Test continuity, dip, and plunge in minutes without waiting on a full desktop modelling workflow.
Desktop modelling packages are powerful, but they are not always the right first tool for an incoming drill announcement. When the question is whether a result supports continuity, dip, plunge, or true width, the useful answer often needs to arrive before a full modelling session is set up.
Canetoad gives geologists a faster first pass. Drill data from ASX announcements is plotted with spatial context, so you can rotate the scene, select holes, generate cross sections, and test whether the claimed structure holds together.
Check whether new intercepts extend a known trend or sit outside the interpreted structure.
Use polygon selection, 3D rotation, and cross sections to test dip, plunge, and apparent continuity.
Compare new ASX drilling with historical WAMEX and government open-file context in the same view.
Assess claims such as mineralisation continuity or strike extension before they reach a board pack or investment committee.
The point is not to replace resource modelling. It is to avoid waiting hours to answer a screening question. If the announced holes do not support the structural story, Canetoad helps you see that early; if they do, you know where deeper modelling is worth the effort.
Open Canetoad, review the drill geometry, and test whether a new announcement supports the claimed geological model.