Liberty Gold Corp. announced additional results from its 2021 Reverse Circulation drill program targeting the Main Zone, which includes 10 drill holes in the Hassayampa Pit area and 13 drill holes in the Hamburg Pit area at the Goldstrike Oxide Gold Project in Utah. Drilling in the Hassayampa Pit also encountered high gold grades in pit backfill at surface, currently modelled as waste rock, including 1.14 grams per tonne gold over 15.2 meters PGS 794 and 1.16 g/t Au over 7.6 m in PGS 797. Drill results in the Hamburg Pit area directly to the south of Hassayampa continues to yield long intervals of shallow oxide gold mineralization, further proof of the robust nature of mineralization in the central part of the Main Zone, which carries greater than 60% of the Mineral Resource. The majority of drill holes in the Main Zone encountered multiple intervals of oxide gold mineralization with excellent cyanide solubility at shallow depths, supporting the continuity of mineralization and increasing the confidence in the resource. High-grade, near-surface gold was encountered in backfilled area of the Hassayampa pit. Results drilled directly from surface included: PGS 794: 1.14 g/t Au over 15.2 m PGS 796: 0.51 g/t Au over 16.8 m PGS 797: 1.16 g/t Au over 7.6 m High oxide gold grades in backfill are believed to be stockpiled above 0.8 g/t Au cut-off material. The 2018 Preliminary Economic Assessment considered this material as waste. Backfill will now be included in a future mine plan to optimize project economics. The near-surface nature of the Hassayampa area, with bedrock mineralization generally starting at 30 m to 40 m down-hole, makes this higher-grade mineralization potentially an important and valuable source of early ore feed in a future production profile. The Hassayampa Pit area forms the north portion of the Main Zone and is hosted on the footwall side of the Hassayampa Fault, which represents an uplifted block of mineralization roughly 500 m x150 m in size. The objective of 2021 drilling in the Hassayampa Zone is to extend the resource pit to the west and north to merge with the Dip Slope Zone, where the unconformity is consistently mineralized over a large area at shallow depth. Drilling in the Hamburg portion of the Main Zone continues to deliver higher grade near surface mineralization increasing confidence in the resource and also defining zones of mineralized backfill with potential to enhance project economics.