Breaker Resources NL announced exceptionally strong drilling results that significantly increase the resource and mining potential of its greenfields Bombora gold discovery, located in the 100% owned Lake Roe Project, 100 km east of Kalgoorlie, WA. The new high-grade steep and flat gold lodes were discovered in several areas within the 2.2 km- long Bombora discovery. The results materially increase the width, depth and strike extent of high- grade mineralisation in the main discovery zone and create potential for a single large 2.2 km-long open pit. The drilling results relate to 53 reverse circulation (RC) drill holes (7,339m) and 18 diamond drill holes (4,175.9m) located mainly within the 2.2 km-long Bombora discovery zone. Six reconnaissance RC drill holes were also completed in the Claypan South area. New drill holes are shown selectively in plan. This is the ninth round of results from resource delineation drilling, which commenced in February 2017. A maiden JORC Resource estimate is planned for release in the March 2018 quarter. Importantly the gold mineralisation is opening up to the east and at depth which increases the size of a potential open pit. The drill hits in the south and central areas may also mean that this potential open pit may take in all of the 2.2km discovery zone. The results also highlight the underground potential, an aspect reinforced by the persistent, high- grade nature of the drilling results and their continuity which is most evident in long section. The potential to mine underground has scope to add multiples to any shallow gold inventory constrained by the economic limits of open pit mining. The expanding footprint of the gold mineralisation means that the maiden Resource planned for the March 2018 quarter is likely to be just the start. Drilling has resumed after a three week break and are taking steps to accelerate exploration activities in more than 500 square kilometres outside the 2.2km Bombora discovery. These reported resource drilling results are part of a broader program of resource drilling that is progressively closing the drill hole spacing to a nominal 40m x 20m using a combination of RC and diamond drilling. The new results relate to fifty three RC drill holes BBRC0555-0577, BBRC0685-0686, BBRC0688-0715; three diamond drill holes BBDD0039-0041; and fifteen pre-collared diamond drill holes BBRD0326, BBRD0448, BBRD0465, BBRD0550-0553, BBRD0637, BBRD0647, BBRD0669, BBRD0671, BBRD0675-0676, BBRD0682 and BBRD0687. Most of the diamond drill holes in the current round of reporting are diamond tails on precollared RC holes to test the depth potential in the central and northern parts of the Bombora discovery. The drilling also includes the initial results from 20m x 100m-spaced drilling currently underway in the 660100N to 6600500N area in the southern part of the discovery zone, as well as further results from drilling currently in progress to improve the drill density in the 6601200N-6601560N area in the central part of the discovery zone. Six reconnaissance RC drill holes were also completed near the granite contact to the east of the main discovery zone in the Claypan South area. Six RC drill holes were completed on six 100 m-spaced sections to assess widespread oxide gold anomalism in previous aircore drilling. All 18 diamond drill holes and 41 of the 47 RC drill holes in the 2.2 km Bombora discovery zone intersected significant gold mineralisation. New drill holes are shown in plan, long- section and cross-section. More significant diamond and RC drill intersections. A full listing of assay results above a nominal 0.2g/t Au lower cut-off grade. Many of the RC results are based on preliminary (4m) composite samples. The down-hole intersections reported do not represent true width as the geometry of the mineralised structures is still being assessed in several areas.