MAX RESOURCE CORP. announced the commencement of drill core and seismic analysis, as part of the structural study of the Cesar basin. The study is being conducted in collaboration with the Ingeniería Geológica Universidad Nacional de Colombia for the Company's 100% owned CESAR Copper-Silver project, NE Colombia. The analysis is being conducted at the Colombian Geological Survey Facility in Santander. The oil & gas drill cores, securely stored within this facility, have never been studied from a metal industry perspective. Initially the analysis will concentrate on drill core intersecting the prospective Jurassic stratigraphy, focusing on XRF measurements, binocular microscope studies and photography of both selected mineralized intervals and stratigraphic contacts. The analytical results and seismic sections will be integrated with the existing Company database to build a three- dimensional model. The model will assist in determining the thickness and extent of the CESAR copper-silver mineralization at surface and depth, anticipated to greatly assist ongoing exploration. The CESAR project spans an area ~500 sq.km in North Eastern Colombia, covering a major part of a 200-km long sediment-hosted copper-silver belt. The CESAR region enjoys major infrastructure as result of oil & gas and mining operations, including Cerrejon, the largest coal mine in Latin America, jointly owned by global miners BHP Billiton, XStrata and Anglo American.