous mining projects in 11 countries and the production of mineral resources from five such projects. Mr. Mirko's past clients include Hudson Bay Mining, Corona Corp., Homestake Development, Kennecott, Extotal Resources, Equity Engineering, Stikine Copper and Pioneer Metals. His work included prospecting, geology, geophysics, geochemistry, property evaluation, project management, property acquisition, catering, camp/road/airstrip construction, mine development, mine rehabilitation, concentrator construction and operations, contract negotiations, financing and strategic planning and development.

Feisal Somji, BSc, MBA, Director Mr. Somji has 20 years of experience in mineral exploration and development ranging from grassroots exploration to mine development. Mr. Somji has acted as an officer and director of several public companies involved in diamond, gold, silver, copper, base metal and platinum assets in Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Philippines, Peru and Africa. Most recently Mr. Somji was the founder, President and CEO of Rio Alto Mining Ltd, with it's La Arena gold/copper mine in Peru, having achieved commercial production in 2011, with a current annual production rate of approximately 150,000 ounces of gold from 4,000,000 tonnes of ore. Mr. Somji provides expertise in areas of corporate finance and governance where he has raised over $125 million and helped several projects go public on the Canadian Venture Exchange. Mr. Somji has a B.Sc. from the University of British Columbia and an MBA from Queens University.

34

Directors and Management Antonio M. (“Mel”) de Quadros Ph.D, P. Eng., Director Dr. de Quadros is a consulting geologist who has been involved for the past 40 years in mineral exploration and development. He has held several positions as an Officer, Director, and Vice President of Exploration of public mining companies. He is currently a Director for Romios Gold Resources Inc. and Northern Platinum. He is a member of CIM as well as a Professional Engineer in Ontario and British Columbia. He graduated from University of London, England with BSc. in geology and chemistry and completed his Ph.D. degree from the University of Nairobi, Kenya. He holds a MSc. in geology from the UCLA.

Larry Okada C.A., CPA (Wash.), Director Mr. Okada has been involved with a number of public mining companies for 36 years. He is a Chartered Accountant and has been in public practice since 1974 with extensive public finance and accounting experience with Deloitte and Touche, Staley Okada and Partners and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. He presently serves as the Chief Financial Officer ("CFO") for BCGold Corp and RedQuest Capital Corp (CPC) and is Acting CFO for Africo Resources Ltd as well as a director and serving as chairman of the audit committees of Forum Uranium Corp. and Revett Minerals Corp.

Ernest (“Ernie”) S. Peters, Director Mr. Peters has over 40 years of experience in the mining industry, having been involved with the formation, management and financing of a number of public resources companies. Mr. Peters’ experience in the resource sector includes exploration, development and production management of projects in Canada, United States, Brazil, Mexico and Australia.

John Fiorino, Director Mr. Fiorino currently sits on the board of several private companies and is currently the president and CEO of Infinite Merchant Solutions Inc. Mr. Fiorino is a Financier, Businessman , Investor and Consultant with over 10 years experience in assisting private and public companies with corporate operations, capital development, financing, and strategic advisory services. He has concluded mining transactions involving Gold and other commodities in North and South America. Mr. Fiorino has been instrumental in the restructuring and recapitalization of AM Gold Inc.

35

Directors and Management Dennis Cojuco CA, CFO, and Corporate Secretary Mr. Cojuco is a graduate of the University of British Columbia (BSc. Chemistry and Diploma in Accounting) and is a Chartered Accountant in British Columbia. Mr. Cojuco articled with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP from 2006 to 2009 and with Staley, Okada and Partners from 2004 until the two firms combined in 2006. Mr. Cojuco worked primarily in the mining practice of both firms where he assisted clients in the areas of public financings, mergers and acquisitions, public company reporting and various other areas. Since the fall of 2009, he has been working in senior accounting capacities with junior mining companies, both in the production and exploration stage.

Ken Konkin, P. Geo., Geological Consultant (Pinaya Project Manager) Mr. Konkin has over 30 years of experience managing precious and base metal exploration programs throughout North America, South America, and Russia. Most recently, Mr. Konkin was the Project Manager of Pretivm's Snowfield and Brucejack Projects located in the northwest region of British Columbia. Mr. Konkin was instrumental in advancing the Snowfield and Brucejack Projects and is a co-recipient, as part of Pretivm Resources, to receive the 2013 Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada "Bill Carter Award". From 1993 to 2010 Mr. Konkin worked for Silver Standard Resources in Peru, Argentina, Mexico and British Columbia. Mr. Konkin holds a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of British Columbia.

