THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE
INFORMATION AS STIPULATED UNDER THE UK VERSION OF THE MARKET ABUSE
REGULATION NO 596/2014 WHICH IS PART OF ENGLISH LAW BY VIRTUE OF
THE EUROPEAN (WITHDRAWAL) ACT 2018, AS AMENDED. ON
PUBLICATION OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT VIA A REGULATORY INFORMATION
SERVICE, THIS INFORMATION IS CONSIDERED TO BE IN THE PUBLIC
DOMAIN.
18 February 2025
Great Southern Copper
plc
("GSC" or the
"Company")
Diamond Drilling Programme Completed at
Mostaza Mine, Cerro Negro Project
All holes intersect visible copper
mineralisation. Planning for Phase II drilling
commenced
Great Southern Copper plc (LSE: GSCU), the
company focused on copper-gold-lithium exploration in Chile, is
pleased to provide an update on its Phase I diamond drilling
programme at the Cerro Negro project in northern Chile, where
drilling at the historical Mostaza mine commenced on 5 January
20251.
Highlights:
·
Phase I drill programme completed with nine diamond holes
drilled for 1,002.6 m
·
Drilling targeted high-grade, structurally-controlled
high-sulphidation style Cu-Ag mineralisation with the aim
to;
o confirm
historical drilling grades and widths beneath the Mostaza open pit
(Lens 2),
o test extensions
of Lens 2 mineralisation to depth and along strike of historical
drill intercepts, and
o test beneath
outcropping Lenses 3-4 mineralisation along trend to south of the
mine
· All
holes intersected visual evidence of copper mineralisation
comprising abundant disseminations, veins, crackle-vein networks
and breccia-hosted chalcocite-bornite-chalcopyrite in zones up to
32.3m downhole width* (Figures 1 and 2)
·
Samples for all holes DD001 - 009 have been dispatched to ALS
laboratories for assaying. Assay results for initial holes are
anticipated in the coming weeks
·
Planning and permitting for the next phase of drilling is in
progress. Work is likely to include metallurgical
testing
Sam Garrett,
Chief Executive Officer of Great Southern Copper,
said: "Our
Phase I diamond drilling programme at the Mostaza copper-silver
mine has been very successful and we are eager to receive our first
assay results.
Planning and
permitting is already underway for the second phase of drilling
which is proposed to include further resource and exploration
drilling plus metallurgical test-work. Geophysics surveys are also
being considered to assist with exploration for buried extensions
and repetitions of the high-grade mineralised lenses and for deeper
porphyry type copper mineralisation.
We also
anticipate results for the scout RC drilling programme at Viuda
which targeted potential porphyry style
mineralisation."
Diamond drill
campaign at Cerro Negro
Phase I diamond drilling at the Mostaza Cu-Ag
mine is now completed with nine holes drilled for a total of
1,002.6m. Drilling targeted high-grade, high sulphidation style
Cu-Ag mineralisation hosted in structurally-controlled,
anastamosing lodes or "lenses" with the aim to;
I. Confirm historical
grades and thicknesses of historical drilling
(CNG25-DD001),
II. Resource drill holes to
test the extent of Lens 2 mineralisation at depth and along strike
of historical drill intercepts (holes CNG25-002 - 005),
and
III. Exploration drill holes to
test beneath outcropping Lens 3-4 mineralisation along trend to
south of the mine (holes CNG25-006 - 009)
All holes intersected copper mineralisation and
a summary of the visual mineralised intervals includes;
CNG25 DD001: 20m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 27.00 to 47.00m
CNG25 DD002: 4.3m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 38.90 to 43.20m (off-set by dyke)
CNG25 DD003: 18.8m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 36.60 to 55.40m (thickening with
depth)
CNG25 DD004: 3m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 28.70 to 31.70m (off-set by
dykes/faults)
CNG25 DD005: 23.5m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 32.90 to 56.40m (thickening with
depth)
CNG25 DD006: 8.6m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 124.40 to 133.06m
CNG25 DD007: 32.3m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 87.00 to 119.30m
CNG25 DD008: 21m* of visible copper
mineralisation from 4.5 to 25.5m
CNG25 DD009: 12.6m* of weak visible
mineralisation from 44.3 to 56.9 and 4.7m* from 109.3 to
114m
In all cases mineralisation is of
high-sulphidation style and mineralogy and occurs as abundant
disseminations, veinlets, crackle networks and breccia matrix
fillings of hypogene chalcocite, bornite, chalcopyrite and lesser
pyrite, associated with minor quartz-baryte gangue and intense
quartz-alunite-dickite/pyrophyllite alteration that overprints
earlier pervasive illite-montmorillonite alteration2
(see Figures 1 and 2).
