Carawine Resources Limited announced highly significant assay results from recent AC drilling at its Don King prospect, defining two new anomalous gold zones associated with major structural trends just 30km along strike from the large Tropicana gold mine. Don King is a gold prospect within Carawine's Thunderstruck Joint Venture ("Thunderstruck JV", Carawine 90% interest), which forms part of the Company's large Tropicana North Project located in the north-eastern goldfields of Western Australia (Figure 4). The results reported are from 20 broad-spaced AC holes completed in December 2020 during Carawine's maiden AC and RC drilling campaign. The assay results define two coherent, north-northeast trending +10ppb gold anomalies extending over 2km x 1km and 1.5km x 1km with peak gold values in each anomaly of 86ppb Au (DKAC0016) and 61ppb Au (DKAC0013) over 1m downhole lengths. These are considered highly significant for the region, with the Tropicana mine discovered from a +3ppb Au (peak 31ppb Au) soil anomaly2 and Carawine's high-grade Hercules prospect located within a large +10ppb Au AC anomaly3, 4. Each anomaly is also associated with northeast trending structures in gneissic rocks – a similar structural and lithological setting to that hosting mineralisation at the Tropicana gold mine. The Don King tenement is approximately 30km southwest of the Tropicana gold mine, situated centrally within the Tropicana Belt stratigraphy. A 3km-long anomalous gold trend defined by historic AC drill holes occurs in the northwest corner of the tenement and is oriented north-northeast, parallel to a major thrust traversing the tenement (the "Western Trend"). This thrust is interpreted to dip to the east, similar to structures associated with mineralisation at the Tropicana mine. Limited historic RC drilling along this gold trend returned a number of significant mineralised intervals, including 4m @ 2.21g/t Au from 102m (0.3g/t Au cut-off) in drill hole DKRC013. Carawine's AC program comprised 20 holes drilled for a total 754m on three lines 400m and 600m apart at a nominal 400m drill hole spacing, targeting structures parallel to and east of the historically defined Western Trend (Figure 1). The AC holes were drilled to blade refusal, effectively producing a "rock chip" sample of the basement rocks, with the results used to produce a lithological and geochemical map of the area tested. It is therefore highly significant to return two coherent mineralised trends of greater than 10ppb Au over 2km and 1.5km strike lengths, associated with the east-dipping thrust structures. The maximum gold grade returned was 1m @ 86ppb Au from 46m (DKAC0016) within a moderately weathered, biotite and chlorite altered feldspar and quartz-rich granitic gneiss. This drill hole is located approximately 120m east (and in the hanging wall) of an interpreted thrust. Air core holes 600m to the north and 400m to the south also returned greater than 10ppb gold results from bedrock. The average cover depth defined by the AC drilling is shallow at 23m, enabling the anomalies to be followed up cost effectively with infill AC holes to define targets for deeper RC drilling. Additional AC drilling will also be required to target parallel structures and gneissic units to the east of the anomalies, in an area which has not been drilled previously.