Gold Terra Resource Corp. announced the restart of drilling to test the Campbell Shear as the Company has received the amended Land Use Permit (LUP) that allows drilling on the Company's recently optioned property from Newmont Ventures Limited and Miramar Northern Mining Limited (the Newmont Option) adjacent to its 100% owned Yellowknife City Gold Project (YCG), NWT. The Newmont Option hosts the immediate southern extension of the Campbell Shear, where approximately 5 million ounces of gold was produced from the Con Mine between 1946 and 2005 at a grade of 15 g/t, and over widths of up to 100 meters. At the former Con Mine, the Campbell Shear hosted approximately 5 of the 6 million ounces of gold produced between 1946-2005. The Campbell Shear zone is within secondary and tertiary structures associated with a large district-scale structure, the Yellowknife River Fault Zone (YRFZ), that straddles the YCG property over 67 kilometers of strike length on the southern and northern extensions. The YRFZ is thought to be the extent equivalent of other prolific gold camps in the Abitibi, such as the Destor-Porcupine and the Larder Lake-Cadillac Fault zones. The Campbell Shear zone and associated structures such as the Con Shear are exceptional due to the high-grade nature of the lode deposits (approximately 20 g/t Au at the Con Shear, and 15 g/t Au at the Campbell Shear). The Mackenzie Valley Land and Water Board issued an amended Land Use Permit (LUP) to Gold Terra on January 11th, 2021. The original LUP was amended to include the Con Mine area claims and leases that form the Newmont Option. The amended LUP permits drilling on the Newmont Option with similar conditions to Gold Terra's previous LUP. The timely issuance of the LUP has allowed Gold Terra to expedite the start of its current drilling program. The YCG project encompasses 800 sq. km of contiguous land immediately north, south and east of the City of Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories. Through a series of acquisitions, Gold Terra controls one of the six major high-grade gold camps in Canada. Being within 10 kilometers of the City of Yellowknife, the YCG is close to vital infrastructure, including all-season roads, air transportation, service providers, hydro-electric power and skilled tradespeople. The YCG lies on the prolific Yellowknife greenstone belt, covering nearly 70 kilometers of strike length along the main mineralized shear system that host the former-producing high-grade Con and Giant gold mines. The Company's exploration programs have successfully identified significant zones of gold mineralization and multiple targets that remain to be tested which reinforces the Company's objective of re-establishing Yellowknife as one of the premier gold mining districts in Canada.