Collective Mining Drills its Best Hole to Date at the Recently Discovered Ramp Zone by Intersecting 75.80 Metres at 8.01 g/t Gold Equivalent

In This Article:

  • Drill hole APC105-D1 cut 75.80 metres at 8.01 g/t gold equivalent and represents the longest and best intercept on a grade accumulation basis (grams x metres) encountered to date in the new Ramp Zone discovery.

  • Drill hole APC103-D3 intersected 20.30 metres @ 6.68 g/t gold equivalent before entering a post mineral dyke at an oblique angle and being terminated.

  • The two holes announced in this press release have expanded the Ramp Zone discovery to the west and southwest with the Ramp Zone remaining open in all directions for further expansion.

  • To date, the Company has received assay results for six holes drilled into the Ramp Zone from three drill pads. Two additional drill holes have been completed with assays pending and a further three holes are currently in progress. The Company continues to aggressively expand the Ramp Zone in all directions and has now expanded the program to include a third rig from a new pad situated on the northeastern side of Apollo.

TORONTO, March 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ - Collective Mining Ltd. (NYSE: CNL) (TSX: CNL) ("Collective" or the "Company") is pleased to announce assay results for two drill holes designed to expand the dimensions of the new Ramp Zone discovery ("Ramp"). Ramp is located in the deeper portion of the Apollo system ("Apollo") which is the Company's flagship discovery within the multi-target Guayabales Project in Caldas, Colombia. The Ramp Zone is a bonafide new discovery characterized by high-grade gold associated with minor amounts of bismuth and tellurium and shares similar characteristics with the multi-million-ounce Marmato Deeps deposit located only 1.75 kilometres to the southeast.

Ari Sussman, Executive Chairman commented: "We continue to be pleasantly surprised by the high-grade Ramp Zone discovery. Importantly, we now have an internal 3D model for Ramp and a working hypothesis explaining why the zone formed.  If correct, the hypothesis implies that Ramp style mineralization can occur over a very large area as it won't be relegated only to the breccia body at Apollo.  Aggressive drill planning is underway with more details to follow in due course."

The Company currently has six drill rigs operating as part of its fully funded 60,000-metre drill program for 2025 with four rigs drilling at Apollo, one drilling at the Tower Target and a final rig testing the San Antonio Project. Two additional rigs are expected to begin operating in late Q1 and early Q2, respectively. Approximately 110,000 metres of diamond drilling has been completed to date at the Guayabales Project, including 74,000 metres in 163 holes at Apollo. There are currently eight drill holes pending assay results for the Guayabales and San Antonio projects with results to be reported in batches once received and compiled by the Company.