Trek Metals Limited announced that it has received encouraging results from initial exploration due diligence work completed last year prior to entering into the acquisition agreement for the Tambourah Project Exploration Licence E45/5484. The Tambourah tenement package, located in close proximity to the Company's existing Pincunah Gold Project in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, offers strong prospectivity for new gold and base metals discoveries and substantially enhances the Company's exploration pipeline in this world-class mining region. The Tambourah Project is considered highly prospective for gold deposits with at least 13 known gold occurrences and old mining workings located on the project. The results reported in this announcement are from field work completed in late 2020. A desktop review was completed prior to the program in order to identify areas of elevated gold previously identified by De Grey Mining in 2008 (rock sampling), Cazaly Resources Limited in 2012 (rock sampling) and Fortescue Metals Group in 2014 (stream sampling). Resource Potentials also re-processed the geophysical data across the project to produce a series of images to assist the geological interpretation. The focus of the fieldwork was to relocate previous workings, and areas of anomalous gold geochemistry at surface identified by previous explores in order to assess the area for the potential to host a significant gold deposit. A total of 41 samples were collected on E45/5484 across six main prospects. Desktop studies by Trek in the prospect area highlighted a significant assay result of 1.3g/t Au from a float rock sample that was described as a ferruginous quartz vein. The review also indicated that the prospect area is also located on a west-northwest trending linear zone described in the Geological Survey of Western Australia 1:100,000 map as "blue-black-grey-white hydrothermal silica and chert in dykes and veins" that extend for 1.6km on the license. The historical 1.3 g/t Au rock chip by Cazaly was relocated by Trek in the field and identified as a very large gossanous boulder with quartz veins sourced from the top of a steep ridge to the north. Various other very large boulders 2-3m in diameter occur 150m to the west. The boulders were sampled and returned a best assay of 0.2g/t Au. A gossan outcrop was sampled at the top of the ridge but only returned 0.02g/t, which indicates that the source of the mineralised boulders is yet to be located. Desktop studies highlighted this area as a structurally complex geological setting where an isoclinal folded anticline of alternating ultramafic and mafic rocks is intersected by multiple north-northeast trending faults. Previous rock chip sampling by Cazaly returned one sample that assayed 0.8g/t Au. Old workings were inspected by Trek in the field that extend to 5m depth into weathered bedrock as well as various other smaller workings and alluvial diggings over 200m strike trending north-south. The best rock sample was returned from outcrop within the larger working where 20-30cm wide layer-parallel gossan bands associated with vuggy silica were sampled and returned 3.0g/t Au. A rock sample 100m to the west assayed 0.8 g/t Au, which suggests the potential for multiple stacked mineralised lenses. Previous rock samples by Cazaly returned grades of 0.3g/t Au and 0.5 g/t Au and were described as "iron-silica stone". The area was also highlighted as an anomalous source region as indicated by the Fortescue stream sampling results, where 11ppb gold was returned from a stream sample located 800m to the north downstream from the rock sample location. The WS3 prospect area is characterised by an outcropping band of extensive gossans with varying widths from 0.5-2m that outcrop for at least 100m at surface and dip 78 degrees toward the south-west. A best assay result of 3.6g/t Au was returned from a sample of classic black boxwork gossan which is partly silicified, 10-30cm wide and hosted by a highly altered mafic rock. Sampling of gossan outcrop located 200m along strike to the south-east returned assays of 2.5g/t Au. An initial review of the airborne magnetic data suggests there is a subtle NW trending demagnetised lineament that occurs coincident and parallel with the mineralised gossan trend at the WS3 Prospect. ELEVATOR PROSPECT: Previous sampling by De Grey returned rock assays up to 3.7g/t Au from a sample described as a quartz-chlorite-carbonate vein. Cazaly also undertook some rock sampling which returned results up to 0.4g/t Au from a shallow pit.