InZinc Mining Ltd. announced the commencement of Phase 1 exploration activities at the Indy project in central British Columbia. The Phase 1 program, consisting of extensive soil geochemistry, mapping, prospecting and access work, will prepare new and existing drill targets for a contingent drill phase in the fall. The Phase 1 sampling program will look to expand the existing aggregate length of 5km of zinc in soil geochemical anomalies, in four large separate anomalies, over the 7km long Main Trend at Indy. Drill-testing of soil geochemical anomalies is cost-effective and has proven successful at outlining new shallow mineralization at Indy. A maiden drill program at Indy discovered shallow Sedex-style mineralization at the B-9 Zone at Anomaly B in 2018, including 12.33% Zn, 2.98% Pb, and 24.46g/t Ag (14.98% ZnEq) over 6.3m at 60m below surface in hole IB18-009. The B-9 Zone remains open for expansion. Objectives of Phase 1 2021 exploration program: 1400 to 1500 soil geochemical samples covering an area of approximately 4 square kilometres. Delta East Area: Extensive sampling where wide-spacing soil sampling 40 years ago detected strong zinc in soil in two areas, each with a potential 1.0 to 1.5km length. Anomaly B: Additional soils to extend the current 1km long multi-element soil anomaly associated with mineralization discovered in 2018. Anomaly C: Reconnaissance soils to the west to investigate historical zinc in soil highs detected from programs 40 years ago. Mapping, prospecting and target ranking of new 2021 areas in addition to the 5km of already established geochemical targets. Phase 1 expenditures are fully-funded and eligible for 30% rebate under the BC Mineral Exploration Tax rebate (METC).