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TDG Gold Corp.
TDG Gold Corp. is a Vancouver-based junior explorer consolidating the Toodoggone District of British Columbia around its Baker and Shasta former mines.
TDG Gold Corp.
TDG Gold Corp. is a Vancouver-based junior mineral explorer focused on the under-explored Toodoggone District of north-central British Columbia. The company holds the former Baker and Shasta mines, both of which operated profitably in the 1980s and 1990s before the district saw a near-total retreat in investment during a prolonged gold bear market. TDG’s thesis is that modern geophysics, systematic data compilation, and higher gold prices can convert these legacy assets into large, economically viable deposits that were missed by first-pass operators. TDG’s asset base is concentrated in two project clusters. The Baker complex historically produced over 500,000 ounces of gold equivalent, but TDG’s drilling has shown mineralization extends well beyond the original pit shells. The Shasta deposit, a high-grade epithermal system a few kilometres away, generated ore above 20 grams per tonne gold in limited mining but was never drilled out to depth. Beyond these brownfield sites, the firm holds earlier-stage targets across a 50-kilometre structural corridor it controls through staking and acquisition. The strategy marries brownfield resource expansion — re-logging old core, reinterpreting historic data — with greenfield discovery on the same land package, a model proven by explorers like Great Bear Resources in Ontario’s Red Lake camp. TDG Gold Corp. operates with a lean technical team led by geologists who balance project-level oversight with capital-markets execution typical of a TSX Venture Exchange listing. The firm raised equity financings to fund multi-thousand-metre drill programs at Baker and Shasta, with results released in the public domain as National Instrument 43-101 technical reports and news releases. Like most junior explorers, its strategic horizon is not mining but discovery: the endgame is to define a resource large enough to attract a mid-tier or major gold producer as a buyer or to form a joint venture that carries the asset through feasibility into development. TDG’s structural differentiator is spatial control. Rather than pursuing scattered prospects across multiple jurisdictions, it consolidated a single district with existing infrastructure — access roads, power lines, tailings-facility footprints — significantly lowering the discovery-to-development transition cost for a future acquirer. That district-scale land position, held 100 percent with no underlying royalties in key areas, makes TDG a single-point consolidation target for any producer seeking a new BC gold camp.
General information
Firm type
other
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
Canada
City
Vancouver
Corporate office
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
What is TDG Gold Corp.'s primary asset base?
TDG controls the Baker and Shasta former mines in British Columbia's Toodoggone District, a region it has largely consolidated through staking and acquisitions. Baker historically produced over 500,000 ounces of gold equivalent, while Shasta operated briefly as a high-grade underground mine with grades above 20 grams per tonne gold. The firm holds a large district-scale land package spanning a 50-kilometre structural corridor around these two brownfield projects.
What is TDG Gold Corp.'s business model — is it developing mines, exploring, or producing?
TDG operates as a junior explorer, not a producer. Its model is to consolidate district-scale land packages around former mines, then systematically de-risk them through modern exploration, drilling and resource estimation. The intended exit is a sale or joint venture with a mid-tier or major gold producer once the assets reach a resource scale that justifies development capital.
Where are TDG Gold Corp.'s projects located?
All of TDG's core assets sit in the Toodoggone District of north-central British Columbia, Canada. This is an underexplored epithermal and porphyry belt where limited past mining occurred in the 1980s and 1990s, but which has seen little modern systematic exploration. The projects benefit from existing road access, power infrastructure, and established mining permits and tailings footprints.
Who manages the technical programs at TDG Gold Corp.?
The firm operates with a compact technical team of project geologists and qualified persons who oversee drill programs and resource estimation. Management typically combines hands-on exploration experience with capital-markets fluency, as is standard for junior explorers listed on the TSX Venture Exchange. Individual names and qualifications are filed in public regulatory disclosures.
Has TDG Gold Corp. released any resource estimates or economic studies to date?
As a junior explorer, TDG has released drill results and National Instrument 43-101 technical reports but has not indicated a current mineral resource that meets modern definition standards for the entire project, though historic production and recent intercepts point toward resource potential. A full maiden resource estimate would be a key inflection point for the company, and any figures would be published via regulatory filings in Canada.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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