Westgold to advise that it has now received screen fire assays for the high-grade intercepts at Great Fingall which have significantly upgraded the intercept grades. Accordingly, the Company re-releases the announcement with the revised data. The aggressive +1km down-plunge step-out hole from the lowest production levels at Great Fingall has successfully intercepted the Great Fingall Reef with the following updated exceptional results: 1.57m at 10.10 g/t (previously 7.95g/t) from 1,642.18m - Great Fingall Reef; 3.1m at 34.05 g/t (previously 20.17g/t) from 1,439.7m - Great Fingall Hangingwall Lodes; 4.35m at 3.27g/t from 1,493.22m - Great Fingall Hangingwall Lodes. The main Great Fingall intercept of 1.57m at 7.98g/t from 1642.18m included a section of 0.49m at 0.12g/t from 1642.92m which contained numerous specs of visible gold. Westgold believes this drilling is highly significant in that it proves that the stratigraphic controls to mineralisation remain in place, and importantly high grades typical of historic production have been returned at greater than twice the depth of historical mining, proving plunge continuity of the high-grade Great Fingall Reef for a length which is now approaching 2 kilometres. The Great Fingall mine was one of WA's largest and richest mines at the turn of the 19th century. It was mined to approximately 740 vertical metres before closing at the start of the Great War in 1914. Its recorded production was 1.2 million ounces at a grade of 19.5g/t Au. The mine never re-opened after closure but was subject to open pit mining in the early 2000's and the deepening of current pit via an in-wall ramp, which will serve as the future decline for the underground mine. Westgold has previously drilled the lode system to approximately 1,000m vertical depth and defined a total underground resource of 1.1 million tonnes at 8.49g/t Au containing 308,000 ounces. Significant remnant resources defined by development and inter-level rising are known to exist within the mine, however due to the age of the data has not been considered. The Golden Crown Mine - The Golden Crown mine, approximately 450m into the hanging-wall of Great Fingall, was subject to modern-day shaft access and closed in the mid 1990's after producing 288,000oz at a grade of 13.8 g/t Au. The ore system was mined to approximately 480m vertical depth. Westgold has previously drilled down-plunge extensions to approximately 650m vertical depth and defined a total resource of 755,000 tonnes at 8.02g/t Au containing 195,000 ounces. This latest hole drilled from the hanging-wall also passed through the projected lode position of Golden Crown at approximately 850m vertical depth. Whilst not perfectly positioned with regard to the down-plunge projection of the higher-grade ore shoot, the hole intercepted the quartz lode and assayed 0.6m at 2.67g/t from 926.9m. This also suggests that this prolific ore system could also extend to double its current mined depth. A New Base Metals Discovery in Hanging-Wall Also Revealed - Additionally, the hole also intersected what has been interpreted to be the down-plunge projection of the Smiths United lode, where it progresses from the traditional host Great Fingall Dolerite into the surrounding Hangingwall Basalts. Significantly, this mineralisation manifested as a massive sulphide intercept, and was not only auriferous, but heavily endowed with both copper and zinc, opening up an exciting new base metals exploration target with a result of 6.3m at 3.71% Cu, 3.73% Zn and 0.73g/t Au from 479.76m. Westgold plans additional drilling to better define the up-plunge areas between historic mining and these intercepts over the ensuing year. The current open pit mining phase (via an in-wall decline ramp) at Great Fingall will complete around April 2020 and it is expected that underground mining to exploit the gold ore systems will immediately follow. In tandem, Westgold plans to conduct further work to better understand the base metal potential of the area.