Mako Mining Corp. reported the results of an updated mineral resource estimate prepared by RESPEC, out of Reno, Nevada, for the San Albino Project, which includes the Las Conchitas deposit, located in Nueva Segovia, Nicaragua. An updated technical report for the San Albino Project with an effective date of October 11th, 2023, including the updated mineral resource estimate, is being prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101.

All dollar amounts referred to in this news release are United States dollars. The San Albino Project open pit and underground mineral resource includes a Measured and Indicated mineral resource of 670,100 tonnes at a diluted grade of 11.61 grams per tonne (g/t) Au for 250,200 gold ounces, and an Inferred mineral resource of 383,300 tonnes at a diluted grade of 10.54 g/t Au for 129,900 gold ounces. These mineral resources are constrained within two major and three smaller open pit shells at the Las Conchitas deposit, and four pit shells at the San Albino mine, two of which are currently in operation.

The underground mineral resources are constrained by shells defined by stope optimizations. The San Albino mine is fully permitted and has been in commercial production since July 1, 2021, and the Las Conchitas deposit is located immediately to the south. The geology at Las Conchitas is very similar to the San Albino deposit, consisting of stacked, gently dipping (averaging 30 degrees), less than 1 to 3 meter (m) wide, high-grade, gold-quartz veins interpreted to be part of a larger orogenic system.

The Company received an interim permit to begin mining at Las Conchitas in June, 2023. Material extracted from two test pits at Las Conchitas has been processed at the Company's San Albino plant. The permit allows for the extraction from six areas of interest (Las Dolores, San Pablo, Mina Francisco, Bayacun, Mango, and El Limon).

In July 2023, the Company submitted the Environmental Impact Assessment ("EIA") for the development of the Las Conchitas deposit in Nicaragua. The EIA has been accepted by the Nicaraguan Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MARENA) and the company anticipates approval by the end of 2023. Explicit modelling, which involved geologists directly interpreting every polygon within the model, was used to create the mineral resource estimate for the San Albino Project.

This approach more accurately predicts the location and grade of mineral resources when compared to implicit modelling, which relies on commercial software to interpret these polygons, and has proven successful at San Albino to date. However, because the drilling is wider spaced than at the San Albino deposit, the modelling was somewhat restrictive on projections of veins. It is expected that infill drilling at Las Conchitas may increase the estimated mineral resources.

Both the San Albino and Las Conchitas deposits were initially modelled on sections spaced 10m apart. These sectional interpretations were reviewed by Mako geologists and modifications were made until there was a mutually agreed-upon interpretation. These interpretations were used to code the database by domain and vein name.

After evaluating each vein's assays statistically, capping levels were defined and assigned, and then compositing was done to one-meter lengths respecting the vein and halo boundaries. The cross-section interpretations were snapped to the drill holes in three dimensions, sliced vertically along N40E long sections, and reinterpreted on one-meter intervals. These long sections were then treated as solids for coding the block model and controlling the estimate.

The San Albino deposit has three main groups of veins - San Albino, Naranjo, and Arras ­ each with multiple splays. Las Conchitas has 16 veins, each of which was modelled and estimated separately. A polygonal estimate was completed for each deposit to anticipate its size and grade and to be a check on the resource estimates.

The one-meter composites were used to estimate gold and silver grades using inverse-distance cubed, kriging, and nearest-neighbor methods. Multiple estimates were made to evaluate sensitivity to estimation parameters and to optimize those estimation parameters. While the three types of estimates (and the polygonal estimate) were used to check each other, the reported estimate used inverse- distance cubed.

The block models are rotated 40o parallel to the strike of the deposits. Block sizes are one-meter high by two-meters along strike by one-meter across strike. Gold and silver grades were estimated for the veins, halos, and the unmineralized material.

Vein grades were diluted depending on the material types adjacent to the vein by any or all of: a) the footwall halo, b) hanging wall halo, or c) unmineralized material. For open pit resources at San Albino a 0.5m dilution rind was applied on both the top and the bottom of the veins, while at Las Conchitas a 0.4m dilution rind was applied on both the top and the bottom of the veins. A thinner dilution rind was applied at Las Conchitas because production shows that dilution can be less than 0.5m on the hanging wall.

Because little engineering work has been done for underground mining, the underground mineral resources reported are block diluted. Input Parameters for Open Pit and Underground Optimizations to Define Resource Shells For evaluating the open-pit potential, a series of optimized pits were run using variable gold prices and parameters. The accepted mining cost was $3/t, processing cost $65/t, and G&A cost $2/t. Metallurgical recoveries of gold used in the pit optimizations were 83%, 90%, and 95% for fresh rock, transition, and oxide material, respectively.

Silver was not considered in the optimizations. For evaluating the potential for underground mining, a series of stope optimizations were run at variable cutoffs. An average underground- mining cost of $144/t, processing cost of $65/t, and G&A of $2/t were assumed.

Underground mineral resources are those at or above the 4.0 g/t Au cutoff lying within the 3.0 g/t Au optimized stopes. The factors used in defining cutoff grades are based on a gold price of $1,750/oz.