Adriatic Metals PLC announced that the results from the recent reprocessing of the 2018 gravity data has highlighted a number of new significant anomalies. Also, land access approval at Rupice and Jurasevac-Brestic has now been finalised, enabling Adriatic to complete the infill drilling at Rupice and to continue to extend the known mineralisation. In early 2018, Adriatic Metals completed a detailed ground gravity geophysical survey over Rupice and Jurasevac-Brestic. This data has now been remodeled utilising the latest detailed Lidar topographic data acquired by the Company in late 2019. A number of significant anomalies and features have been identified from this gravity reprocessing. Gravity data is a powerful tool when massive sulphide and barite mineralisation is present. The density contrast between the barren host rock and mineralisation, when mineralisation is present, shows a gravity high. The new gravity data at Rupice confirms the massive sulphide and barite mineralisation seen from the resource drilling. Official confirmation and permission from the Bosnian Ministry for Forestry, Agriculture and Water has been received, which will now enable Adriatic to expand extensional and infill drilling at Rupice and Jurasevac-Brestic. Adriatic staff working with Montana GIS, analysed the gravity survey completed by Adriatic Metals in February 2018. The original 2018 survey consisted of 249 survey points on a 50m station spacing, by 100m spaced lines. Each survey point was surveyed using a differential GPS. During the recent gravity reprocessing work, the gravity data was recalculated using Lidar terrain corrections, and Free Air and Bouguer Anomaly & Terrain correction. Resultant images for both Bouguer Anomaly correction and a Terrain Bouguer correction (Total Bouguer) were produced. Highly accurate Lidar topography data was used to aid with the reprocessing of the final gravity images. This reprocessing was successful in demonstrating that the massive sulphide and barite mineralisation seen at the Rupice deposit, which has very high densities relative to surrounding barren sedimentary shales, limestones and marls, and shows as an intense gravity anomaly. From this reprocessing, immediate, additional high-priority drill targets are apparent at the Jurasevac-Brestic prospect, and drilling will re-commence there shortly. These are primarily to the east of the Jurasevac adit and east of Adriatic's drilling at the prospect to date. A number of additional gravity anomalies have also been high- lighted, which also warrant drill testing. Historic and Adriatic Metals drilling at Jurasevac-Brestic has previously encountered patchy, vein-style mineralisation, but to date, no compact massive sulphide mineralisation. Indications now from this gravity reprocessing is that the drilling may have been targeting too far west, with the peak of the gravity anomaly being on the eastern side of the prospect.