Zacatecas Silver Corp. announced that Zacatecas Silver property is located in Zacatecas State, Mexico, within the highly prospective Fresnillo Silver Belt, which has produced over 6.2 billion ounces of silver. The company holds 7826 ha (19,338 acres) of ground that is highly prospective for low and intermediate sulphidation silver-base metal mineralization and potentially low sulphidation gold-dominant mineralization. The property is 25 km south-east of MAG Silver Corp.'s Juanicipio Mine and Fresnillo PLC's Fresnillo Mine. The property shares common boundaries with Pan American Silver Corp. claims and El Orito which is owned by Endeavour Silver. There are four main target areas within the Zacatecas concessions. Zacatecas Silver plans to immediately complete a 10,000 metre drill program on the vein system outside of the historical resource estimate. The Company has already completed an extensive verification resampling program of historical drill core, equating to approximately 15% of sample intervals used in the historical resource estimate at Panuco. This data is presently being used to remodel the historical resource. Zacatecas Silver considers the historic shafts to the southeast of Muleros to be highly significant. In this area, there is an extensive cover of recent gravel and vein outcrop is absent. Yet, the historical shafts indicate that the south vein extends at least 1 km to the southeast. This has never been drill tested and is an important exploration target. Gold grades in several of the historical Muleros drill intercepts are higher than other silver-base metals veins in the area. This may reflect the hybrid intermediate-low sulphidation nature of the Muleros vein system making for an attractive target. The El Cristo vein system comprises at least 8 northwest-southeast trending, subparallel veins which define a dilational sigmoidal complex that is up to 600 m wide and which coalesces to the northwest and southeast. Veins extend over a strike length of at least 2.5 km. Dip varies from vertical to 60° to the northeast to southwest. El Cristo is the northwest extension of the Veta Grande vein system. The San Manuel-San Gill target is relatively unexplored. Quartz-carbonate-sulphide veins of between 10 cm to >7 m wide, trend northwest-southeast over a strike length of at least 2 km. Individual veins are between 400 to 1400 m long and splay to the southeast where they intersect a north-south trending hematitic breccia. The breccia has a strike length of approximately 800 m, is up to 40 m wide, and is most likely vertical.