10.27.2022, 9:30:00 AM

Trundle Project Presentation

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, Oct. 27, 2022 /CNW/ - Please find attached for release to the market, Kincora Copper Limited's presentation on its flagship and brownfield Trundle copper-gold porphyry project.

Please find attached for release to the market, Kincora Copper Limited’s presentation on its flagship and brownfield Trundle copper-gold porphyry project. (CNW Group/Kincora Copper Limited)

This announcement has been authorised for release by the Board of Kincora Copper Limited (ARBN 645 457 763)

Trundle Project background

The Trundle Project is located in the Junee-Narromine volcanic belt of the Macquarie Arc, less than 30km from the mill at the Northparkes mines in a brownfield setting within the westerly rift separated part of the Northparkes Igneous Complex ("NIC"). The NIC hosts a mineral endowment of approximately 24Moz AuEq (at 0.6% Cu and 0.2g/t Au) and is Australia's second largest porphyry mine comprising of 22 intrusive porphyry discoveries, 9 of which with positive economics.

The Trundle Project includes one single license covering 167km2 and was secured by Kincora in the March 2020 agreement with RareX Limited ("REE" on the ASX). Kincora is the operator, holds a 65% interest in the Trundle Project and is the sole funder until a positive scoping study is delivered at which time a fund or dilute joint venture will be formed.

For further information on the Trundle and Northparkes Projects please refer to Kincora's website:  https://kincoracopper.com/the-trundle-project/

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain information regarding Kincora contained herein may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements may include estimates, plans, expectations, opinions, forecasts, projections, guidance or other statements that are not statements of fact. Although Kincora believes that the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurance that such expectations will prove to have been correct. Kincora cautions that actual performance will be affected by a number of factors, most of which are beyond its control, and that future events and results may vary substantially from what Kincora currently foresees. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in forward-looking statements include market prices, exploitation and exploration results, continued availability of capital and financing and general economic, market or business conditions. The forward-looking statements are expressly qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement. The information contained herein is stated as of the current date and is subject to change after that date. Kincora does not assume the obligation to revise or update these forward-looking statements, except as may be required under applicable securities laws.

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) or the Australian Securities Exchange accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Drilling, Assaying, Logging and QA/QC Procedures

Sampling and QA/QC procedures are carried out by Kincora Copper Limited, and its contractors, using the Company's protocols as per industry best practise.

All samples have been assayed at ALS Minerals Laboratories, delivered to Orange, NSW, Australia. In addition to internal checks by ALS, the Company incorporates a QA/QC sample protocol utilizing prepared standards and blanks for 5% of all assayed samples.

Diamond drilling was undertaken by DrillIt Consulting Pty Ltd, from Parkes, under the supervision of our field geologists. All drill core was logged to best industry standard by well-trained geologists and Kincora's drill core sampling protocol consisted a collection of samples over all of the logged core.

Sample interval selection was based on geological controls or mineralization or metre intervals, and/or guidance from the Technical Committee provided subsequent to daily drill and logging reports. Sample intervals are cut by the Company and delivered by the Company direct to ALS.

All reported assay results are performed by ALS and widths reported are drill core lengths. There is insufficient drilling data to date to demonstrate continuity of mineralised domains and determine the relationship between mineralization widths and intercept lengths.

True widths are not known at this stage.

Significant mineralised intervals for drilling at the Trundle project are reported based upon two different cut off grade criteria:

  • Interpreted near surface skarn gold and copper intercepts are calculated using a lower cut of 0.20g/t and 0.10% respectively; and,
  • Porphyry intrusion system gold and copper intercepts are calculated using a lower cut of 0.10g/t and 0.05% respectively.

Significant mineralised intervals are reported with dilution on the basis of:

  • Internal dilution is below the aforementioned respective cut off's; and,
  • Dilutions related with core loss as flagged by a "*".

