Aeris Resources Limited announced the second drill hole (TAKD002) at the Anomaly K target within the company's 100% owned Tritton tenement package in New South Wales has intersected a 3.4 metre interval (estimated true thickness 2.1 metres) containing massive sulphides. Drill hole TAKD002 was designed to test the second of two bedrock conductors at the Anomaly K target. A massive sulphide zone was intersected from 61.2 metres down hole within strongly altered and partially weathered turbidite sediments. Based on visual observations pyrite is the dominant sulphide mineral with lesser chalcopyrite and chalcocite. Drilling has now confirmed both EM conductors at Anomaly K represent sulphide bodies. Samples from drill hole TAKD002 will be dispatched to the laboratory for analysis. Assay results are expected to be returned early in 2021. The Anomaly K prospect was first identified following the detection of a potential bedrock conductor from an airborne EM survey in December 2018. A follow-up ground based Moving Loop survey (MLTEM) confirmed the presence of two potential conductive bodies over the prospect (Figure 2). Drill hole TAKD002 targeted the smaller sub-vertical modelled conductor with dimensions in the order of 30 metres (strike) x 100 metres (dip). TAKD002 intersected an approximate 3.4 metre thick interval (estimate true thickness of 2.1 metres) of massive sulphides from 61.2 metres down hole, within highly altered turbidite sediments. There is some core loss within the sulphide horizon (0.7 metres) and it is difficult to know whether the core loss is associated with sulphide rich or sulphide poor horizons. Based on visual logging, sulphide minerals include pyrite with lesser chalcopyrite and chalcocite.