Fulcrum Metals plc announced an update on its Saskatchewan exploration assets. Through a combination of staking 29,362 hectares and acquiring an option over a further 11,481 hectares, the Company has increased its Saskatchewan uranium footprint by a potential 221% from 18,468 hectares (184.5km2) to 59,310 hectares (593.1km2), which now consists of the Charlot-Neely Lake, Fontaine Lake, Snowbird and South Pendleton projects. Highlights are: Charlot-Neely Uranium project - an additional 2,703 hectares staked covering the highly prospective Black Bay Fault contiguous to the Charlot-Neely uranium project and 1,188 hectares optioned covering an area to the west of Charlot-Neely which now totals 16,372 hectares (+31%); Snowbird project - 24,187 hectares staked and option over 8,649 hectares, totalling 32,835 hectares.

The property includes several uranium airborne anomalies and rare earth lake sediment anomalies along major faulting on trend with historic uranium mines and major uranium projects; South Pendleton - 2,472 hectares staked and option over 1,644 hectares, totalling 4,116 hectares. The area is sparsely mapped but within the property are several airborne uranium anomalies in the highly prospective Needle Falls Shear Zone and major faulting on trend with historic uranium mines such as Rabbit Lake and further projects having recently obtained significant partnerships; The option agreement totals 11,481 hectares and has a close date of 30 June 2024. The Company has paid CAD 5,000 in cash immediately, with CAD 60,000 payable in either cash or equity should the option agreement be exercised; The cost of the staking totalled CAD 17,889 with these properties having no work requirements until October 2025, whilst the optioned properties have work requirements of CAD 57,073 through to the end of 2024; Following the addition of the new staked and areas under option, the Company's Saskatchewan uranium footprint has the potential to cover 59,310 hectares (593km2); and Fulcrum has a significant, highly prospective, uranium exploration footprint in Saskatchewan, a recognised leading uranium exploration jurisdiction, and is now reviewing its options with interested parties with regards to its uranium properties in Saskatchewan.

These options include, but are not limited to, a potential spin out of the Saskatchewan assets as a separate business listed on a recognised exchange and other partnerships. Discussions remain at an early stage and further details will be announced at the appropriate time. Snowbird Project:    The project covers 32,836 hectares of the largely underexplored Cora Lake and Legs Lake Shear zones between major North-East and South-West Snowbird faults and the Black Lake Fault; The Black Lake structure can be traced for at least 200km across the entire Athabasca Basin and is associated with Cameco's Centennial deposit (up to 33.9m averaging 8.78% U3O8 as reported on the Formation Metals website); The project is on trend with the historic Nisto Uranium Mine and notable projects Fir Island held by Forum Energy, Cree Bay held by F3 Uranium, projects held by Kobald Metals, the Black Lake project held by UEC and recent staking by Dennison Mines; Mining first occurred at the Nisto Uranium Mine in 1950-51.

In 1959, Haymac Mines restarted mining and shipped 500 tons of high-grade ore to the Lorado Mill at Uranium City, SK. One shipment of 106 tons of ore graded 1.6% U3O8; Limited historic airborne radiometric surveys located uranium anomalies that have not been followed up; Limited lake sediment surveys identified a number of highly prospective REE targets and limited rock sampling identified the Bompas lake uranium occurrence suggesting a significantly wide zone of anomalous mineralisation for which the source of the anomalies had not been identified; and A couple of very shallow holes on the north shore of Cora Lake hit very wide 20m and 30m graphitic zones, with carbonate, quartz, pyrite along with chlorite, jasperiod, and chert alteration, potentially favorable for Uranium and REE mineralization. There was also a lot of lost drill core, typical in drilling clay-filled uranium zones.

Back in the 1960 and 1970s, exploration was not focussed on uranium or REE's. Alteration recorded is considered to be potentially similar to the Ranger uranium mine in Australia.