Leviathan Gold to Acquire Significant Mineral Exploration Land Package in Bosnia and Herzegovina

In This Article:

  • Foča Project covers a highly prospective land package in an under explored mineral belt between the Rupice Mine (Adriatic Metals plc.) and the Trepča Mines of Kosovo.

  • Yugoslav drilling records indicate an average mineralized thickness of 15 metres at 13.25% Pb+Zn over three diamond drill holes at Vrela; recent rock chip sampling at this vicinity has returned values of up to 347 g/t Ag, 10.1% Pb and 40% Zn.

  • Recent soil sampling has identified continuous base metal anomalism for over 2 kilometres beyond the area of historic drilling and high grade rock chip sampling at Vrela.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Nov. 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Leviathan Gold Ltd. (“Leviathan”, the “Company”) (LVX – TSXV, 0GP – Germany) is pleased to announce that it has entered into a share exchange agreement dated November 22, 2024 (the “Agreement”), with LS Lithium Corp. (to be renamed Foca Metals Corp.) (“FMC”) and the shareholders of FMC to acquire 100% of the issued and outstanding common shares of FMC (the “Acquisition”) in consideration for an aggregate of 9,000,000 common shares of the Company at a deemed price of $0.0525 per share (the “Consideration Shares”), and thereby a 100% indirect interest in the Foča Project (“Foča”, the “Project”), a highly prospective land package in Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Project covers 100.7 square kilometres across three exploration licenses, includes a series of silver and base metal targets tentatively considered to be of sedimentary exhalative or related origin, and lies approximately 100 kilometres south of the Vareš project of Adriatic Metals plc. Vareš hosts Indicated Mineral Resources of 18.3 Mt at 168 g/t Ag, 1.3 g/t Au, 4.6% Zn, 2.9% Pb, 0.4% Cu and 30% BaSO4 and Inferred Mineral Resources of 2.8 Mt at 75 g/t Ag, 0.5 g/t Au, 2.4% Zn, 1.6% Pb, 0.2% Cu and 13% BaSO41 in rocks of closely comparable age and host lithology to those at Foča - within the so-called Central Dinaride metallogenic zone of the Western Tethyan Belt.

Another prominent group of Central Dinaride polymetallic deposits is the Trepča Mines complex in Kosovo, which falls approximately 300 kilometers southeast of the Project at which historic production of 60.5 Mt at 8% Pb+Zn and more than 4,500 tons of Ag2 is documented, and which in the 1980’s reportedly employed 20,000 people, supposedly accounting for 70% of all Yugoslavia's mineral wealth3. A number of other polymetallic mineral occurrences including past and current producing mines fall in closer proximity to Foča (Figure 1), and provide a broader indication of the potential metal endowment of this highly under-explored mineral district, which is almost entirely untouched by modern, systematic exploration.