Advance United Holdings Inc. reported the summer work program on the Buck Lake Property in the Batchewana Greenstone Belt ("BGB") of Northern Ontario is underway. The Buck Lake Property lies within the eastern part of the BGB of the Superior Province approximately two hours north-northeast by road from Sault Ste Marie and is comprised of 78 claims totaling approximately 1,715 hectares. The property covers three (3) known mineralized areas which have potential for Volcanic Massive Sulphide Deposits (VMS) - the Noranda, El Carmen, and Goulais River Zones.

Geological mapping and prospecting crews have been mobilized to the property to begin field work in the area referred to as the Noranda Zone. Numerous base metal occurrences are known in the BGB and the past producing Tribag Mine occurring 30 km to the southwest was a significant copper producer. The work program will focus initially on targets around the massive sulphide mineralization intersections identified in previous drilling in the Noranda Zone and the extended VLF-EM anomalies identified related to this mineralization.

They will also be following up on anomalous copper in soil results obtained in the 2017 soil survey and rock samples which returned 0.3% copper. The ground VLF-EM survey completed on the property in 2021 identified strong conductors which have been interpreted to be related to major mineralized zones which traverse the property. An area in the central part of the property, the Noranda Zone, where drill intersections identified massive sulphide mineralization will be the focus of intense prospecting, sampling, and mapping.

Past work in the eastern part of the BGB has been limited in part due to poor access and mineral rights ownership of a large number of townships by Algoma Central Railway but there has been some work in the vicinity and on the property in the 1970s by companies such as Granges. A modest exploration program on the Buck Lake Property was carried out by Noranda in the mid 1980's which resulted in the definition of a 3,000-meter-long airborne and ground geophysical electromagnetic ("EM") anomaly. Noranda followed up with a single drill hole which intersected two 4-meter-thick massive sulphide zones which reported copper and zinc mineralization, although no assays were reported.

In 2017 a reconnaissance soil survey was completed, and a 2,500-meter-long copper/zinc anomaly was identified overlying the area of the former drilling and extending to the south. In 2021 a ground VLF-EM survey outlined the known EM anomaly in detail near the Noranda Drill hole and resulted in several key areas for follow-up.