Company Description
Silicon Metals Corp. (SLCNF) is a mineral exploration and development company with projects in Canada, focused on high-purity quartz and silica mineralization. According to the company’s public news releases, Silicon Metals is active in the provinces of British Columbia and Ontario and is advancing a portfolio of silica and quartz-focused properties at various stages of exploration and early development.
The company’s shares trade on the Canadian Securities Exchange under the symbol CSE: SI and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol FSE: X6U, while SLCNF represents the company in the over-the-counter market. Silicon Metals’ projects are described in its news releases as targeting high-purity quartz pegmatite and quartzite bodies, which the company views as prospective for industrial and critical mineral applications.
Project portfolio in Ontario and British Columbia
Silicon Metals’ primary Ontario asset is the Maple Birch Project, located in the Sudbury Mining District of Ontario, approximately 30 kilometres south-east of Sudbury. Company disclosures describe Maple Birch as a high purity quartz pegmatite project with a production permit allowing for up to 3,000 tonnes per year. The project area covers roughly 1,848 hectares and is characterized by quartz-rich pegmatite mineralization. Through an option and related transactions, Silicon Metals has acquired an undivided 100% right, title, and interest in five mining claims that form part of Maple Birch, as well as an option to acquire a 100% interest in an aggregate production permit identified as AP6453.
In addition to Maple Birch, Silicon Metals has disclosed the acquisition and advancement of the Crystal Hills Project in Clarkson Township, Ontario. Through a share purchase agreement, the company acquired all of the issued and outstanding shares of a private company that holds a 100% interest in Crystal Hills. The project consists of five mineral claims comprising eighteen cells, totalling approximately 400 hectares, located about 40 kilometres north of the city of North Bay, Ontario. Company technical descriptions state that Crystal Hills hosts a high purity crystalline quartzite formation expressed at surface as a series of topographic high hills, with tens of metres of relief and hundreds of metres of width, and an estimated three kilometres of strike length within the claim boundary.
Silicon Metals reports that historical sampling at Crystal Hills indicates quartzite material with over 98% SiO2. The company also notes that the quartzite ridges are favourably exposed at surface and that existing access roads, proximity to a highway, and nearby rail services contribute to logistical accessibility.
In British Columbia, Silicon Metals holds several silica-focused properties. The company has disclosed a 100% interest in the Ptarmigan Silica Project, located approximately 130 kilometres from Prince George, British Columbia. Ptarmigan is described as an exploration-stage quartzite project with a five-year Mines Act Permit and Free Use Permit issued by the B.C. Ministry of Mining and Critical Minerals. These permits authorize activities such as surface drilling, trenching, bulk sampling of up to 2,000 tonnes, and construction of exploration access trails and related infrastructure.
Silicon Metals has reported that work at Ptarmigan includes high-definition LiDAR and orthophoto surveys, property-wide sampling, structural mapping, ground truthing, and preliminary three-dimensional modelling. Company disclosures describe topographic high ridges composed of quartzite material, with LiDAR-based modelling indicating a preliminary volumetric estimate of approximately five million cubic metres of surface quartzite in these ridges. Laboratory analysis of samples from these ridges has been reported with quartzite purity up to 99.99% SiO2 and an average purity of 98.49% SiO2 for the collected samples, although the company emphasizes that such estimates are conceptual in nature and do not constitute mineral resource or reserve estimates under NI 43-101.
Beyond Ptarmigan, Silicon Metals also reports 100% interests in the Silica Ridge Silica Project and the Longworth Silica Project in British Columbia. The Silica Ridge Silica Project is located approximately 70 kilometres southeast of the town of MacKenzie, while the Longworth Silica Project is located approximately 85 kilometres east of Prince George. Both are described as exploration-stage silica projects. Company disclosures indicate that Silicon Metals has acquired undivided 100% rights, title, and interests in these projects.
Exploration and development focus
Silicon Metals’ public communications emphasize exploration, permitting, and early-stage development activities. At Maple Birch, the company has discussed reconnaissance programs to assess access roads, engage contract mining companies, and collect bulk samples for advanced testing. The production permit at Maple Birch allows for extraction of up to 3,000 tonnes per year of high purity quartz pegmatite, and the company has indicated plans to use this permit for initial extraction, hauling, processing, and delivery of material.
At Ptarmigan, Silicon Metals highlights the combination of exploration permits and technical work such as LiDAR-based modelling, structural mapping, and bulk sampling. The company notes that the permits enable surface drilling, trenching, and bulk sampling, which it views as important steps in evaluating the high-purity silica potential of the project.
For Crystal Hills, the company’s technical description focuses on the geological setting of high purity crystalline quartzite, favourable topography for potential future extraction, and historical sampling results indicating high SiO2 content. The project’s location near existing infrastructure is also noted as a logistical advantage in company disclosures.
Capital markets and corporate actions
Silicon Metals has reported several capital markets and corporate transactions in its news releases. These include non-brokered private placement financings, issuance of units consisting of common shares and warrants, and the use of proceeds for advancement and development of its properties and general working capital. The company has also described voluntary lock-up agreements covering warrants issued in a private placement, under which holders agreed to lock up their warrants and the underlying common shares for a defined period.
In connection with property acquisitions and options, Silicon Metals has disclosed share issuances to vendors and optionors, as well as shares for debt transactions with consultants and directors. These transactions are described as being conducted under applicable Canadian securities regulations, including reliance on exemptions from formal valuation and minority shareholder approval requirements under Multilateral Instrument 61-101 for related party transactions.
Regulatory and technical oversight
Silicon Metals’ technical disclosures identify a professional geoscientist, registered in British Columbia and Ontario, as the qualified person under National Instrument 43-101 who has reviewed and approved the scientific and technical information in the company’s news releases. The company’s communications also include cautionary notes regarding forward-looking information and the conceptual nature of exploration targets, emphasizing that there has been insufficient exploration to define mineral resources and that it is uncertain whether further work will result in delineation of mineral resources or reserves.
Positioning within the mining and materials sector
Based on its public statements, Silicon Metals positions itself as a company focused on high-purity quartz and silica projects in established Canadian mining jurisdictions. Its portfolio spans permitted production at Maple Birch, permitted exploration at Ptarmigan, and additional exploration-stage assets at Silica Ridge, Longworth, and Crystal Hills. The company highlights the presence of high purity quartz pegmatite and quartzite mineralization, surface-exposed ridges, and access to infrastructure as key attributes of its projects.
Investors researching SLCNF can use this overview as a starting point to understand Silicon Metals’ project locations, permitting status, and exploration focus, as described in the company’s own news releases. For detailed technical data, resource estimates (if any are defined in the future), and risk factors, readers should consult the company’s full regulatory filings and technical reports where available.
Stock Performance
Latest News
SEC Filings
No SEC filings available for Silicon Metals.