Western Mines Group Ltd. to update shareholders on the Company's recent exploration work and plans at the Mulga Tank Project. The Mulga Tank Project covers approximately 113km2 of the southern end of the Minigwal Greenstone Belt, an under explored belt approximately 190km east-northeast of Kalgoorlie. The project contains the entire Mulga Tank Dunite Intrusion, a major ultramafic intrusion and a key feature of the area. Limited historical work shows good evidence for a working sulphide mineral system and the project is considered highly prospective for Ni-Cu-PGE magmatic sulphide mineralisation. WMG is completing a series of high-resolution ground based geophysical surveys aimed at unlocking the project; in order to define and derisk robust drill targets for an initial drilling program later in the year. The Company has recently received the final results for a gravity survey undertaken in June. This new dataset offers 2 to 4 times better resolution than previous work. 3D inversion modelling is now planned to model the intrusion in far greater detail than previously known, in particular to help map the basal contact of the intrusion, with the aim of finding vertically plunging denser feeder zones or vents that can occur beneath ultramafic bodies and/or deeper channel zones that can be the sites for the deposition of major Ni-Cu-PGE deposits. WMG has also designed an extensive Moving Loop Electromagnetic (MLEM) survey covering the entire intrusion to explore for buried electromagnetic bedrock conductors that could be associated with deposits of massive Ni-Cu-PGE sulphides. At 200m line spacing, this will be at twice the resolution of previous surveys, with a high-powered, low frequency survey system offering a significant step up from previous work and taking advantage of advancements in this field. This system will offer greater detail and greater potential to detect bedrock conductors. The survey is due to start soon after a recent delay due to COVID. The Mulga Tank Project comprises exploration licence E39/2132 and exploration licence application E39/2223, covering approximately 113km2 of the southern end of the Minigwal Greenstone Belt, 190km east-northeast of Kalgoorlie. The Minigwal Greenstone Belt, trending NNW over a strike of approximately 50km, is very under explored due to the presence of shallow sand cover. Tenement E39/2132 contains the entire Mulga Tank Dunite Intrusion, a major ultramafic intrusion and a key feature of the area, considered highly prospective for Ni-Cu-PGE magmatic sulphide mineralisation. The Mulga Tank Dunite Intrusion was first identified by BHP in the 1980's as a significant magnetic high feature (approximately 5km x 5km or 25km2) in regional aeromagnetic surveys. Whilst their exploration was focused on Olympic Dam-style targets their single deep stratigraphic diamond drill hole through the centre of the magnetic feature showed it to be large ultramafic dunite intrusion, that they recognised as prospective for nickel sulphide mineralisation with up to 1m at 0.58% Ni from 196m (MD1A). They conducted follow up RC drilling along the southern boundary of the intrusion with a best result of 2m at 2.00% Ni from 67m in hole MRC9. Limited further nickel focused exploration was conducted until 2001 when Anaconda Nickel drilled three shallow reverse circulation (RC) percussion drill holes, again across the centre of the intrusion and magnetic high. This drilling was focused on targeting lateritic nickel at the basement contact beneath the sand cover. All holes returned anomalous results including MGRC0001 2m at 0.72% Ni from 56m EOH, MGRC0002 22m at 0.37% Ni from 54m EOH, including 2m at 1.00% Ni from 58m and MGRC0003 20m at 0.63% Ni from 62m EOH, including 4m at 1.44% Ni from 64m.