Strathmore Plus Energy Corporation announced initial results from a scintillometer survey at their Night Owl uranium project in the Shirley Basin district of Wyoming. Strathmore has confirmed elevated levels of gamma radiation at the surface including readings over 9,999 counts per second. This survey was performed by Terrence Osier, P. Geo., Vice President of Exploration for Strathmore, using a GR-110G portable gamma ray scintillometer.

The high levels of surface radiation were located along outcrop and surveyed on June 12, 2022. Strathmore will be sending grab samples to a certified assay lab for radiometric, equilibrium, and chemical analyses as the work continues. Strathmore plans on a larger work program to determine the extent of mineralization on the Night Owl property.

A surface exploration permit, to include trenching and shallow drilling, will be applied for over the coming weeks. The survey was conducted in an area that was historically trenched and a limited amount of mineralized material excavated in the 1950-60s. The extent of radiologically elevated outcrop, ranging from 200 to 9,999+ cps, was approximately 400 feet long by 30-50 feet wide.

An area of higher concentrated counts had been in part previously exposed and mined, covering approximately 50 by 50 feet. The uranium mineralization is contained within a brecciated zone lying at the unconformable contact between the Mississippian Madison Formation and the overlying Pennsylvanian-Permian Casper Formation.