Otis Gold Corp. announced that results from the Fall 2019 drill program at the Kilgore Project indicates gold mineralization extends to the west and the south of the existing Kilgore Deposit. Specifically, assays from hole 19OKR-384, drilled to the west of the Kilgore Deposit, intercepted 158.5 metres ("m") averaging 0.23 grams per tonne ("g/t") gold ("Au") including 51.8m grading 0.48 g/t Au, with gold mineralization beginning at the surface. Hole 19OKR-381, drilled to the south of the Kilgore Deposit, intercepted 49m grading 0.13 g/t Au and 2.08 g/t silver ("Ag"). Drill The holes reported reflect all material results from an 11-hole, 2,564m (8,415ft) reverse-circulation exploration drilling program conducted at the Kilgore Project between October and December 2019. The goal of this program, which is the first phase of a larger, multi-stage 70-hole, 25,000 metre exploration drill program announced in 2019, was to conduct step-out exploration drilling at all points immediately around the currently identified Kilgore resource. Hole 19OKR-384 was drilled due west of the Kilgore Deposit and was designed to test the extension of mineralization away from the currently defined resource. The hole intercepted 158.5m (520ft) grading 0.23 g/t Au including an interval of 51.8m (170ft) grading 0.48 g/t Au. Samples were assayed for silver but did not return any significant values. Historic drilling dating back to the 1980s revealed that potential for mineralization existed well outside the existing resource area. At the time of drilling, the goal of the mining companies exploring at Kilgore was to establish a near surface, low grade, bulk tonnage deposit that could be quickly put into production. Mineralization was identified over a width of approximately 94.5m (300ft) averaging 0.26 g/t Au in a single, vertical rotary drill hole, KG85-5, approximately 200m west of the Kilgore Deposit, and lay under a cap of silicified rhyolitic and hydrothermal breccias approximately 200m to the west of the Kilgore Deposit. This intercept was never followed up with further drilling. 19OKR-384 tested a portion of the undrilled space between the current resource and KG85-5 and encountered significant gold mineralization within silicified and oxidized lithic tuffs. The drill results, combined with historic data, demonstrates the potential to host a body of mineralized material in a largely untested block approximately 500m long, 150m wide and 100m thick, extending from the Cabin Fault in the south, 500m to the north-northwest. This represents a high priority target for the next round of exploration drilling. The drill results also indicate a zone of gold mineralization in the Prospect Ridge area well to the south of the current resource area. Hole 19OKC-381 encountered a broad zone of alteration and mineralization including 49m (160ft) grading 0.13 g/t Au and 2.08 g/t Ag. Results varied from 0.02 to 0.52 g/t Au and 0.1 to 6.2 g/t Ag; the hole was designed to test the structure-lithology hypothesis as well as a follow-up of historic drill hole 95EKR-98 that encountered 91.4m (300ft) grading 0.52 g/t Au, including 25.9m (85ft) of 1.38 g/t Au in a vertical rotary drill hole. This broad zone lies approximately 400m south-southeast of the current Kilgore Deposit, lies well outside the 0.1 g/t Au grade shell, and represents a significant target for follow-up exploration drilling. The mineralized intercept is representative of the low grade disseminated, silica-adularia-pyrite-jarosite altered rocks containing gold-silver mineralization that forms the majority of the near surface Kilgore Deposit. Hole 19OKR-387 returned significant silver values from 173.7m (570ft) to 178.3m (585ft), an interval of 4.5m (15ft) averaging 41.7 g/t Ag. The high grade silver values occur in moderate to strongly calc-silicate altered Aspen sandstone and siltstone; it is notable that the high silver values occur with no significant gold (0.05-0.06 g/t Au) suggesting a base metal mineralization assemblage that is atypical for the Kilgore Deposit.