InZinc Mining Ltd. announced it is planning summer exploration programs at the Indy zinc project (100% option) located 100km southeast of Prince George in central British Columbia. The additional, contiguous claims acquired by staking in Third Quarter 2018 extended the property to over 25km in length and encompass an additional zinc-in-soil geochemical anomaly, called the Action anomaly. The Action anomaly was delineated by Noranda Exploration in 1989 and consists of multiple high contrast (up to 3400ppm) soil geochemical samples over a trend of 800m. An aggregate length of 4.0 km of zinc-in-soil, in four separate anomalies, now comprise the Indy project. The 2019 exploration program will include extensive soil geochemical programs, commencing in June, to prioritize these targets for drilling. In 2018, a successful drill program tested an area of one anomaly and identified a new zone of near surface mineralization called the B-9 zone which remains open for expansion. The 2018 drill program, the Company’s first drill program at Indy, discovered shallow mineralization at the new B-9 zone at Anomaly B, including high-grade massive sulphide mineralization in holes IB18-009 and IB18-003 which are 250m apart and remain open for further exploration: Hole IB18-009: 12.33% Zn, 2.98% Pb, and 24.46 g/t Ag (14.98% ZnEq) over 6.29m at 60m below surface. Hole IB18-003 (low core recovery); 9.26% Zn, 2.43% Pb and 17.98 g/t Ag (11.38% ZnEq) over 3.05m at 23m below surface. Hole IB18-008: 5.76% Zn, 0.48% Pb and 3.41 g/t Ag (6.18% ZnEq) over 6.73m at 56m below surface. The geological characteristics of the B-9 zone (see News Release NR2018-06) are analogous to a distinctive geological setting, termed vent-proximal, within a sedimentary hosted exhalative (Sedex) type depositional environment. Sedex type zinc deposits, the rarer exhalative “cousins” of volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) deposits, occur as clusters on a district scale and only within specific ages of sedimentary rock formations referred to as time horizons. The large and well-known deposits occur in the Yukon, northern and southern British Columbia, Australia and southern Africa. The Indy project is underlain by sedimentary formations correlated in age by the Geological Survey of Canada (Struik,1988) to the same time horizons hosting the Sedex deposits of northern British Columbia and the Yukon. With a large claim position (24km strike), new discoveries of shallow mineralization and extensive geochemical anomalies remaining to be tested, the Indy project provides multiple opportunities for new discoveries of this type in an unexplored region of central British Columbia. Indy is readily accessible by road from Prince George, the major hub for transportation and heavy industry in central British Columbia and is located 85km south of the Canadian National Railway. To date, four large soil geochemical anomalies with an aggregate length of 4.0 km occur on the property. Preliminary drilling at the B-9 zone (a 270m long portion of Anomaly B) indicated that soil geochemistry is a cost-effective method of targeting sub-surface mineralization. Anomalies Action, C and D remain to be drill tested by the Company. On April 3, 2019, the Company signed a term sheet with Ash-ley Woods LLC, a private limited liability company, for Ash-ley to earn a 35% interest in PX by completing an initial drill program. The PX project is a grassroots exploration stage project located in Utah and was acquired, by staking, in 2018.