Mammoth Resources Corp. has reached agreement to extend surface access for a two year period with one of the two communities (ejidos) which oversee surface access to its Tenoriba gold-silver project located in the Sierra Madre precious metal belt, southwestern Chihuahua State, Mexico. Mammoth is scheduled to meet with the administrative board and members of the second ejido in the next two weeks and remains confident that this ejido will also be supportive of a similar two year extension to surface access thereby enabling Mammoth to advance exploration activities on its Tenoriba property. While advancing these surface access permits, and while Mammoth awaits approval of the drill permit for up to 139 drill sites submitted in August, the Company has been active in advancing a number of initiatives to position the Company and the Tenoriba project with enhanced confidence towards the financing and execution of a substantial drill program planned to commence in early 2021. Activities currently underway at Tenoriba include: Engaging the services of a PhD geologist with extensive experience in Low, Intermediate and High Sulphidation epithermal precious metal systems to review all historical data from the Tenoriba property, including that produced in the past 21 months, and to include time at the project reviewing surface geology and historic drill core. The objective of this review is to assist in the review of the geological prospectively at Tenoriba, including recommendations on future exploration opportunities and activities. Mammoth is advancing the 3D interpretation of geophysical and topographic data currently available from its 2015 IP-Mag surface geophysical survey with the objective of enhancing the understanding of potential control features evidenced in this data which appear to control mineralization intersected in 2008 and 2017-18 diamond drilling. Past geophysical lines were run north-south and the goal of the 3D interpretation is that this may assist in identifying potential control structures which may exist at high angles to these geophysical lines and as a result may not be observable in the current 2D north-south interpretation of the data produced from this survey. Should this 3D interpretation assist in understanding these control features better, this same 3D interpretation will be employed on additional geophysical work planned at Tenoriba. Mammoth is planning an additional up to 72-line kilometres of IP-Mag surface geophysics at Tenoriba. The 2015 geophysical survey covered approximately 50 percent of the 5 to 6 kilometre strike length of surface mineralization sampled at Tenoriba, including only 3 lines covering 200 metres of the El Moreno area. A 1.2 kilometre gap exists between these 3 El Moreno lines and the area surveyed in the central portion of the mineralized trend. It was below the El Moreno area where coarse gold nuggets were recently panned. As part of this survey additional geophysical coverage is planned further east and west of the eastern and western most areas covered by the past survey where the trend of mineralization remains open.