Acquisition Of Three Additional Potential Intrusions On-Trend With Flat Gold Project

VANCOUVER - Tectonic Metals Inc. announced the acquisition of three potential intrusions that are on-trend and similar in many respects to Flat's main, gold-bearing intrusion, Chicken Mountain, and the potential buried intrusion at Golden Apex. Immediately north of and contiguous with Tectonic's 92,160 acre Flat Gold Project, the Company added 7,680 acres (48 x 160 acres state claims): 2,720 acres (17 x 160 acres state claims) were acquired from a third-party vendor, and 4,960 acres (31 x 160 acres state claims) of new claims were staked by Tectonic. The Company secured the rights to three geophysical anomalies north of the Flat Gold Project that follow the 20km "string-of-pearls" geophysical trend of several confirmed intrusion related gold systems currently being explored. These potential intrusions represent the possible bedrock source of the historic placer production from Otter Creek and Malamute Pup.

"Introducing ‘The Flat Gold System' - a network of interconnected geophysical anomalies that indicate six confirmed or potential intrusion related gold systems. Spanning a 20km trend, these intrusion targets are significant in size and interpreted to be bedrock sources for placer gold, reinforcing our belief that Flat is a Tier One Opportunity," said Tony Reda, President and Chief Executive Officer. "It is truly remarkable that our company has access to such a large number of intrusion targets, which would be nearly impossible in a more established, mature, exploration and mining district. There is a collective sense of relief and excitement now that we have secured the right to explore these three additional potential intrusions north of the Flat Gold Project.

"The complex north of Otter Creek appears to contain multiple potential intrusion-related gold systems similar to the Chicken Mountain intrusion, which Tectonic is exploring through drill testing this year. Two of the potential intrusions lie immediately north of and drain into Otter Creek, which has already produced 417,000 ounces of recorded placer gold1. Surprisingly, historic data indicates that these areas have seen minimal exploration and no drilling in contrast to the southern portions of the Flat Gold System."