Relevant Gold Corp. reported release of data from the 2023 airborne magnetics geophysical survey flown by the Wyoming Geological Survey (WSGS) and US Geological Survey (USGS). The regional survey covered the Company's entire 16,000-hectare portfolio of projects and reveals structural and geological detail far surpassing existing mapping.

Importantly, some of the most prominent anomalies highlighted by the survey are major structures at South Pass and Bradley Peak gold camps. The survey shows patterns very similar to those of Canada's Abitibi Gold Province and provides strong support for the Company's exploration thesis that Wyoming has Abitibi-style geology and gold potential. Key takeaways from the magnetic data: The magnetic data provides far more detail than existing regional geologic maps.

The overall results show strong similarities to the Abitibi Gold Province, especially the Red Lake, Hemlo, and Canadian Malartic districts. The magnetic data highlight the major Archean orogenic structures of Wyoming that coincide with historical mining districts. The magnetic data agree very well with the Company's detailed mapping.

The two most prominent structural/magnetic anomalies are at Relevant Gold's South Pass and Bradley Peak camps. South Pass and Bradley Peak are clearly connected along a regional primary structure. Secondary structures revealed at both South Pass & Bradley Peak camps coincide with known high-grade gold occurrences.

The magnetics support Relevant Gold's target concepts and show where to tighten targets at South Pass. The strength of the 100 km2 Bradley Peak anomaly strongly encourages expediting drill permitting. About the Survey: This survey was funded jointly by the State of Wyoming and the US Geological Survey as part of the Earth Mapping Resources Initiative (aka Earth MRI) and is the first of three regional aerial geophysical surveys being conducted in Wyoming.

Magnetic and radiometric data was collected over approximately 3,300 square miles (~854,000 hectares) in central Wyoming using 200m spaced flight lines-it includes Relevant Gold's entire ~16,000 ha landholdings. Airborne geophysical surveys are commonly employed in gold-bearing Archean terranes like the Abitibi of Canada. The technique can "see" through extensive cover and reveal remarkable details of the major geology and structural trends that control gold mineralization.

Data produced from the Wyoming survey provides a much clearer picture of the geology and highlights targets within both the South Pass and Bradley Peak gold camps. The magnetic survey data provides clear resolution on the nature and extent of major Archean crustal-scale structures and highlights important related secondary structures. Understanding these structural features is critical in gold exploration as they are the primary controls for orogenic gold emplacement.

Some of the most notable geophysical signatures within the survey highlight the South Pass and Bradley Peak areas. This high-resolution geophysical data ties very well to the detailed mapping completed by the Company in both gold camps where regional geologic data is limited. In 2023, the company completed an initial mapping and rock chip sampling program at Bradley Peak identifying 3 new district-scale targets.

The rock chip sampling returned high-grade results, highlighted by 5.3 g/t Au, 107 g/t Ag, and 6.25% Cu. The geophysical survey outlines the structural trap for these targets in the center of a major 100 km2 anomaly. The survey illustrates a very large (100 km2) fold hinge structure developed off the crustal-scale Oregon Trail Structural Belt affecting Archean rocks including, iron formation, mafic greenstones, mafic intrusives, felsic intrusives, komatiites, and others.

This rock assemblage and type of structure is known as the primary host for numerous gold deposits in the Abitibi, with strong similarities to the Red Lake district and Hemlo districts. Over South Pass the magnetic data illustrates numerous major structures cutting Relevant Gold's property and agrees closely to the Company's detailed mapping and high-grade gold targets. Importantly, this data confirms the Company's model for South Pass and continues to tighten targets throughout the camp.

The geophysical signatures, geology, and mineralization at South Pass display strong similarities to the Canadian Malartic region along the Cadillac-Larder Lake deformation zone in the southern Abitibi gold belts. The Company will begin more detailed processing of the data for each property area, with ground truthing based on mapped geology to tease out key details and connections between the geology and gold.