The following assay techniques have been adopted for drilling at the Trundle project:

  • Gold: Au-AA24 (Fire assay), reported, unless above detection limit where the interval is re-assayed using fire assay method with atomic-absorption finish (Au-AA26 method of ALS). The technique allows accurately determine the gold grade above 0.01 g/t and suitable for high – grade samples where grade exceeds 10 g/t.
  • Multiple elements: ME-ICP61 (4 acid digestion with ICP-AES analysis for 33 elements) and ME-MS61 (4 acid digestion with ICP-AES & ICP-MS analysis for 48 elements), the latter report for TRDD001 and former reported for holes TRDD002-TRDD022.
  • Copper oxides and selected intervals with native copper: ME-ICP44 (Aqua regia digestion with ICP-AES analysis) has been assayed, but not reported.
  • Assay results >10g/t gold and/or 1% copper are re-assayed.

The following assay techniques have been adopted for drilling at the Fairholme project:

  • Gold: Au-AA24 (Fire assay), reported.
  • Multiple elements: ME-ICP61 (4 acid digestion with ICP-AES analysis for 33 elements) and ME-MS61 (4 acid digestion with ICP-AES & ICP-MS analysis for 48 elements), the latter report for KFHD005.
Qualified Person

The scientific and technical information in this news release was prepared in accordance with the standards of the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum and National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") and was reviewed, verified and compiled by Kincora's geological staff under the supervision of Paul Cromie (BSc Hons. M.Sc. Economic Geology, PhD, member of the Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and Society of Economic Geologists), Exploration Manager Australia, who is the Qualified Persons for the purpose of NI 43-101.

JORC Competent Person Statement

Information in this report that relates to Exploration Results, Mineral Resources or Ore Reserves has been reviewed and approved by Paul Cromie, a Qualified Person under the definition established by JORC and have sufficient experience which is relevant to the style of mineralization and type of deposit under consideration and to the activity being undertaking to qualify as a Competent Person as defined in the 2012 Edition of the 'Australasian Code for Reporting of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves'.

Paul Cromie (BSc Hons. M.Sc. Economic Geology, PhD, member of the Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and Society of Economic Geologists), is Exploration Manager Australia for the Company.

Paul Cromie consents to the inclusion in this report of the matters based on his information in the form and context in which it appears.

The review and verification process for the information disclosed herein for the Trundle project has included the receipt of all material exploration data, results and sampling procedures of previous operators and review of such information by Kincora's geological staff using standard verification procedures.

JORC TABLE 1

Section 1 Sampling Techniques and Data

(Criteria in this section apply to all succeeding sections).

Criteria

JORC Code explanation

Commentary

Sampling

techniques

 

  • Nature and quality of sampling (e.g.

    cut channels, random chips, or

    specific specialised industry standard

    measurement tools appropriate to the

    minerals under investigation, such as

    down hole gamma sondes, or

    handheld XRF instruments, etc.).

    These examples should not be taken as

    limiting the broad meaning of sampling.
  • Include reference to measures taken

    to ensure sample representivity and the

    appropriate calibration of any

    measurement tools or systems used.
  • Aspects of the determination of

    mineralisation that are Material to

    the Public Report.
  • In cases where 'industry standard'

    work has been done this would be

    relatively simple (e.g. 'reverse

    circulation drilling was used to obtain

    1 m samples from which 3 kg was

    pulverised to produce a 30 g charge

    for fire assay'). In other cases more

    explanation may be required, such as

    where there is coarse gold that has

    inherent sampling problems. Unusual

    commodities or mineralisation types

    (eg submarine nodules) may warrant

    disclosure of detailed information
  • Kincora Copper Limited is the operator of the

