Flow Metals Corp. announced results from the first phase summer program at the New Brenda Project located in south-central British Columbia. The large soil grid resulted in the discovery of two main anomalous zones.

The central mag-low ring has a diameter of 1200m and showed a silver-bismuth anomaly outlining much of the mag-low ring. A coincident copper-molybdenum anomaly is slightly offset, centered east of the silver bismuth anomaly. The second anomaly was discovered on the north-east corner of the survey grid.

This anomaly spans over 1 kilometer and is open to the north, west and south. The anomaly shows elevated copper, molybdenum, silver and arsenic. Highly anomalous copper values were discovered another 780m to the southeast.

Additional sampling will infill and expand the survey to help find the edges of this large anomaly. XP Target History: In 2018, a 10m wide outcrop with chalcopyrite mineralization was discovered and a grab sample was taken. The sample contained 0.67% Cu and 46.11 ppm Ag and elevated trace elements such as Bi, Te and U. The sample had pervasive potassic alteration in the form of biotite replacing hornblende.

An airborne magnetic survey was later conducted in 2021 that revealed a large ring-shaped magnetic low anomaly directly underneath the rock sample. The XP target represents a new Porphyry style geochemical and magnetic anomaly. XP is hosted in the Pennask batholith also seen at the neighboring Brenda mine to the east.

The target is also near the contact with the Osprey Lake batholith which hosts the neighboring Elk mine to the west. The xenoliths from which XP gets its name are heavily altered Nicola volcanics that have been replaced by biotite.