Castle Minerals Limited announced that it has delineated six gold and three copper anomalies following an extensive broad-spaced reconnaissance auger sampling programme at its Polelle project in the Meekatharra gold mining district of Western Australia. None of the newly defined anomalous areas appear to have been previously drilled. The Polelle project (E51/1843) lies 25km south of Meekatharra and 7km southeast of the operating Bluebird Mine. It hosts a mainly obscured and minimally explored greenstone belt which is comprised of a combination of prospective lithological units and major structural features including the Albury Heath shear. This shear hosts the Albury Heath deposit, recently acquired by Westgold, located immediately adjacent to the east boundary of Castle's licence. An interpretation of the recent Castle commissioned high-resolution aeromagnetic survey by the Company's geophysical consultants has indicated that the southwest trending Albury Heath shear is traceable onto the Polelle project area for some 7.5km. The interpretation also defined a number of previously unrecognised regional and local faults and shears that may act as controls to mineralisation. These provide an important geological backdrop to geochemical sampling programme design and for the general advance of the project. The auger programme comprised 1,877 samples collected at 80m intervals on 400m spaced lines and covered an area of 58km2, representing 36% of the 162.5km2 total Polelle licence area. Samples were analysed for gold and a broad suite of base metal and pathfinder elements. It did not cover the very recently applied for nine new prospecting licence applications to the north.