Galane Gold Ltd. announced that it has completed a new 2.2 kilometer adit and has accessed the Galaxy ore body at its Galaxy property in South Africa. This represents the final material step required in the Company's plan to unlock the potential of Galaxy. The three key components of the Galaxy plan were the recommencement of mining at the Princeton ore body (achieved April 2019), the upgrade of the existing processing plant to 50,000 tonnes per month (achieved December 2020) and completing the adit to the Galaxy ore body. The completion of the adit eliminates the historic constraint to underground production at the Mine, that being the capacity of the Woodbine shaft which was limited to 15,000 tonnes per month. The path is now clear to ramp up to the planned production of 43,000 ounces per annum at an operating cash cost of $749 per ounce. Highlights of the Galaxy Ore Body and the work done to access it: A measured and indicated resource of 3,000,204 tonnes at 2.64g/t for a total of 254,241 ounces; An inferred resource of 2,383,040 tonnes at 2.83g/t for a total of 216,623 ounces; A 2.2 kilometer long adit from the surface measuring 5 meters high and 3.2 to 5 meters wide; The movement of 122,641 tonnes of waste rock; and The discovery of a new mineralised zone, the Golden Comet, while mining the adit. The main Galaxy access drive has intersected the underside of the 55 degree easterly dipping Galaxy mineral zone. Initial grades on the 8 meter wide exposure (face and sidewall) are up to 3 g/t, and reflect the highly altered nature of the ore body at this point. The drive is turning into the mineralisation and will intersect more silicified and higher levels of sulphides (with wider zones of mineralisation and higher grades). The primary infrastructure will continue to establish the production ramp and access to the first level of stoping. Diamond cover drilling has also started to provide geological and grade control information.