White Rock Minerals Ltd. announced an update on a number of new VMS prospects sampled during the 2020 field season at its 100% owned Red Mountain Project, Alaska. Geological reconnaissance follow-up of multiple stream sediment anomalies north of the company's large Last Chance IRGS-style gold anomaly between the known historic VMS prospects at Sheep Creek, Peaches and Keavy Peak, discovered multiple exposures of massive sulphide mineralisation within a broad package of phyllites with discontinuous lenses of meta rhyolite and carbonaceous black phyllite. The main productive VMS stratigraphic package between Gossan Peak and Peaches trends east-west over a strike length in excess of 13km with a thickness of 500 to 750 metres. VMS mineralisation occurs as discontinuous stacked lenses or pods parallel to the east-west regional foliation, proximal to second order northwest and northeast trending faults. Exposed massive sulphide mineralisation is limited to isolated outcrops on steep talus-dominated slopes. VMS lenses are coincident with podiform magnetic features identified by the airborne magnetics survey flown in 2020. Magnetic response, interpreted to be related to the presence of pyrrhotite, will allow a more accurate interpretation of the extent of the potential VMS lenses beneath the talus cover. A number of the magnetic features coincident with VMS lenses can be interpreted over strike lengths of 1.0 to 1.5km, similar to the VMS deposit dimensions that make up the Project's VMS JORC-compliant Resource further east at Dry Creek and WTF. More detailed ground magnetics, mapping and systematic surface geochemical sampling is being planned for early during the 2021 field season with drill testing potentially to follow.