    Trundle Project, with drilling using diamond coring

    and Air coring methods by DrillIt Consulting Pty Ltd,

    from which sub-samples were taken over 2 m

    intervals and pulverised to produce suitable aliquots

    for fire assay and ICP-MS.
  • Diamond drilling was used to obtain orientated

    samples from the ground, which was then

    structurally, geotechnically and geologically logged.
  • Sample interval selection was based on

    geological controls and mineralization.
  • Sampling was completed to industry standards

    with 1⁄4 core for PQ and HQ diameter diamond core

    and 1⁄2 core for NQ diameter diamond core sent to

    the lab for each sample interval.
  • Samples were assayed via the following methods:
    • Gold: Au-AA24 (Fire assay) unless above

      detection limit where the interval is re-assayed

      using fire assay method with atomic-absorption

      finish (Au-AA26 method of ALS). The technique

      allows to accurately determine the gold grade

      above 0.01 g/t and suitable for high – grade

      samples where grade exceeds 10 g/t.
    • Multiple elements: ME-ICP61 (4 acid digestion

      with ICP-AES analysis for 33 elements) and

      ME-MS61 (4 acid digestion with ICP-AES &

      ICP-MS analysis for 48 elements)
    • Copper oxides and selected intervals with

      native copper: ME-ICP44 (Aqua regia digestion

      with ICP-AES analysis) has been assayed, but

      not reported
    • Assay results >10g/t gold and/or 1% copper

      are re-assayed
  • Historic sampling on other projects included soils,

    rock chips and drilling (aircore, RAB, RC and

    diamond core).

Drilling

techniques

  • Drill type (e.g. core, reverse

    circulation, open-hole hammer,

    rotary air blast, auger, Bangka,

    sonic, etc) and details (e.g. core

    diameter, triple or standard tube,

    depth of diamond tails, face-sampling

    bit or other type, whether core is

    oriented and if so, by what method,

    etc.).
  • Drilling by Kincora at Trundle has used diamond

    core drilling with PQ, HQ and NQ diameter core

    depending on drilling depth and some shallow depth

    Air core drilling.
  • All Kincora core was oriented using a Reflex ACE

    electronic tool.
  • Historic drilling on Kincora projects used a variety

    of methods including aircore, rotary air blast, reverse

    circulation, and diamond core. Methods are clearly

    stated in the body of the previous reports with any

    historic exploration results.

Drill sample

recovery

  • Method of recording and assessing

    core and chip sample recoveries and

    results assessed.
  • Measures taken to maximise sample

    recovery and ensure representative

    nature of the samples.
  • Whether a relationship exists between

    sample recovery and grade and whether

    sample bias may have occurred due to

    preferential loss/gain of fine/coarse material.
  • Drill Core recovery was logged.
  • Diamond drill core recoveries are contained in the

    body of the announcement.
  • Core recoveries were recorded by measuring the

    total length of recovered core expressed as a proportion

    of the drilled run length.
  • Core recoveries for most of Kincora's drilling were

    in average over 97.1%, with two holes averaging 85.0%
  • Poor recovery zones are generally associated with

    later fault zones and the upper oxidised parts of drill holes.
  • There is no relationship between core recoveries

    and grades.

Logging

  • Whether core and chip samples have

    been geologically and geotechnically

    logged to a level of detail to support

    appropriate Mineral Resource estimation,

    mining studies and metallurgical studies.
  • Whether logging is qualitative or

    quantitative in nature. Core (or costean,

    channel, etc.) photography.
  • The total length and percentage of the

    relevant intersections logged.
  • All Kincora holes are geologically logged for their

    entire length including lithology, alteration,

    mineralisation (sulphides and oxides), veining

    and structure.
  • Logging is mostly qualitative in nature, with some

    visual estimation of mineral proportions that is

    semi-quantitative. Measurements are taken on

    structures where core is orientated.
  • All core and Air core chips are photographed.
  • Historic drilling was logged with logging mostly

    recorded on paper in reports lodged with the NSW

    Department of Mines.

