Osisko Metals Incorporated announced additional results from its drill program on the Mount Fronsac North Project located 60 kilometres west of Bathurst, New Brunswick. Drill hole MF17- 43 intersected 3.1 metres of 12.3% Zn and 5.4% Pb, and 91.9 g/t Ag, within 15.5 metres of semi massive to massive sulphides. The holes being reported tested the deposit at different elevations to better target high-grade zones within the deposit. Drill hole MF17-46, encountered a 21.6 metre, (19.0m true thickness) predominantly copper rich massive sulphide zone from 363.8 to 385.4, which included 11.8 meters, grading 1.53% Cu, 0.43% Zn and 0.1% Pb. These copper rich massive sulphides are similar to historical drillhole MF00-26 that is located 300m to the north that intersected 1.84% Cu over 7.0 metres. Similar mineralization was also found in historical drill hole MF00-22, located 80 metres down dip, that intersected 2.3 metres of 1.44% Cu, 2.37% Zn, 1.07% Pb, 37.6 g/t Ag and 0.4 g/t Au. The Mount Fronsac North deposit contains a historical, non-NI43-101 compliant, unclassified resource of 1.26 million tonnes grading 7.65 % Zn, 2.18 % Pb, 0.14% Cu, 40.3 g/t Ag, and 0.40 g/t Au. This high-grade deposit is hosted within approximately 14 million tonnes of low-grade, semi-massive (greater than 60%) to locally massive sulfides that occur in an envelope of quartz-sericite +/- chlorite schist. The deposit has a north-south strike length of 525 metres and a down dip length of 600 metres. Thickness varies between 2 to 20 metres. The alteration and disseminated mineralization halo has a maximum thickness of 140 metres and contains up to 50% fine to coarse-grained disseminated pyrite. The pyritic envelope is 900 metres long and extends down dip over 1,000 metres. Massive sulfides are found throughout this alteration envelope, but preferentially occur at or near the upper contact.