Sego Resources Inc. announced geochemical results from its Phase 2 2018 trenching programme completed December 04, 2018 at the Company's Miner Mountain project. Sego is 100% owner of the Miner Mountain project, an alkalic copper-gold porphyry exploration project located near Princeton, British Columbia. In addition to drilling, Sego excavated 100 meters of trenching during the programme, and exposed a new important zone approximately 500 metres west of the known Cuba Zone. This new zone was originally defined by combined soil and geophysical anomalies. The trenches exposed approximately 40 metres of copper mineralization, including malachite, azurite, and chalcopyrite. A historic percussion drill hole drilled by Sego and located near the Northwest end of the discovery trench assayed 0.2% copper and 0.1 grams/tonne gold over its entire length. It is interesting to note that the rock geochemistry at the percussion drill hole in the trench is similar to the drill hole assays. Two samples in the new 2018 trench ran greater than 10,000 ppm or 1% copper, which is the upper detection limit for the rock geochemistry, and all mineralized samples will be re-submitted for fire assay. The Phase 2 2018 drilling and trenching programme was developed as the beginning of a much larger scale exploration programme designed to expand and enhance mineralization at Sego's Miner Mountain Project. The results of the recent trenching are being utilized by comparing geochemical and geophysical anomalies and alteration strengths on the newly discovered zone to determine future targets property-wide. As a result of this data, several of Sego's known targets have been upgraded to a much higher priority. Diamond drill results on the Phase 2 2018 programme are pending and Sego expects to receive these assays within the next two weeks.