Cartier Resources Inc. announced that it has filed on SEDAR the technical report titled NI 43-101 Technical Report and Mineral Resource Estimate for the Benoist Property, Québec, Canada. The NI 43-101 compliant report, completed by InnovExplo Inc. for Cartier, includes mineral resource estimate for the Pusticamica Gold Deposit of the Benoist Property, located 70 km northeast of Lebel-sur-Quévillon in the province of Québec. At this stage, it is reasonable to believe that a crown pillar, somewhere between 500,000 and 700,000 t at grades between 3.5 g/t AuEq and 4.5 g/t AuEq, may be added to the project conditional to the success of a geotechnical drilling program, a rock mechanic study and a resources estimation that follow NI 43-101 and CIM definitions and guidelines. This is based on drilling results and preliminary grade block model covering the crown pillar between 30 m to 100 m below surface. The reader should be cautioned that this potential crown pillar is not a mineral resource estimate and is conceptual in nature. There has been insufficient exploration and engineering works to define this as a mineral resource, and it is uncertain if further exploration and engineering will result in the exploration target being delineated as a mineral resource. The Benoist Property hosts the Pusticamica gold deposit, which also contains copper and silver concentrations. This mineralization has all the typical characteristics sought by Cartier and as at the Chimo Mine Project could rapidly outline high-tonnage mineralization. Cartier holds a 100% interest in the property for which 2.6% net smelter return (“NSR”) royalties have been awarded of which 2.1% is redeemable at any time for CAD 2.05 Million. The property, which is accessible year-round via forestry road 3000, is located near the mills of the Langlois and Bachelor mines and the future mill of Osisko Mining’s Windfall Project. Work to date on the property consists of 93 boreholes totaling 32,356 m, resulting in 14,243 samples collected over a sampled length of 14,647 m.