Sub-sampling

techniques and

sample

preparation

  • If core, whether cut or sawn and

    whether quarter, half or all core taken.
  • If non-core, whether riffled, tube

    sampled, rotary split, etc. and whether

    sampled wet or dry.
  • For all sample types, the nature,

    quality and appropriateness of the

    sample preparation technique.
  • Quality control procedures adopted

    for all sub-sampling stages to maximise

    representivity of samples.
  • Measures taken to ensure that the

    sampling is representative of the in situ

    material collected, including for instance

    results for field duplicate/second-half

    sampling.
  • Whether sample sizes are appropriate

    to the grain size of the material being

    sampled.
  • Once all geological information was extracted from

    the drill core, the sample intervals were cut with an

    Almonte automatic core saw, bagged and delivered to

    the laboratory.
  • This is an appropriate sampling technique for this

    style of mineralization and is the industry standard for

    sampling of diamond drill core.
  • PQ and HQ sub-samples were quarter core and

    NQ half core.
  • Sample sizes are considered appropriate for the

    disseminated, generally fine-grained nature of

    mineralisation being sampled.
  • Duplicate sampling on some native copper bearing

    intervals in TRDD001 was undertaken to determine if

    quarter core samples were representative, with results

    indicating that sampling precision was acceptable.
  • For air core holes, sampling used PVC spears into

    the rock chip bags that were collected from the drill rig

    cyclone at 1m intervals.
  • Following high grade gold assay results received for

    a 2 meter interval in TRDD032 (from 850m), re-assays

    for three 2 meter samples where undertaken from reject

    samples (the coarse part of samples) seeking to confirm

    the original high grade interval (12.55g/t gold) and also

    to test if quarter core samples were representative.
  • Duplicated values for the two adjacent 2 meter

    samples were in-line with both gold and base metals.

    For the original high grade 2 meter sample (from 850m)

    both re-assay results were materially higher

    (via Au-AA26), and base metals higher than the original

    results. Kincora has reported the average of the assay

    results for both gold and base metals.
  • No other duplicate samples were taken.

Quality of

assay data

and

laboratory

tests

 

 

  • The nature, quality and

    appropriateness of the assaying and

    laboratory procedures used and

    whether the technique is considered

    partial or total.
  • For geophysical tools, spectrometers,

    handheld XRF instruments, etc, the

    parameters used in determining the

    analysis including instrument make and

    model, reading times, calibrations factors

    applied and their derivation, etc.
  • Nature of quality control procedures

    adopted (e.g. standards, blanks,

    duplicates, external laboratory checks)

    and whether acceptable levels of accuracy

    (ie lack of bias) and precision have been

    established.
  • Gold was determined by fire assay and a suite of

    other elements including Cu and Mo by 4-acid digest

    with ICP-AES finish at ALS laboratories in Orange

    and Brisbane. Over-grade Cu (>1%) was diluted and

    re-assayed by AAS.
  • Techniques are considered total for all elements.

    Native copper mineralisation in TRDD001 was

    re-assayed to check for any effects of incomplete

    digestion and no issues were found.
  • For holes up to TRDD007 every 20th sample was

    either a commercially supplied pulp standard or pulp

    blank. After TRDD007 coarse blanks were utilised.
  • Results for blanks and standards are checked upon

    receipt of assay certificates. All standards have

    reported within certified limits of accuracy

    and precision.
  • Historic assays on other projects were mostly

    gold by fire assay and other elements by ICP.

Verification

of sampling

and assaying

  • The verification of significant

    intersections by either independent or

    alternative company personnel.
  • The use of twinned holes.
  • Documentation of primary data, data

    entry procedures, data verification, data

    storage (physical and electronic) protocols.
  • Discuss any adjustment to assay data.
  • Significant intercepts were calculated by Kincora's

    geological staff.
  • No twinned holes have been completed.
  • The intercepts have not been verified by

    independent personal.
  • Logging data is captured digitally on electronic

    logging tablets and sampling data is captured on

    paper logs and transcribed to an electronic format

    into a relational database maintained at Kincora's

    Mongolian office. Transcribed data is verified by

    the logging geologist.
  • Assay data is received from the laboratory in

    electronic format and uploaded to the master

    database.
  • No adjustments to assay data have been made.
  • Outstanding assays are outlined in the body

    of the announcement.

