Riverside Resources Inc. has received results from the latest geophysics survey that included 3.8 line-km of Inverse Polarization (IP) in five lines across the Cerro Magallanes rhyolitic dome part of the Cecilia Project, Sonora, Mexico (the "Project"). Ahead of drilling, Riverside has further refined and detailed drill targets with the geophysics IP survey using 50-m dipole spacing. The close spacing between dipoles helps to delineate structures and reduces the data variation ("noise") at shallow depth, allowing for better targeting in the upcoming drill program. The scheduled drilling will test various gold-bearing fault/vein structures up to 250 m depth. Mapping of the rhyolitic dome has highlighted zones of high silicification nearby to breccia and gold-bearing structural zones. The IP data and new IP pseudo-sections define resistive anomalies (which are potentially silica zones), along the identified structures at surface for 200 meters along strike and remains open. The IP anomalies coincide with past sampling in the area of historical drilling where Cambior (1995) in drillhole 138-95-08 drilled 30.0 m at 1.41 g/t gold. Riverside and Carlyle Commodities are working together to progress the project to the drilling phase which will include an initial 1,500 m drill program to test high-grade gold targets at: San Jose, North Breccia and Central Targets. Surface samples at the San Jose Target previously returned 43.2 g/t Au (out of 21 samples; see press release of September 21, 2020). Additional survey results in the upcoming weeks will include: Drone aeromagnetic survey, which will help with vectoring in on magnetic anomalies at depth; Results from the next batch of channel samples covering the east-west extension between the San Jose and Central targets.