- Military Metals Corp. (CSE:MILI) identified an 800‑metre northwest–southeast antimony soil anomaly at its Last Chance project in Nye County, Nevada
- The 2025 soil survey used controlled sampling methods to avoid contamination, with assays showing the highest values concentrated near historical workings
- Analyses were conducted by an accredited Nevada laboratory using fire assay and ICP‑OES techniques to determine gold and multi‑element results
- Military Metals stock (CSE:MILI) last traded at $0.40
Military Metals (CSE:MILI) has released new soil sampling results from its Last Chance antimony project in Nye County, Nevada, outlining an 800‑metre trend of anomalous antimony values extending northwest–southeast from an area of historical mining.
The property lies 12 kilometres west of Kinross Gold’s Round Mountain mine and roughly 70 kilometres north of Tonopah. The company conducted the soil orientation survey in October 2025 following recommendations from a consulting structural geologist working on the project.
According to the company, samples were collected from the B‑horizon using hand tools and were sieved on site through a 2.36‑millimetre mesh before being bagged and labelled. Field crews avoided areas where historical mining or other human activity could have introduced contamination.
Military Metals reported that the highest 10 per cent of antimony assay results—ranging from 53.5 parts per million to 952 parts per million—cluster along a defined northwest–southeast corridor. This zone extends outward from the historical workings and delineates a surface anomaly approximately 815 metres long.
“Antimony is officially listed as a critical mineral in the United States which means it gets special attention in policy and planning,” CEO Scott Eldridge explained in a media statement. “Increased government investment in critical minerals has been observed in the form of grants, equity and loans. Our past producing Last Chance project could play a crucial role in the development of a secure domestic supply of Antimony for the United States and its allies.”
Sampling and analytical procedures
The company stated that certified reference materials, including analytical standards and blanks, were inserted into the sample stream at a rate of 4 per cent of the total batch to support quality control.
All analyses were carried out by American Assay Laboratories in Sparks, Nevada, an ISO/IEC 17025:2017‑accredited facility. Gold was analyzed using a 30‑gram fire assay with an inductively coupled plasma–optical emission spectrometry (ICP‑OES) finish. Multi‑element data—including silver, arsenic, calcium, copper, iron, mercury, lithium, lead, antimony, and zinc—were obtained through a four‑acid digestion followed by ICP‑OES analysis.
Military Metals Corp. has not yet announced next steps for the project, but the company indicated that the soil anomaly will help guide future exploration targeting at Last Chance.
Military Metals stock (CSE:MILI) last traded at $0.40 and is down 28.57 per cent since this time last year began, but up 14.29 per cent since the year began.
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