Max Resource Corp. reported new assay results, with visible copper mineralization now spanning over 12-square kilometres at the URU zone, located along the 80-kilometre-long CESAR North belt, within Max's 100% owned CESAR copper-silver project in Northeastern Colombia. Eight rock samples over widths ranging from 10 to 25-metres returned values of 2.0% copper and above, twenty-one returned values greater than 1.0% copper, with highlight values of 3.9% copper and 37 g/t silver. Rock chip channel results from values of 2.0% copper: 3.9% copper and 7 g/t silver over widths of 10-metres; 3.0% copper and 6 g/t silver over widths of 10-metres; 3.0% copper and 37 g/t silver over widths of 10-metres; 2.5% copper and 12 g/t silver over widths of 10-metres; 2.4% copper and 12 g/t silver over widths of 10-metres; 2.0% copper and 9 g/t silver over widths of 10-metres. Reported representative grab samples collected over widths of 25-metres returned 2.7% and 2.2% copper. In addition, Max is awaiting assay results located along 10-kilometres of strike. The URU copper mineralization is hosted in a stockwork within igneous host rock that crosscuts sediment-hosted stratabound mineralization. Observed minerals include chalcocite, native copper, cuprite and copper oxide. The copper mineralization is often associated with the presence of epidote. Max interprets the sediment-hosted stratabound copper-silver mineralization in the Cesar Basin to be analogous to both the Central African Copper Belt (CACB) and the Polish Kupferschiefer. Almost 50% of the copper known to exist in sediment-hosted deposits is contained in the CACB, including Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. 95-billion-pound Kamoa-Kakula copper deposits in the Congo. Kupferschiefer, the world's largest silver producer and Europe's largest copper source, mining an orebody of 0.5 to 5.5- metres thick at depths of 500m, grading 1.49% copper and 48.6 g/t silver. The silver yield is almost twice the production of the world's second largest silver mine.