Max Resource Corp. reported a second newly discovered copper zone, the URU zone, located 30-km south of the recently discovered CONEJO high-grade copper-silver zone, at CESAR North, within the wholly-owned CESAR copper-silver project in North Eastern Colombia. The URU-copper zone lies along the southern portion of the 60-kilometre-long CESAR North target area. It appears to be of significant size since presently collected samples indicated the presence of copper mineralization extending over 3.7-kilometres, and open in all directions. Over 125 rock samples have been collected and sent to ALS for assays. Results are expected early next month. The surface mineralization at the URU zone occurs as stockwork of cross cutting fractures or as disseminated mineralization hosted in igneous rock. Observed minerals include: chalcocite, native copper, cuprite and copper oxides. Epidote is also common and appears to be associated with copper mineralization. Max interprets the sediment-hosted stratabound copper-silver mineralization in the Cesar Basin to be analogous to the Kupferschiefer Basin in Poland. The Kupferschiefer deposits, Europe's largest copper source, produced 3MT of copper in 2018 and 40 million ounces of silver in 2019 from an orebody 0.5 to 5.5-metres thick, grading 1.49% copper and 48.6 g/t silver. This silver yield is almost twice the production of the world's second largest silver mine. The CESAR project in North Eastern Colombia covers a significant portion of the 200-km long Cesar Basin, has now been demonstrated to contain widespread highly prospective copper-silver mineralization.