Location of

data points

  • Accuracy and quality of surveys used

    to locate drill holes (collar and down-hole

    surveys), trenches, mine workings and

    other locations used in Mineral Resource

    estimation.
  • Specification of the grid system used.
  • Quality and adequacy of topographic control.
  • Collar positions are set up using a hand-held GPS

    and later picked up with a DGPS to less than 10cm

    horizontal and vertical accuracy.
  • Drillholes are surveyed downhole every 30m using

    an electronic multi-shot magnetic instrument.
  • Due to the presence of magnetite in some alteration

    zones, azimuth readings are occasionally unreliable

    and magnetic intensity data from the survey tool is

    used to identify these readings and flag them as

    such in the database.
  • Grid system used is the Map Grid of Australia

    Zone 55, GDA 94 datum.
  • Topography in the area of Trundle is near-flat and

    drill collar elevations provide adequate control

Data spacing

and distribution

  • Data spacing for reporting of Exploration Results.
  • Whether the data spacing and distribution is

    sufficient to establish the degree of geological

    and grade continuity appropriate for the Mineral

    Resource and Ore Reserve estimation procedure(s)

    and classifications applied.
  • Whether sample compositing has been applied.
  • Kincora drilling at Trundle is at an early stage, with

    drill holes stepping out from previous mineralisation

    intercepts at various distances.
  • Data spacing at this stage is insufficient to establish

    the continuity required for a Mineral Resource estimate.
  • No sample compositing was applied to Kincora drilling.
  • Historic drilling on Trundle and other projects was

    completed at various drill hole spacings and no other

    projects have spacing sufficient to establish a

    mineral resource.

Orientation

of data in

relation to

geological

structure

  • Whether the orientation of sampling

    achieves unbiased sampling of possible

    structures and the extent to which this is

    known, considering the deposit type.
  • If the relationship between the drilling

    orientation and the orientation of key

    mineralised structures is considered to

    have introduced a sampling bias, this

    should be assessed and reported if material.
  • The orientation of Kincora drilling at Trundle has

    changed as new information on the orientation of

    mineralisation and structures has become available.
  • The angled drill holes were directed as best

    possible across the known lithological and

    interpreted mineralised structures.
  • There does not appear to be a sampling bias

    introduced by hole orientation in that drilling not

    parallel to mineralised structures.

Sample

security

  • The measures taken to ensure sample security.
  • Kincora staff or their contractors oversaw all stages

    of drill core sampling. Bagged samples were placed

    inside polyweave sacks that were zip-tied, stored in a

    locked container and then transported to the laboratory

    by Kincora field personnel.

Audits

or reviews

  • The results of any audits or reviews of sampling techniques and data

.

  • Mining Associates has completed an review of

    sampling techniques and procedures dated January

    31st, 2021, as outlined in the Independent Technical

    Report included in the ASX listing prospectus,

    which is available at:

    https://www.kincoracopper.com/investors/asx-prospectus

 

Section 2 Reporting of Exploration Results

(Criteria listed in the preceding section also apply to this section.)