Adam Murphy, Corporate Operations Mr. Murphy administers Rokmaster's corporate operations. He has over ten years of management experience across multiple industries including mining, interactive entertainment, and hospitality. From 2007 to 2010 Mr. Murphy worked as an executive manager for a mining services contractor located in Smithers, British Columbia.

36

Appendix II, Advisors and Consultants Mark Rebagliati, P. Eng., Chief Geological Consultant Mr. Rebagliati is a consulting geological engineer and has held positions with a number of major mining companies. He graduated from Michigan Technological University in 1969 with a B.Sc. in Geological Engineering. In 1986, Mark formed Rebagliati Geological Consulting Ltd. based in Vancouver, Canada. He played a leading role in the discovery of the Mount Milligan, Southern Star and Kemess South porphyry copper/gold deposits in British Columbia, a cluster of polymetallic VMS deposits at Campo Morado, Mexico, the Pebble East porphyry copper/gold/silver/moly deposit in Alaska and the Xietongmen and New-Tongmen porphyry copper/gold deposits in China. Mr. Rebagliati is the recipient of several mining industry awards including the BC Chamber of Mines "H.H. Huestis Award" (1992) for excellence in mineral exploration, the "Bill Dennis Prospector of the Year Award" (1997) from PDAC (Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada), a co-recipient of the "Thayer Lindsey International Discovery Award" from PDAC (2007), the "Robert M. Dreyer Award" (2008) from the Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration to recognize outstanding achievements in applied economic geology accomplished through commercial exploration or development of mineral deposits, and most recently the "Colin Spence Award" (2009) from the Association for Mineral Exploration BC for global exploration excellence.

Jim Oliver, Ph.D., P. Geo., Geological Consultant Dr. Oliver has more than 25 years exploration experience specializing in global mineral deposit evaluations and early to advanced stage project valuations, with particular emphasis on belt, regional and detailed geological mapping programs, lithologic, structural and alteration mapping, Archean and epithermal gold, porphyry copper-molybdenum-gold, SedEx and REE mineral systems.

Luis Igreda, P. Geo, Geological Consultant Mr. Igreda is a consulting geologist with more than 40 years of experience in mineral exploration, development and production. He received his Bachelor of Science degree in Geological Engineering from National Mayor University of San Marcos, Lima, Peru in 1972 and is registered as a Practicing member of the Association of Professional Geoscientists of Ontario. Mr. Ingreda's clients include Endeavour Silver Corp. in Mexico, Roca Mines Inc. in Canada and Mexico, Aurelian Resources Inc. in Ecuador, Geomaque Explorations Ltd. in Mexico and Honduras and he worked as a mine geologist over 20 years for Cerro de Pasco Corp. (Centromin Peru), Minas Buenaventura, S.A. and Perubar, S.A.

37

Advisors and Consultants, cont. Harvey Tremblay, Advisor Mr. Tremblay is the founder and President of Hy-Tech Drilling Ltd. based in Smithers, BC. A northerner all his life, Mr. Tremblay grew up in Kitimat and eventually moved to Smithers in 1977 to raise his family. In 1991 Mr. Tremblay founded Hy-Tech Drilling and built it up from a single drill operation to a fleet of 25 drills operating throughout Canada and Europe. Hy-Tech Drilling clients include the Lundin Group, Goldcorp, Seabridge, Xstrata, Rubicon and Dennison. Working closely with his engineering team, Harvey helped design the unique patented diamond drill that is exclusive to Hy-Tech Drilling. Prior to starting Hy-Tech Drilling, Mr. Tremblay worked in every area of the mining industry including camp construction, soil sampling, claim staking and diamond drilling. Mr. Tremblay is active in the community as a sponsor, volunteer and mentor. He is currently a Director of the Canadian Diamond Drilling Association (CDDA) and is a strong believer in developing and fostering a culture of safety and environmental awareness. He received the "David Barr Award" (2010) for leadership and innovation in mineral exploration, health and safety from the Association for Mineral Exploration B.C.

