Cassini Resources Limited announced final results of the recent RC drilling program and future work plans at Cassini's 100%-owned Mount Squires Project ('Mt Squires' or the 'Project') in the West Musgrave Province of Western Australia. The Project is at an early stage and is proving to be highly prospective for gold and base metals. It is located adjacent to the western border of the Company's West Musgrave JV Project with OZ Minerals Ltd. Earlier results from the drill program were released to the ASX on 24 September 2019 and 2 October 2019. Excellent Start to Mount Squires Exploration: All assay results from the RC drilling program at the Handpump Prospect, comprising 10 holes for 1,134m, have now been received. Best results are from holes previously released including 20m @ 1.27g/t Au, including 7m @ 2.54g/t Au from 23m in MSC0003, 27m @ 1.00g/t Au from 31m, including 3m @ 2.59g/t Au from 38m in MSC0004 and 19m @ 0.68g/t Au including 6m @ 1.26g/t Au from 38m in MSC0005. The remaining 4 holes (MSC0007-0010) returned lower grade results, but have successfully identified additional mineralised breccia halos (>0.1g/t Au), suggesting the mineralisation remains open. The lower grade holes are mostly from the western-most sections and broadly spaced. Using the recently flown high resolution aeromagnetic data, a revised geological interpretation suggests the siting of these holes was not optimal to identify the extensions of mineralised zones described above. Mineralisation is hosted within a hydrothermal breccia at the stratiform contact between a footwall rhyolite and hanging wall (predominantly barren) volcaniclastic unit. Mineralised lodes, defined as >0.1g/t Au, strike E-W to ESE-WNW and are steeply south-dipping. Mineralisation is possibly controlled by the intersection of NWSE and SW-NE trending structures. Mineralisation is outcropping at the eastern margin of the prospect, with an abundance of rock chip samples >0.5g/t Au. The hydrothermal breccia host plunges beneath the volcaniclastic unit (and thickening sand cover) to the west (and potentially north west). Extrapolation of recent and historical drill results indicates a potential mineralised strike of at least 600m, which remains open. A selection of samples have been dispatched for further detailed geochemical analysis to identify potential path-finder elements to assist future regional exploration. Results from this program indicate that a large portion of previous drilling by other companies has been ineffective, due to either the drilling angle being sub-parallel to mineralised lodes or it not penetrating the prospective rhyolite unit beneath the volcaniclastic (the case for most of the previous shallow aircore drilling). Gold Trend Emerging: The initial discovery of gold at Handpump occurred because mineralised bedrock is exposed at surface, a relatively rare occurrence in a landscape dominated by desert sands. The transported cover has likely inhibited exploration in other parts of the project and this is why the Company is re-processing the legacy geochemistry results to remove the biases of the regolith (in simple terms, bedrock vs transported sampling mediums). In some instances the previous geochemical sampling has probably been completely ineffective. Key learning outcomes of the program are: The initial Handpump discovery was enabled by locally favourable regolith (outcropping mineralisation) and does not necessarily represent the best mineralisation at the project. Previous companies' exploration post-discovery has been hampered by drilling that has failed to test the most prospective rocks at an appropriate orientation. The recently completed high-resolution aeromagnetic survey has assisted the geological interpretation of Handpump as well as the surrounding region. The Company has now refined the target areas along the prospective trend. Only 3 RC holes have been drilled outside the immediate Handpump Prospect area to test for additional mineralised bodies and therefore the prospective trend is largely unexplored. Permitting to clear these targets with a reconnaissance-style drill program is underway. Nickel and Copper Potential to be Evaluated: Whilst the current exploration focus at the Mount Squires Project is primarily for gold, recent surveying and mapping by Cassini has recognised a potential extension of the magmatic nickel-copper mineralised trend from the West Musgrave Project into the eastern half of the project area. This is supported by: The emergence of the One Tree Hill Prospect within the West Musgrave Project, but only 200m outside the Mount Squires tenement boundary. New aeromagnetic data confirming the continuity of broad geological domains and structure into the Mount Squires Project. Field mapping identifying gabbro intrusions along strike of the mineralised trend which had been previously mapped as granites and gneisses. This area has been lightly explored for magmatic nickel-copper sulphides by previous explorers, primarily by broad-spaced soil geochemistry and large fixed loop electromagnetic surveys (FLEM). The Company has reviewed these surveys and identified a number of areas that would benefit from new electromagnetic surveys given the significant advancement in technology over the past 10-20 years. The re-processed geochemistry data will also support the targeting of these surveys.