Nord Precious Metals Preliminary 3D model Shows Exploration Upside of Little-Explored Lower Contact of the "Productive Nipissing Diabase"

Nord Precious Metals Mining Inc. is expanding its exploration program to include the lower contact of the Nipissing Diabase in the Gowganda Silver Camp of Northeastern Ontario, aiming to discover more high-grade silver veins. The company's recent 60,000-meter drill program identified high-grade silver intersections in both the upper and lower portions of the Nipissing diabase.

The Gowganda Camp's mines in the Miller Lake Basin have produced over 60 million ounces of silver, primarily from the upper portion of the Nipissing Diabase. The Cobalt Camp, including Gowganda, Casey, and South Lorrain, has produced over one half Billion ounces of silver.

The high-grade silver intercepts the company drilled include 89,859 grams per tonne over 0.30 meters, 50,583 grams per tonne over 0.6 meters, and 70,380 grams per tonne over 0.3 meters.

Nord operates the only permitted high-grade milling facility in the historic Cobalt Camp of Ontario, integrating high-grade silver discovery with strategic metals recovery operations. The company's flagship Castle property encompasses 63 sq. km of exploration ground and the past-producing Castle Mine, complemented by the Castle East discovery.

The company also maintains a strategic portfolio of battery metals properties in Northern Quebec through its 35% ownership in Coniagas Battery Metals Inc. as well as the St. Denis-Sangster lithium project comprising 260 square kilometers of prospective ground near Cochrane, Ontario.