Zonation in the copper mineralogy is evident
with mineralisation in the northern holes (DD001-005, Figure 1)
being dominated by chalcocite-bornite and the southern holes
(DD006-008, Figure 2) being higher in chalcopyrite and bornite.
This mineralisation is visually comparable to that evidenced in the
bottom of the Mostaza open-pit and historical ore stockpiles where
rock sampling by GSC returned assay grades up to 4.64% Cu and
177ppm Ag3.
The mineralisation and its associated
alteration occur in structurally controlled "lenses" or "lodes" of
felsic porphyry, "tuffisite" and polymictic rock-flour matrix
breccia. In places the lenses may be bounded by faults and/or cut
by narrow inter-mineral to late-mineral andesitic dykes with
intensely clay-altered margins.
These are preliminary observations, and
detailed core logging and geological interpretation is
ongoing.
Next
steps:
Detailed geological and geotechnical logging of
the core, including petrographic and spectral studies, is now
underway and will be used to assist in the planning of future drill
programmes and improve the understanding of the mineralising system
at Cerro Negro. Core samples for holes CNG25 001 - 009 have been
despatched to ALS Laboratories for analysis with the last samples
delivered on 14th February. Results for initial holes
are anticipated within the coming weeks.
Planning and permitting for the next phase of
drilling at Mostaza has commenced and is expected to include
resource and exploration drilling. Metallurgical studies of drill
core, stockpiles and tailings is also being planned.
Figure 1: Cerro Negro Project, Mostaza
Mine: Photographs of drill core from CNG25 DD001. Left: Crackle and
veinlet hosted chalcocite-bornite (cc-bo; black mineral) cutting
illite and locally quartz-alunite-dickite/pyrophyllite altered
polymictic breccia (30.4m depth). Right: 5cm thick vein of
steely-black chalcocite (cc) mineralisation (33.2m depth). Bottom:
Intense crackle and disseminations of black chalcocite (cc) in
polymictic breccia (36.7 to 37.2m depth). All drill core is HQ
diameter 6.35cm thick. Note: core photos illustrate examples of the
style and textures of copper mineralisation observed within the
mineralised intervals and are not necessarily representative the
entire mineralised zone.
Figure 2: Cerro Negro Project, Mostaza Mine:
Photographs of drill core from CNG25 DD007, over 200m south of
mineralisation shown in Figure 4. Upper Left: chalcopyrite (cpy)
dominated breccia matrix within intensely silicified rock (113m
depth). Upper Right: intense disseminated, crackle and breccia
matrix mineralisation of purple bornite (bo) and yellow
chalcopyrite (116.4 to 118.4m depth). Lower Left and right: Intense
dissemination and breccia infill by bornite-chalcocite, bo-cc,
(90.4m depth) and chalcopyrite, cpy, (103m depth).
All drill core is HQ
diameter 6.35cm. Note: core photos illustrate examples of the style
and textures of copper mineralisation observed within the
mineralised intervals and are not necessarily representative the
entire mineralised zone.

Figure 3: Cerro Negro Project, Mostaza Mine: Long
section of Lens 2 with circles showing the location of where phase
1 drillholes are projected to intersect the hanging wall of the
mineralised lens. The exact intersection points are subject to
confirmation. Completed drill holes are shown with their final
end-of-hole (EOH) depths. The apparent thickness of visible copper
mineralisation is shown in bold below each intersection point. Note
that mineralisation remains open at depth and along strike.
Historical resource blocks, underground mine workings, and channel
sample and drillhole assay results (coloured) are shown for
reference. (GSCU has not been able to independently verify the
historical channel sample or drill hole assay
results).

Figure 4: Cerro Negro Project, Mostaza Mine: Plan
map showing the approximate locations of mineralised lenses at
surface, historical drill holes, and current GSC drilling. Note the
scale.
Cautionary
note:
*Apparent thickness: There is not sufficient
geological information to calculate true thickness of mineralised
intercepts at this time.
Photographs of core and mineralisation are for
visual purposes only to assist in explanation and description of
mineralisation styles and textures observed in the core and do not
convey any information as to the copper assay grade of the
mineralisation photographed or the mineralised zones as a whole.
The company will report assay grades when they are received from
the laboratory and have been assessed, verified and
certified.
