Outcrop Silver & Gold Corporation announced new drill results from its ongoing exploration program at the Santaa high-grade silver project in Colombia. Recent drilling has extended the Aguilar vein system by 450 metres to the south, confirming continuity beneath younger volcanosedimentary cover and identifying multiple high-grade intercepts in blind targets. These results significantly expand the known footprint of the vein system and support the potential emergence of a new high-grade shoot.
Outcrop Silver continues to drill with three rigs along the fully permitted 17 kilometres mineralized trend in preparation for its first quarter 2026 mineral resource update. Highlights: DH535 intercepted 0.84 metres grading 1,659 g/t AgEq. Step-out drilling, demonstrated Outcrop Silver's ability to identify high-grade silver mineralization in blind targets and reinforcing the potential that remains open along strike and at depth.
Results lay the groundwork for future drilling and reinforce the company's expansion strategy ahead of its first quarter 2026 Mineral Resource Update. These new results, together with previously reported intercepts, confirm the Aguilar vein's continuity in blind targets and significantly expand its known footprint. Importantly, drill holes DH514, DH517, DH520, DH524, and DH528 represent a step-out of 450 metres to the south from known mineralization and support the potential discovery of a new mineralized shoot.DH532 and DH535 are part of the resource definition program and demonstrate that the previously known high-grade shoot remains open along strike and atdepth.
The Aguilar vein system continues to exhibit a complex structural architecture, with multiple splays, parallel structures, and shallow, high-grade mineralization. Drill hole assay results reported in this release. The current knowledge of the step-out in the Aguilar vein does not allow for estimating the true width of the intercepts.
Recent step-out drilling to the south has added a new dimension to the geological understanding of the system. Drill holes have intercepted mineralized veins beneath a younger volcanosedimentary cover, confirming the presence of blind targets -- areas where veins do not outcrop at the surface but remain open along strike and at depth; and results lay the groundwork for future drilling.

















