Leviathan Gold Ltd. announced that it has commissioned a high-resolution airborne magnetic survey of at its Avoca and Timor Projects in the Victorian goldfields, Australia. Surveying will be conducted at a line-spacing of 50 meters and at a minimum survey height of 60 meters, subject to variation for reasons of safety, land-use, and topographic relief. Work is expected to commence during the week of May 10, for cumulative survey duration of approximately two weeks. The survey will cover the Avoca and Timor Projects in their entirety. Magnetic surveying is a technique commonly used in mineral exploration to detect localized variations in the earth's magnetic field, from which structural and/or intrusive features of mineralized – or mineralizing – potential may then be defined. In the case of Leviathan it is anticipated that the survey data will serve to refine and extend existing targets associated with historic mine workings, and (ii) to develop new exploration targets beyond these. Surveying will commence over the Timor Project, which hosts the historic Leviathan Group of Mines for which historic production of 56,474 ounces of gold at an average recovered grade of 9.14 g/t Au is recorded. The Leviathan Group of Mines is thought to lie in a broader structural corridor, with significant mineralized potential both internally to the area of historic mining, and to its north. Drilling at the Avoca Project is ongoing and forms part of a program of approximately 30,000 meters that Leviathan is currently deploying at Avoca and Timor. The balance of results is awaited and will be reported on in due course.