References:
1.
RNS 2189S (06 January 2025): Diamond drilling commences at Cerro
Negro
2.
RNS 7484V (04 February 2025): Drilling extends copper
mineralisation at Mostaza
3.
RNS 3120K (31 October 2024): Cerro Negro Results Up To 4.64% Cu and
177ppm Ag
Enquiries:
Great Southern
Copper plc
|
|
Sam Garrett, Chief Executive Officer
|
+44 (0) 20 4582 3500
|
|
|
SI Capital
Limited
|
|
Nick Emerson
|
+44 (0) 1483 413500
|
|
|
Gracechurch
Group
|
|
Harry Chathli, Alexis Gore, Henry
Gamble
|
+44 (0) 20 4582 3500
|
Notes for
Editors:
About Great
Southern Copper
Great Southern Copper PLC is a UK-listed
mineral exploration company focused on the discovery of copper-gold
and lithium deposits in Chile. The Company has the option to
acquire rights to 100% of two projects in the under-explored
coastal belt of Chile that are prospective for large scale
copper-gold deposits. In addition, the Company has the option to
acquire rights to 100% of a lithium project located in the Salar de
Atacama district of Chile. Chile is a globally significant mining
jurisdiction being the world's largest copper producer and the
second-largest producer of lithium.
The two, early-stage Cu-Au projects comprise
the San Lorenzo and Especularita Projects, both located in the
coastal metallogenic belt of Chile which hosts significant copper
mines and deposits, including Teck's Carmen de Andacollo copper
mine, and boasts excellent access to infrastructure such as roads,
power and ports. Significant historical small-scale and artisanal
workings for both copper and gold are readily evident in both
exploration project areas.
The Company's Monti Lithium project is
strategically located in the pre-Andean region of Salar de Atacama
which is Chile's premier lithium-producing region with
well-established lithium mining operations and
infrastructure.
Great Southern Copper is strategically
positioned to support the global market for copper and lithium -
both critical battery metals in the clean energy transition around
the world. The Company is actively engaged in exploration and
evaluation work programmes targeting both large tonnage, low to
medium grade Cu-Au and Li deposits as well as high-grade Cu-Au
deposits.
Further information on the Company is available
on the Company's website: https://gscplc.com
Competent
Person Statement
The information in this announcement that
relates to exploration results is based on and fairly represents
information reviewed or compiled by Mr Sam Garrett, a Competent
Person who is a Member of the Australian Institute of Geoscientists
and a Fellow of the Society of Economic Geologists. Mr Garrett is
the CEO and a shareholder of Great Southern Copper PLC. Mr Garrett
has sufficient experience that is relevant to the styles of
mineralisation and types of deposit under consideration and to the
activity being undertaken to qualify as a Competent Person as
defined in the 2012 Edition of the "Australasian Code for Reporting
of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves". Mr
Garrett has provided his prior written consent to the inclusion in
this announcement of the matters based on information in the form
and context in which it appears.
This announcement includes information that
relates to Exploration Results prepared and first disclosed under
the JORC Code (2012) and extracted from the Company's previous LSE
announcements as noted, and the Company's Prospectus dated 20
December 2021. Copies of these announcements are available from the
LSE Announcements page of the Company's website:
www.gscplc.com.
The Company confirms that it is not aware of
any new information or data that materially affects the information
included within the Prospectus dated 20 December 2021.
Forward Looking and Cautionary
Statements
Some statements in this announcement regarding
estimates or future events are forward-looking statements. They
include indications of, and guidance on, future earnings, cash
flow, costs and financial performance. Forward-looking statements
include, but are not limited to, statements preceded by words such
as "planned", "expected", "projected", "estimated", "may",
"scheduled", "intends", "anticipates", "believes", "potential",
"predict", "foresee", "proposed", "aim", "target", "opportunity",
"could", "nominal", "conceptual" and similar expressions.
Forward-looking statements, opinions and estimates included in this
report are based on assumptions and contingencies which are subject
to change without notice, as are statements about market and
industry trends, which are based on interpretations of current
market conditions. Forward-looking statements are provided as a
general guide only and should not be relied on as a guarantee of
future performance. Forward-looking statements may be affected by a
range of variables that could cause actual results to differ from
estimated or anticipated results and may cause the Company's actual
performance and financial results in future periods to materially
differ from any projections of future performance or results
expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. So, there
can be no assurance that actual outcomes will not materially differ
from these forward-looking statements.