Criteria

JORC Code explanation

Commentary

Mineral

tenement

and land

tenure status

  • Type, reference name/number, location

    and ownership including agreements or

    material issues with third parties such as

    joint ventures, partnerships, overriding

    royalties, native title interests, historical

    sites, wilderness or national park and

    environmental settings.
  • The security of the tenure held at the

    time of reporting along with any known

    impediments to obtaining a licence to

    operate in the area.
  • Kincora holds four exploration licences in NSW

    and rights to a further six exploration licences

    through an agreement with RareX Limited

    (RareX, formerly known as Clancy Exploration).
  • EL8222 (Trundle), EL6552 (Fairholme), EL6915

    (Fairholme Manna), EL8502 (Jemalong), EL6661

    (Cundumbul) and EL7748 (Condobolin) are in a

    JV with RareX where Kincora has a 65% interest

    in the respective 6 licenses and is the operator

    /sole funder of all further exploration until a

    positive scoping study or preliminary economic

    assessment ("PEA") on a project by project basis.

    Upon completion of PEA, a joint venture will be

    formed with standard funding/dilution and right of

    first refusal on transfers.
  • EL8960 (Nevertire), EL8929 (Nyngan), EL9320

    (Mulla) and EL9340 (Condobolin East) are

    wholly owned by Kincora.
  • Kincora has formed an exploration alliance for

    EL6661 (Cundumbul) with Earth AI Pty Ltd

    ("Earth AI"). The success based alliance seeks

    to leverage Earth AI's vertically integrated,

    proprietary artificial intelligence and machine

    learning capacity to generate and drill test

    targets at their cost. See the October 6th,

    2022 press release for further details.
  • All licences are in good standing and there

    are no known impediments to obtaining

    a licence to operate.

Exploration

done by

other parties

  • Acknowledgment and appraisal of

    exploration by other parties.
  • All Kincora projects have had previous exploration

    work undertaken.
  • The review and verification process for the

    information disclosed herein and of other parties

    for the Trundle project has included the receipt of

    all material exploration data, results and sampling

    procedures of previous operators and review of

    such information by Kincora's geological staff

    using standard verification procedures. Further

    details of exploration efforts and data of other

    parties are providing in the March 1st, 2021,

    Independent Technical Report included in the

    ASX listing prospectus, which is available at:

    https://www.kincoracopper.com/investors/asx-prospectus

Geology

  • Deposit type, geological setting and

    style of mineralisation.
  • All projects ex EL7748 (Condobolin) and EL9340

    (Condobolin East) are within the Macquarie Arc,

    part of the Lachlan Orogen.
  • Rocks comprise successions of volcano-sedimentary

    rocks of Ordovician age intruded by suites of

    subduction arc-related intermediate to felsic

    intrusions of late Ordovician to early Silurian age.
  • Kincora is exploring for porphyry-style copper and

    gold mineralisation, copper-gold skarn plus related

    high sulphidation and epithermal gold systems.

Drill hole

Information

  • A summary of all information material

    to the understanding of the exploration

    results including a tabulation of the

    following information for all Material

    drill holes:
  • easting and northing of the drill

    hole collar
  • elevation or RL (Reduced Level –

    elevation above sea level in metres)

    of the drill hole collar
  • dip and azimuth of the hole
  • down hole length and interception depth
  • hole length.
  • If the exclusion of this information is

    justified on the basis that the

    information is not Material and this

    exclusion does not detract from the

    understanding of the report, the

    Competent Person should clearly

    explain why this is the case.
  • Detailed information on Kincora's drilling at

    Trundle is given in the body of the report.

Data

aggregation

methods

  • In reporting Exploration Results,

    weighting averaging techniques,

    maximum and/or minimum grade

    truncations (e.g. cutting of high

    grades) and cut-off grades are

    usually Material and should

    be stated.
  • Where aggregate intercepts

    incorporate short lengths of high

    grade results and longer lengths

    of low grade results, the

    procedure used for such

    aggregation should be stated

    and some typical examples of

    such aggregations should be

    shown in detail.
  • The assumptions used for any

    reporting of metal equivalent

    values should be clearly stated.
  • For Kincora drilling at Trundle the following

    methods were used:
  • Interpreted near-surface skarn gold-copper

    intercepts were aggregated using a cut-off

    grade of 0.20 g/t Au and 0.10% Cu respectively.
  • Porphyry gold-copper intercepts were

    aggregated using a cut-off grade of

    0.10 g/t Au and 0.05% Cu respectively.
  • Internal dilution below cut off included was

    generally less than 25% of the total reported

    intersection length and is noted in the

    summary tables of significant mineralised

    intervals of the respective holes.
  • Core loss was included as dilution at

    zero values.
  • Average gold and copper grades calculated

    as averages weighted to sample lengths.
  • Historic drilling results in other project

    areas are reported at different cut-off grades

    depending on the nature of mineralisation.

