O3 Mining Inc. announced that it has received initial results from its 2,886 metre infill drilling campaign completed between November 2023 and January 2024 on the Norlartic Extension area within the Marban Alliance project, in Val-d'Or, Québec, Canada. Highlights: 9.6 g/t Au over 6.2 metres in hole O3MA-23-539 at a vertical depth of 36 metres, including 104 g/t over 0.5 metre on Norlartic Extension; 3.7 g/t Au over 5.9 metres in hole O3MA-23-539 at a vertical depth of 21 metres on Norlartic Extension; 1.2 g/t Au over 17.2 metres in hole O3MA-23-546 at a vertical depth of 106 metres on Norlartic Extension. The 2023 drilling campaign on the Norlartic Extension focused on best intercepts of the 2022 drilling campaign (see news releases of O3 Mining dated July 6, 2022 and entitled ?O3 Mining Intersects 2.3 g/t Au Over 14.8 Metres Outside Resource Pit Shells at Marban Engineering?, and February 27, 2023 and entitled ?O3 Mining Intersects 3.7 g/t Au over 11.0 Metres at Norlartic Extension, Marban Engineering?).

In the area adjacent to the main Marban pit, three satellite pits were defined in the Corporation's pre-feasibility study using only historical drilling. A strike length of 200 metres hosting multiple Norlartic Extension dyke swarms was drilled down to 250 metres vertical at a spacing of 40 metres, corresponding to the drill spacing used elsewhere on the property. The results released today along with those from 2022 show two near-surface mineralized lenses of at least 200 metres long each.

Complete assay results for nine of the 18 drill holes from this campaign have been received to date. Once all assays are received, the 2022 and 2023 results on Norlartic Extension will be integrated into an updated mineral resource estimate to be used in a future feasibility study on the Marban Alliance project. The dyke swarm hosting the gold mineralization at Norlartic Extension is geologically identical to the one hosting the Norlartic and Kierens mineralization.

They correspond to mafic and intermediate fine-grained dykes, which have been successfully traced along a two-kilometre trend and serve as a marker to the mineralized corridor.