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Brixton Metals Corporation Reports Drilling Results At Langis Silver Project
Brixton Metals Corporation has announced results from its ongoing exploration at the wholly owned Langis Silver Project, located in the historic silver mining camp of Cobalt, Ontario, Canada. The 2026 drill campaign marks a significant milestone, 60,000m of drilling, the largest in the history of the project, focusing on both infill and expansion of high-grade silver zones. To date, a total of 14,760.65 meters across 72 drill holes has been completed in 2026. Hole LM-26-341 south of Shaft 6 intercepted 27.7 m of 166.45 g/t silver from 99.3 meters, including 2.3 m of 1,811 g/t silver from 107.2 meters, including 0.5 m of 5,580 g/t silver from 108.5 meters and 2.0 m of 700 g/t silver from 149.0 meters. Hole LM-26-338 south of Shaft 6 intercepted 17.5 m of 170.8 g/t silver from 105.5 meters, including 1.0 m of 1,150 g/t silver from 115.0 meters. These recent results demonstrate continuity of mineralized zones between previously reported ultra-high-grade silver intervals, including those reported in holes 289 and 305. Drill holes reported herein were designed to evaluate the continuity of mineralization between the ultra-high-grade silver intercepts previously reported from holes LM-26-289 and LM-26-305 in the Shaft 6 South area. The interval of 2.3 m grading 1,811 g/t silver within a broader interval of 27.7 m grading 166.45 g/t silver on hole LM-26-341 confirms this continuity, albeit with variable grades that are consistent with the vein-hosted nature of mineralization at Langis. Silver mineralization in hole LM-26-341 is associated with sulphide + carbonate veins and visible centimetre-scale native silver, ± cobaltite. Collectively, to date, the results from the 2026 field campaign demonstrate that continuous high-grade silver mineralization persists within areas of historical mining. Table 1 provides selected composited assay intervals for the reported drill holes: LM-26-318 191.00-205.00m, 14.00m, 54.46 g/t silver, including 191.00-195.00m, 4.00m, 173.52 g/t silver; LM-26-329 117.00-126.60m, 9.60m, 7.45 g/t silver; LM-26-335 124.00-126.00m, 2.00m, 12.85 g/t silver; LM-26-335 140.40-142.00m, 1.60m, 10.62 g/t silver; LM-26-337 113.50-121.00m, 7.50m, 404.35 g/t silver, including 116.90-118.30m, 1.40m, 1964.82 g/t silver; LM-26-337 153.85-168.00m, 14.15m, 28.83 g/t silver, including 158.00-160.00m, 2.00m, 119.00 g/t silver; LM-26-338 105.50-123.00m, 17.50m, 170.81 g/t silver, including 115.00-116.00m, 1.00m, 1150.00 g/t silver; LM-26-341 99.30-127.00m, 27.70m, 166.45 g/t silver, including 107.20-109.50m, 2.30m, 1810.73 g/t silver, including 108.50-109.00m, 0.50m, 5580.00 g/t silver; LM-26-341 149.00-151.00m, 2.00m, 700.00 g/t silver. All assay values are weighted averages. Reported intervals are drilling length, and the true width of the mineralized intervals has not yet been determined. The wholly owned Langis Silver Project located approximately 500 kilometers north of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, includes a former producing mine and excellent infrastructure, including all-season road access, power, rail connections, and a refiner. Silver mineralization is found as native silver and within steeply to moderately dipping veins, veinlets, disseminations, rosettes, and fracture infill, often associated with minerals such as calcite, hematite, pyrite, cobaltite, chalcopyrite, niccolite, and silver. Mineralization is hosted across three principal rock types: Archean Keewatin volcanic and metasedimentary rocks, Proterozoic Coleman Member sedimentary rocks of the Huronian Supergroup, and Proterozoic Nipissing diabase. The geological ore deposit model for this area is a continental-rift extensional depositional environment. Intermittently from 1908 to 1989, the Langis Mine produced 10.4 million ounces of silver at a head grade of 777.5 g/t silver. Reported silver recoveries at Langis were 88% to 98%. Over 10km of underground workings were developed by previous operators; however, shafts and openings have been capped and sealed. Historically, silver mines in the Cobalt Camp have collectively produced over 445 million ounces of silver. An exploration target for the project has been identified in the range of 1.0 million to 2.0 million tonnes grading 400 g/t to 800 g/t silver. Note: the potential quantity and grade are conceptual. Insufficient exploration has been completed to define a mineral resource, and there is no certainty that further exploration will result in the target being delineated as a mineral resource. Quality assurance and quality control protocols for drill core sampling were developed by Brixton. Core samples were mostly taken at 2m intervals. High-grade intervals were taken at 0.50m to 1.00m intervals. Blank, duplicate (lab pulp), and certified reference materials were inserted at a combined rate of up to 15%. Core samples were cut in half, bagged, zip-tied, and sent directly to the ALS Minerals preparation facility in Sudbury, Ontario. ALS Minerals Laboratories is registered to ISO 9001:2008 and ISO 17025 accreditations for laboratory procedures. Samples were analyzed at ALS Laboratory Facilities in North Vancouver, British Columbia, for gold by fire assay with an atomic absorption finish. Ag, Pb, Cu, and Zn, as well as 48 additional elements, were analyzed using a four-acid digestion with an ICP-MS finish. Overlimits for silver were analyzed using fire assay and gravimetric finish, and/or fire assay and gravimetric finish on concentrates. The certified reference materials were acquired from CDN Resource Laboratories Ltd. of Langley, British Columbia, and the standards inserted varied with the type and abundance of mineralization observed in the primary sample. Blank material used consisted of non-mineralized siliceous landscaping rock. A copy of the QAQC protocols is available on the Company’s website. Mr. Martin Ethier, P.Geo., is a consultant for the Company who is a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101. Mr. Ethier has verified the referenced data and analytical results disclosed in this press release and has approved the technical information presented herein.