Viscount Mining Corp. announced results of Titan MT survey on Passiflora in Silver Cliff, Colorado. During the early summer of 2022, Viscount contracted Quantec Geoscience to perform a five-line TITAN MT survey over the Silver Cliff caldera of the Passiflora target.

Quantec is authorized by the Association of Professional Geoscientists of Ontario (PGO) and has acquired many reputable clients such as Newmont Mining, Barrick Gold, Agnico - Eagle Mining, De Beers Consolidated Mines Limited and the Nevada Department of Energy to name a few. The purpose of the survey was to identify conductive areas below the survey surface which could represent metal deposits, or perhaps the presence of a porphyry. Each of the five, parallel lines surveyed by Quantec Geoscience were 2.2 kilometers (1.36 miles) in length and separated by 175 meters (574 feet).

Ground-penetrating resistivity data gathered overnight from each of the survey lines was analyzed and converted by Quantec-employed qualified professionals into cross sections. In their executive summary, Quantec Geoscience describes their findings, saying: "The TITAN MT survey identified a zone of extremely low resistivity in the Silver Cliff caldera. The main anomaly is bowl-shaped and at a depth of 450m (1,475 ft) at the point nearest to the surface below lines L1E and L2E.

The 2D and 3D modeled depth of the anomaly extends 1,500m (4,920 ft) deep, or to an elevation of 900m (2,950 ft), but the source could be deeper. The extreme conductivity of the anomaly and sensitivity of the MT method limit resolution of the inversion result below the massive conductive zone." Figure 2, below, is a cross section of through line L1E which depicts a view of the massive, low resistivity anomaly described by Quantec. As shown, the bowl-shaped anomaly extends 1,400m (4,590 ft) across the center of the caldera, and at least 1,500m (4,920 ft) deep, maybe deeper, depending upon the accuracy of resistivity detection below the conductive body.

The only historic report available on the Passiflora target is one written by R. A. Rivera for Coca Mines in 1983. In this report, Rivera gives a brief history of the exploration efforts, inferring a potential deposit size of 40 million tons of AgEq in the form of silver, gold, lead, and zinc (not NI 43-101 compliant). It is noted in his report that the deposit was presented as "a set of steeply dipping, NNW striking, tabular mineralized zones" (Rivera, 1983).

It is also implied that the deposit could go much deeper as Rivera states that some drill holes presented high assay values at their total depths. Viscount has drilled a total of six drill holes throughout the Passiflora target, with the deepest hole going 215m (705 ft) below the surface. In each of the six holes, evident phyllic alteration and associated metal concentration increases were observed throughout the entire drilled depth.

The level of increased alteration displayed, as well as the volcanic history of the region as a caldera, prompted Viscount Mining to further explore the probability of the Passiflora target presenting as a porphyry at depth.