Bond Resources Inc. announced that the parallel access tunnel it has been developing has broken through into the Historical Mary K Mine workings at the company's Mary K mine project, near Elk City, Idaho. The 12' x 12' drift was driven 883 ft. (269 metres) and parallel to the #4 level of the historical mine. The new tunnel broke through into the historical Mary K workings where the previous owner, Richard Kleesattle, reported a high-grade gold mineralized vein. According to historical records, the Mary K vein had at least 1,200 ft, (366 metres), of gold-bearing quartz vein on the #4 level, now referred to as the 4225 ft level. Initial evaluation of the historical drift showed it to be heavily timbered with large amounts of collapsed material inside the drift. From what can be observed, the target structure is mostly gouge, with only spotty quartz lenses inside the structure. Based on this visual assessment, together with the data outlined on the 1930's mine plan map, Bond Resources plans to extend the main access tunnel another 100 ft (30 metres) further east, still parallel to the old workings. At that point a small access cross-cut will be driven into the vein structure. According to the historical mine plan map, the vein should be thicker and more consistent in this area. In addition, the surrounding host rock should be more stable. Bond Resources then plans to commence bulk sampling the Mary K vein on the 4225' level. At the same time, a decline will be developed down to the old #5 level to access the reported high-grade Apex Area. The Apex Area of the Mary K mine represents a very compelling target. The last workings driven by Kleesattel in 1942 were to about 23 ft (7 meters) below the #4 level, near what he called "the apex of a very rich ore shoot". He recorded assays ranging from 11 to 59 ounces per ton from this development. These workings were developed but never mined.**The historical Mary K mine was shut down in 1942 and never re-opened. Historical records indicate that only 2,000 tons of mineralized gold material was mined with an average reported grade of 0.65 ounces per ton gold (22.28 g/t Au).