Summa Silver Corp. provided an update on property-wide geological, geophysical, and remote sensing surveys at its Mogollon Property, near Silver City, New Mexico. Surface Sampling: 326 channel and grab samples have been collected from the extensive number of surface prospect pits and trenches present on the property, most of which were previously unsampled. Underground Sampling: On-going investigation of the historic mines on the property has revealed good access to underground workings in several areas. Systematic sampling will begin in the Last Chance Mine where sulfide-mineralized quartz veins were recently observed. Soil Sampling: A property wide soil survey is in progress and will focus on the identification of blind exploration targets which may not have been recognized by past operators. High-resolution LiDAR Survey: A 29 km2 LiDAR survey was flown to provide topographic control and to identify areas of surface disturbance peripheral and along strike from historic workings. Drone-based Magnetic Survey: 400 line-kilometres of drone-based, high-resolution magneticdata were collected to refine the property-scale structural model. Drilling On-Going: Drilling is in progress at the Consolidated Extension target where the Company anticipates that a minimum of 15,000 m of drilling is necessary. This first target represents only 1.5% of the total vein and structure strike length present on the property. Over 350 areas of historic mining and exploration-related surface disturbances have been identified in the LiDAR data across the Mogollon Property. Many of these areas (e.g., pits, adits, trenches) fall along prominent east-west or north-south trending orientations interpreted to be delineating the locations of structurally hosted, epithermal-related veins. The north-south trending Queen fault, host to the high-grade Queen Vein, is also defined in the high-resolution magnetic data as a prominent break in magnetic response. This fault truncates numerous east-west oriented lineaments interpreted to be major, ore- controlling faults (e.g., Fanney, Maude). Many of these magnetic lineaments are also coincident with trends in historic surface disturbances. In some cases, trends in surface disturbances extend well beyond where historic mining records indicate mining was terminated (e.g., Fanney). These potential high-level vein extensions, as well as other outcropping vein occurrences are currently being investigated through detailed structural and geological mapping and rock-chip sampling across all vein occurrences. To date, 326 rock samples have so far been collected for geochemical analyses. Additionally, the Company has initiated a property-wide soil survey. The goal of this survey is to generate new exploration targets by focusing on pathfinder element anomalism known to be associated with Mogollon-style epithermal-related, high-grade silver and gold mineralization. Samples will be analyzed using a tailored portable Xray fluorescence spectrometer (pXRF) workflow to measure elemental concentrations from prepared sample mounts in the field.