Rise Identifies Numerous Exploration Targets at I-M Mine

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwired - Jun 1, 2017) - Rise Gold Corp. (CSE:RISE)(RISE.CN)(CNSX:RISE)(OTC PINK:RYES) ("Rise" or the "Company") announces the completion and results from its study of historic mine workings and geology at the past producing Idaho-Maryland Mine (the "I-M Mine"), located in the very productive Grass Valley District of northern California.

The Company is pleased to announce the completion and filing on SEDAR of an independent geological report prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 pertaining to the Idaho-Maryland Gold Project. The Technical Report on the Idaho-Maryland Project Grass Valley California, USA (the "Report") was completed by Amec Foster Wheeler Americas Limited ("Amec"), an industry leader in global mining solutions. The Report dated effective June 1st, 2017, was authored by Mr. Greg Kulla, P. Geo, a Principal Geologist with Amec. The Report is available on the Company website, www.risegoldcorp.com, and on www.sedar.com.

The Report identifies numerous exploration targets in and around the historic I-M Mine workings which warrant further evaluation to determine their importance. The most significant exploration targets identified at the Idaho-Maryland Gold Project are in untested ground below the historic mine workings. These targets are the Idaho #1 Vein, Crackle Zone, Brunswick, and 3 Vein System.

The I-M Project hosts numerous exploration targets that warrant drilling and the exploration of these targets will require a significant drill program. These targets range from vertical depths of 1,600 ft (488 m) to 5,000 ft (1,524 m).

A summary of the major exploration findings of the Report are presented in this news release. Readers are recommended to refer to the Report to review figures and tables describing the exploration targets.

Crackle Zone

The Crackle Zone exploration target is a conceptual target based on an idea proposed by consulting geologist, Alan Bateman, that mineralizing fluids responsible for the gold mineralization encountered at the Idaho-Maryland Mine may have formed a zone of intense quartz veins and stockwork within the Brunswick Block in response to the interaction of the Idaho, 6-3, and Morehouse Faults.

In 1948, Alan Bateman spent a month at the I-M Mine studying the geology and mine workings. Alan Bateman was a highly-regarded economic geologist during this era and a graduate of and professor at Yale University.

Bateman prepared a summary of his geological findings and theories of mineralization in his 1948 Report. Bateman described how the three main bounding faults of the Brunswick "Porphyrite" Block, which hosts the Brunswick mineralization, converge at depth resulting in the tapering or narrowing of the Brunswick Block. Bateman believed that as the block narrowed at depth it would be subject to more fracturing and that a large crackled zone could exist. Based on Bateman's theories of mineralization he believed that the mineralizing solutions would have to pass through this crackled zone and possibly may have formed a large-scale stockwork mineralized body.