White Metal Resources Corp. provide an update from its Australian joint venture partner Noronex Limited on the DorWit Copper-Silver Project (the "Property"), located in the Kalahari Copperbelt of central Namibia. The DorWit comprises three Exclusive Prospecting Licences (EPLs) that cover 72,000 hectares, referred to as the Witvlei Project and Dordabis Project (EPL 7030).

The Property is prospective for sedimentary-hosted Cu-Ag mineralization within the prolific Kalahari Copper Belt that spans Namibia and Botswana. The focus of current exploration and drilling by Noronex is on the target areas in the Witvlei Project which covers about 390 square kilometres. over 1.0 metre.

The bedding and mineralisation is interpreted to dip steeply to the south but no orientated core is available as yet to understand the mineralization style. A diamond drilling program will be considered after further in-fill RC drilling. Malachite staining was intercepted from surface in hole 22DHRC005 and oxidation is down to approximately 20 m vertically, with fine pyrite, chalcopyrite and chalcocite developed in the siltstone horizons at depth below.

A fence of holes was drilled 400 m east on a separate geochemistry anomaly and holes 22DHRC001 and 22DHRC007 intersected a number of copper horizons including 3.0 m @ 0.9% Cu from 110.0 m indicating the mineralisation is laterally extensive. The prospective Sandstone contact was not tested and further detailed mapping and soil sampling is underway to better define this target. A further fence of holes drilled 800 m to the west demonstrates a 1.2 km strike of mineralisation where 22DHRC008 intersected a number of copper horizons including 4.0 m @ 0.4% Cu from 40.0 metres.

The continuity and prospectivity between these zones is unclear and further work including soil sampling and ground magnetics is planned to assist in targeting the next phase of drilling. A further drilling program is being planned to follow up anomalous geology intersected in the initial 13 holes drilled to date. RC drill hole chip samples were collected in 3.0 m composites and at 1.0 m intervals where mineralisation was visually noted.

Samples were prepared in the ALS sample preparation facility in Namibia and assayed at their laboratory in South Africa. RC chip samples were split by a cone splitter on the cyclone and then composited by spearing where required. The majority of samples were collected dry.

Quality control procedures were in place by the Company with 1 in 20 blanks and standards inserted and field duplicates collected at 1 in 20 frequency. Samples were prepared at the ALS Okahandja laboratory in Namibia. Samples were weighed, fine crushing of entire sample to 70% -2mm, split off 250 g and pulverise split to better than 85% passing 75 microns.

Samples were analysed by ALS Johannesburg for ME-ICP61 and overlimit by ME-OG62 33 elements by a 4-acid digestion, HCl leach and ICP-AES. Quality control procedures are in place with repeats and blanks inserted by the laboratory.