Midland Exploration Inc. announced the start of a drilling campaign on its gold Lewis project, 100% owned by Midland and located approximately 60 km southwest of the town of Chapais. The drilling campaign, scheduled to started early in February 2024, consists of four (4) drill holes for an expected total of 725 metres. The drilling campaign will focus on new gold occurrences discovered by prospecting conducted by Midland since 2020, namely the Red Giant (up to 0.35 g/t Au over 9.0 metres in channel sample) and Golden Nest (up to 10.2 g/t Au in grab sample and 0.65 g/t Au over 6.0 metres in channel sample) showings.

Induced polarization (?IP?) axes are also targeted along the eastward projection of the Golden Nest showing. The Red Giant showing is associated with an IP anomaly bordering a magnetic high. The east-west-trending gold-bearing zone shows increasing grades/thicknesses toward the west of the area stripped in 2020 and remains completely open in this direction.

The Golden Nest gold showing is directly associated with an IP anomaly that coincides with a sharp increase in resistivity and corresponds to a small outcrop of approximately 10 square metres exhibiting 2 to 10% pyrite mineralization. The IP anomaly associated with this gold-bearing zone may be traced over several hundred metres. Trenches were excavated to the west of the Golden Nest showing in 2022 but failed to locate the same mineralization.

These IP anomalies extend eastward and occur proximal to a north-northeast-trending structure interpreted from magnetic data, which may have displaced northward (sinistral movement) the horizon hosting the Golden Nest showing. These two showings are spaced one kilometre apart, are both hosted in sheared mafic volcanic rocks and are characterized by the presence of numerous quartz-carbonate veins with local pyrite and arsenopyrite mineralization. Mineralized zones are associated with strong chlorite and ankerite alteration.

These gold-bearing zones, readily accessible using logging roads, have never been drill-tested. The Lewis property consists of 158 claims (87 km2) and covers a strategic position characterized by a regional flexure proximal to the Guercheville-Opawica deformation zone.