Summit Minerals Limited announced that it has received expanded access for exploration across the southern half of the Windfall Project, including all the Toorooka and most of the Pinnacle antimony camps. The acquired access allows for geological mapping and geochemical and geophysical surveys of the historical workings located on several properties. Drilling access will be negotiated later.

As with Munga Creek to the immediate east, antimony mineralisation within the Toorooka and Pinnacles camps is mainly associated with steeply-dipping, high-grade quartz-stibnite veins and breccia zones, which cut various usually fine-grained sedimentary units. The vein occurrences occur in clusters, each usually a few hundred metres or less apart. Eleven historic workings lie across the camps, including the Neill and Taylors prospect at Toorooka and the Star of Hope, Cavanagh's Claim, Lady Mary, De La Forces Claim, and the Hayshed antimony prospects within the Pinnacles camp.

Each working was developed on mineralisation exposed at the surface, and limited to no exploration was provided to the adjacent covered mineralised zones, where substantial discovery potential remains. The possibility is demonstrated at Toorooka, where a 180m long x 80m open pit exploited eluvial antimony mineralisation with no located primary sources. Next Steps: Summit will undertake early-stage exploration activities, including surface mapping, soil and rock chip sampling, and assays across the historical workings to delineate potential along-strike extensions to the antimony-rich zone and outline drill positions to test the existing mineralisation at depth and any prospective extensions or parallel systems. The Company will continue progressing with landholder access discussions and negotiations at Windfall.