
Talisker Resources intersected 85 g/t gold over 0.5 metres at its Bralorne project. The 20-hole batch extends Mustang Mine veins as underground drilling ramps up.
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Talisker Resources intersected 85.00 grams per tonne gold over 0.5 metres within a broader interval of 18.76 g/t gold over 2.30 metres at its Bralorne Gold Project in British Columbia. The results come from 20 new drill holes in the 2026 resource conversion program, following an earlier batch of 25 holes reported this year.
The intercepts target dip and strike extensions in the major ore veins at the company's producing Mustang Mine. Underground development in the Bralorne West zone is underway, with the first underground diamond drill bay now complete. Talisker now runs three drills on the project – two underground and one surface – after adding an extra underground rig.
Kyle Orr, Talisker's vice president of exploration, said the underground access saves substantial drill metres and improves precision. "We now have three drills on the project and are excited with the progress so far," he said.
All 20 holes reported sit within the Mustang Mine, hosted in diorite or intermediate-to-felsic dyke. The major vein structures are orogenic quartz-carbonate veins with banded sulfide septae. Crack-seal septae host fine-grained arsenopyrite and pyrite mineralization. Alteration halos show strong silica-sericite ± mariposite alteration with disseminated sulfides.
The Bralorne project is a past-producing gold mine in southwestern British Columbia. Talisker restarted production in 2024 and is now drilling to convert inferred resources into the measured and indicated categories. The company has not yet updated its resource estimate for the 2026 program.
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