Tarachi Gold Corp. (‘Tarachi’ or the ‘Company’) announced additional assay results from underground diamond drill holes JAB-20-08, JAB-21-09 and JAB-21-10 completed at the historic La Dura mine on the Company's Jabali concession. The underground La Dura drill program tested the down-dip and potential plunge orientation to the area of known gold bearing structures. Based on the drilling and mapping done to date, the Tarachi geology team believes the gold is hosted in a 10-20m thick panel of heavily silicified rhyodacite striking roughly north-south, dipping to the east at an approximate angle of 30 degrees and plunging to the south at 25 degrees. Higher grade gold mineralization is suspected to be concentrated within this panel in vertical zones or shoots running east-west. Hole JAB-21-09, which was drilled to the southeast, shows evidence of this with its multiple higher-grade subintervals including more than an ounce per tonne of gold over 5.6m. The results from drill hole JAB-21-09 are very similar in both grade and length to last year's channel sample across the north-south face of the underground workings which returned 6.34g/t Au over 62.55m and also contained many subintervals of 1m to 6m with grades between 7.4 and 55.2 g/t Au. Combined, the channel sampling and two rounds of drilling demonstrate a strike length of over 100m of high-grade mineralization that remains open along strike to the south and down dip to the east. The potential to find continuation of the mineralized zones to the west, on the other side of a fault found in the underground workings, is undetermined at this time. To the north, the unit appears to come to surface not far from the La Dura underground workings due to the unit's plunge. Hole JAB-21-10, drilled to the east, appears to have remained within the mineralized panel for a considerable length but likely did not intersect as many of the higher-grade east-west trending zones. Hole JAB-21-08, drilled to the south at a dip of 30 degrees, may have exited out the bottom of the main mineralized panel early on. The 11.7m intersection of 2.48g/t starting from 71.15m down the hole may represent the hole re-entering the main panel or possibly an additional mineralized structure that is parallel to and below the main panel. Deeper intercepts were also encountered in holes JAB-21-10, JAB-20-04 and JAB-20-06. Drill hole JAB-20-06, drilled from the same pad at an azimuth of 150 degrees and dip of 30 degrees, intercepted 2.22g/t Au over 8.5m starting from 74m downhole. The RC surface drilling program is expected to provide greater clarity as to the true thickness of the panel as well as if there are additional parallel structures at depth or if the deeper intercepts are still part of the main mineralized panel. The target panel has been found to be very poor in sulphide mineralization with only minor veinlets containing sulphides found in some holes. In the gold-rich intersections, iron averages less than 1%, sulphur less than 0.1%, copper less than 20ppm and lead about 60ppm. Silver values typically range between 1-5g/t. Core samples were selected by a geologist and sawed in half. One half of the core remains in the core tray the other half is placed into a plastic bag. Sample tags were submitted into each bag before being sealed and stored at the campsite in a secure area and were later transported by company truck directly the Bureau Veritas Mineral Laboratories (BVM) in Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico. At the laboratory, the samples were dried, crushed and pulverized with the pulps being sent airfreight for analysis to BVM in Vancouver, B.C. for 37-element ICP analysis after modified aqua regia digestion. Gold assays are done in Hermosillo by 50-gram fire assay with an atomic absorption spectroscopy finish. Samples were checked using a 50-gram fire assay with a gravimetric finish for samples greater than 10ppm Au and 1Kg metallic fire assay with duplicate minus fraction analyzed. Both Hermosillo and Vancouver BVM facilities are ISO 9001 and ISO/IEC 17025 accredited. Laboratory control samples comprising certified reference samples, duplicates and blank samples were inserted by the laboratory into the sample stream and analyzed as part of the quality assurance/quality control protocol.