38

Appendix III, Notes on Mineral Resources & Deposit References

Additional Information Regarding Mineral Resources Antonio M. de Quadros, P. Eng., Director and Consultant to Rokmaster Resources Corp. is the “qualified person” within the meaning of National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects (“NI 43-101”) who supervised the preparation of the scientific and technical information of this presentation. For complete copper and gold mineral resource information and all additional technical information related to the Pinaya Project, which was derived from NI 43-101 Technical Report titled “Independent Technical Report on the Pinaya Gold/Copper Property, Caylloma and Lampa Provinces, Peru” for Rokmaster Resources Corp., dated July 26, 2012 and authored by Brian Cole, P. Geo. and Ronald Simpson, P. Geo. of GeoSim Services Inc., can be viewed on Rokmaster’s website (www.rokmaster.com) or SEDAR (www.sedar.com) Cautionary Note Regarding Mineral Resource Estimates Rokmaster Resources Corp. (“ROKMASTER”) are required to describe mineral resources associated with their properties utilizing Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum ("CIM") definitions of "indicated" or "inferred", which categories of resource are recognized by Canadian regulations but are not recognized by the United States Securities Exchange Commission (the "SEC"). In addition, the terms "mineral resource", "measured mineral resource", "indicated mineral resource" and "inferred mineral resource" are defined in and required to be disclosed by NI 43-101; however, these terms are not defined terms under SEC Industry Guide 7 and normally are not permitted to be used in reports filed with the SEC. Investors are cautioned not to assume that any part or all of mineral deposits in these categories will ever be converted into reserves. "Inferred mineral resources" have a great amount of uncertainty as to their existence and as to their economic and legal feasibility. It cannot be assumed that all or any part of an inferred mineral resource will ever be upgraded to a higher category. Under Canadian rules, estimates of inferred mineral resources may not form the basis of feasibility or pre-feasibility studies, except in rare cases. Disclosure of “contained ounces” in a mineral resource is permitted disclosure under Canadian regulations. However, the SEC normally only permits issuers to report mineralization that does not constitute “reserves” by SEC standards as in place tonnage and grade, without reference to unit measures. Accordingly, information in this presentation containing descriptions of mineral deposits may not be comparable to similar information made public by U.S. companies subject to the reporting and disclosure requirements under the United States federal securities laws and the rules and regulations thereunder. Deposit Figure References (external links, subject to change without notice) 1. Las Chancas , Southern Peru - Reuters.com (May 30, 2012) - http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/30/us-latam-summit-peru-southerncopperidUSBRE84T1J120120530 2. Cotabambas , Panoro - Newswire.ca (September 11, 2012) - http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/1033941/panoro-s-cotabambas-project-resource-estimate-showsincrease-to-3-75-billion-lb-copper-3-0-million-oz-gold-and-36-9-million-oz-silver-with-excellent-p 3. Las Bambas, Tintaya, Antapaccay, & Coroccohayco, Xstrata - Xstrata .com - http://www.xstrata.com/, www.minerandina.com – Society Volume 7, issue 32 April , 2011 4. Haquira, First Quantum - First –quantum.com - http://www.first-quantum.com/Our-Business/Development-Projects/Haquira/default.aspx 5. Constancia, Hudbay - Ausenco.com (August 13, 2012) - http://www.ausenco.com/uploads/news/1345529832-120813-asx-constancia-epcm-hudbay-board-approvalconfirmed.pdf 6. Chucapaca, Goldfields - 4-traders.com (April 25, 2012) - http://www.4-traders.com/GOLD-FIELDS-1413362/news/Gold-Fields-Sees-$1-2-Billion-Investment-In-Peru-Project14296168/ 7. Quecha, Pan Pacific - Bnamericas.com (Sept 12, 2012) http://www.bnamericas.com/project-profile/en/Quechua-Quechua

39

Appendix IV, Corporate Directory Legal Counsel  Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP – Vancouver Address: #2300 - 550 Burrard St. Vancouver, BC V6C 2B5

Phone: 604.683.6498 Fax: 604.683.3558

Transfer Agent  Computershare – Vancouver Address: 2nd Floor, 510 Burrard St. Vancouver, BC V6C 2B9

Phone: 604.661.9400 Fax: 604.661.9549

Auditors  DeVisser Gray LLP (Chartered Accountants) – Vancouver Address: 401-905 West Pender St. Vancouver, BC V6C 1L6

Phone: 604.687.5447 Fax: 604.687.6737

Agent  Jordan Capital Markets Inc. – Vancouver, TSX: V Address: 1920-1075 Georgia St. W Vancouver, BC V6E 3C9 Contact: John Fraser

40

Phone: 778.373-4100 Fax: 778.373.4101 Email: [email protected]

Teamwork

41

More Teamwork

42

Planning the Move from Explorer to Producer!

43