Relationship

between

mineralisation

widths and

intercept lengths

  • These relationships are particularly

    important in the reporting of

    Exploration Results.
  • If the geometry of the mineralisation

    with respect to the drill hole angle is

    known, its nature should be reported.
  • If it is not known and only the down

    hole lengths are reported, there

    should be a clear statement to this

    effect (eg 'down hole length, true

    width not known').
  • Due to the uncertainty of mineralisation

    orientation, the true width of

    mineralisation is not known at Trundle.
  • Intercepts from historic drilling reported

    at other projects are also of unknown

    true width.

Diagrams

  • Appropriate maps and sections (with

    scales) and tabulations of intercepts

    should be included for any significant

    discovery being reported These

    should include, but not be limited to a

    plan view of drill hole collar locations

    and appropriate sectional views.
  • Relevant diagrams and figures are included in the

    body of the report, including the current working

    models and interpretations.

Balanced

reporting

  • Where comprehensive reporting of all

    Exploration Results is not practicable,

    representative reporting of both low and

    high grades and/or widths should be

    practiced to avoid misleading reporting

    of Exploration Results.
  • Intercepts reported for Kincora's drilling at

    Trundle are zones of higher grade within

    non-mineralised or weakly anomalous material.

Other

substantive

exploration

data

  • Other exploration data, if meaningful

    and material, should be reported

    including (but not limited to): geological

    observations; geophysical survey results;

    geochemical survey results; bulk samples

    – size and method of treatment;

    metallurgical test results; bulk density,

    groundwater, geotechnical and rock

    characteristics; potential deleterious

    or contaminating substances.
  • No other exploration data is considered material

    to the reporting of results at Trundle. Other data

    of interest to further exploration targeting is

    included in the body of the report.
  • Historic exploration data coverage and results

    are included in the body of the report for Kincora's

    other projects.

Further

work

  • The nature and scale of planned further

    work (e.g. tests for lateral extensions or

    depth extensions or large-scale step-out

    drilling).
  • Diagrams clearly highlighting the areas

    of possible extensions, including the

    main geological interpretations and

    future drilling areas, provided this

    information is not commercially sensitive.
  • Drilling has concluded at the Mordialloc,

    Mordialloc NE and Trundle Park prospects

    at the time of publication of this report and

    plans for further step-out drilling are in place

    at the Trundle Park (Southern Extension

    Zone and North-East Gold Zone targets),

    Dunns (North and South) and

    Botfield prospects.

 

 

Why porphyry exploration? 
- The discovery of a new globally significant porphyry deposit(s) generates significant shareholder returns through the cycle
- Porphyries generally occur in a series of deposits along mineralised trends: offering multiple discovery opportunity
- Porphyries supply >70% of the world’s copper with new discoveries needed to achieve net zero carbon ambitions (CNW Group/Kincora Copper Limited)

Trundle: Ticks the boxes for a porphyry explorer  
- Two new intrusion related discoveries to date
- Last phase of drilling discovered the largest mineralised skarn system in NSW with ore grade porphyry interval 
- Expert technical reviews advanced mineral system controls, refine vectors and generate high conviction targets
- Next phase of drilling focuses on a series of shallow ore grade porphyry targets + deeper porphyry source to skarn discovery (CNW Group/Kincora Copper Limited)

SOURCE Kincora Copper Limited