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GEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT REPORT

ON THE

DISCO MINING CLAIM


APPROXIMATELY 70 km EAST OF GREENVILLE CITY
GOVERNMENT CAMP, DISTRICT#2
SINOE COUNTY, REPUBLIC OF LIBERIA

FOR ITS POTENTIAL

OF

APPLYING FOR A CLASS B MINING OR PROPSECTING LICENSES

COMPILED BY: EMMANUEL G. WILSON, AA, B.SC.


CONSULTANT GEOLOGIST
Cell#: +231-888-334-540/+231-776-297-724
Email#: wilsonemmanuelgeology2017@gmail.com

Date: February 19, 2021

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TABLE OF CONTENT
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i. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY------------------------------------------------------------------------2
1.0 INTRODUCTION---------------------------------------------------------------------------------3
2.0 Mining Claim Description and Location-------------------------------------------------------- 3
2.1 Location and Access -----------------------------------------------------------------------3
2.2 Geology --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------3
2.2.1 Regional geology---------------------------------------------------------------3
2.2.2 Local geology ----------------------------------------------------------------- 4
2.3 Structural Setting----------------------------------------------------------------------------4
2.4 FIELD PROCEDURES ----------------------------------------------------------------- 5

3.0 FIELD RESULTS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------6


3.1 Geologic Structures -------------------------------------------------- ----------------------6
3.1.1 Host Rocks ----------------------------------------------------------------------------6
3.1.2 Mini Structural Mapping ----------------------------------------------------------8
3.1.3 Mineral Vein and Structural Setting -------------------------------------------- 8
3.2 Vein Texture and Alteration Mineralogy -----------------------------------------------11
3.3 Shear Zone --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11

4.0 INTERPRETATION AND DISCUSSION --------------------------------------------------12


4.1 Structural Configuration of Disco Mining Claim--------------------------------------13
4.2 Source of the gold ------------------------------------------------------------------- -----13

5.0 DISCO MINING CLAIM GOLD POTENTIAL -----------------------------------------14

6.0 CONCLUSION ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------15

7.0 RECOMMENDATION--------------------------------------------------------------------------16
7.1 Class C Mining Operations ---------------------------------------------------------------------16
7.2 Class B Mining Operations ---------------------------------------------------------------------17

8.0 STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATION--------------------------------------------------------20

List of Figures and Tables

LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1: Structural setting of Structural --------------------------------------------------------------4
Figure 2: A 2m by 100m artisanal Mining Pit --------------------------------------------------------5
Figure 3: Massive granite that host the quartz vein --------------------------------------------------6
Figure 4: Schematic Diagram ----------------- -------------------------------------------------------- 7
Figure 5: Measuring structural orientation------------------------------------------------------------8

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Figure 6: field photograph of 0.4m gold bearing quartz vein -------------- ----------------------12
Figure 7: Quartz Vein Diagram -----------------------------------------------------------------------10
Figure 8: field photograph of rock specimen ------------------------------------------------------ -11
Figure 9: field photograph of the gold bearing vein ------------------------------------------------12
Figure 10: Surface water interaction with wall rock -----------------------------------------------12
Figure 11: Structural orientation of faults -----------------------------------------------------------13
Figure 12: An E-W Quartz vein ------------------------------------------------------------------ --16
Figure 13: Structural Control of fault zone ----------------------------------------------------------17
Figure 14: VR1000 geophysical instrument---------------------------------------------------------17
Figure 15: Maps for Class B Operations -------------------------------------------------------------18
Figure 16: Propose Targets for Class B Prospecting Licenses------------------------------------19
List of Tables
Table 1: Structural Measurements ---------------------------------------------------------------------8
Table 2: UTM Coordinates of granite Segment ------------------------------------------------------9
Table 3: Propose Targets for Class B Prospecting Licenses --------------------------------------19

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This document is a summary report of a two-day initial geological assessment on the Disco
Mining Agency at the request of geologist Forkpa Dennis.The property is located
approximately 70km East of Greenville City, Government Camp, District#2, Sinoe County.
The two-day geological assessment was carried out between Sunday, February 7-Monday,
February 8, 2020.

The property is reached through an asphalt road from Monrovia to the port City of Buchanan,
Grand Bassa and a deplorable laterite road from Buchanan City to the famous artisanal gold
mining camp known as Government Camp, Sinoe County, a route of approximately 320km
away from Monrovia.

The property is located in an area that host influx of artisanal gold miners dating from the
1930’s. According to some locals the name government Camp derived from President Tubman
regime when the area was only restricted to government to mine gold.

The area also pay host to some class B hard rock gold mining companies. One of those Class
B gold mines is located few meters away Northeast of Disco Mining Claim.
.

The two-day geological assessment was intended to assess the property to have hands on
geological information relating to its gold potential which will motivate the owners to apply
for a class B Mining License or prospecting license over the entire area. The rapid
reconnaissance assessment was also intended to ascertain the underlying geology, geologic
structures and host lithology for gold mineralization.

Even more important is to search for the presence of outcrops and surface signature for gold
mineralization within the vicinity of the Disco Mining Claim.

The two-day initial geological assessment was successful in that as seen in this report it gave
firsthand information relating to the property gold mineralization potential, the underlying
lithology, geologic structures and the method of exploration to be employed.

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1.0 INTRODUCTION

In many parts of Liberia, local people using very rudimentary tools carry out small-scale
mining activities. However, these persons lack the technical expertise, as is the case in the
famous government Mining Camp in Sinoe County, Southern eastern Liberia.

This document is a preliminary assessment report of the Disco Mining Claim, to collect initial
data for its gold mineralization potential, and to provide technical suggestions whether to apply
for a Class B mining License or a prospecting License over the entire area. This report is not
exhaustive and should not be used as an instrument to mobilized resources for extraction
(mining phase). The purpose of this assessment report is to give first-hand information on the
entire mining claim in relation to its Lithology, regional geology, local geology, geologic
structures and accessibility that will serve as a baseline for further detail geological
investigation.

2.0 MINING CLAIM DESCRIPTION AND LOCATION

2.1 LOCATION AND ACCESS

The Property is located at a famous artisanal Gold mining Camp known as Government
Camp,District#2,Sinoe County, southeastern Liberia, 70 km East of Greenville City, Sinoe
County, Republic of Liberia.

The property is reached through an asphalt road from Monrovia to the port City of Buchanan,
Grand Bassa County and a deplorable laterite from Buchanan City to the famous artisanal gold
mining camp known as Government Camp, Sinoe County, a route of approximately 320km
away from Monrovia.

2.2 GEOLOGY

The majority of this section was adapted from the geology of Liberia and the Monrovia
quadrangles.

2.2.1 REGIONAL GEOLOGY

Liberia is underlain by the Man Shield, part of the West African Craton, which comprises two
major areas of Archean and Paleoproterozoic rocks, mapped during the 1970s in a joint
programmed between the Liberia Geological Survey (LGS) and the United States Geological
Survey (USGS).

The Precambrian Man Shield underlying Liberia can be subdivided into three age provinces
(see figure 2.1). The Liberian age province (2.5–3.0 Ga) extends across central and western
Liberia and is composed of a suite of granitoid gneisses and migmatites that are in folded with
supracrustal metavolcanics and metasedimentary rocks and intruded by a younger igneous
complex. The Eburnean age province (1.9–2.3 Ga) of southern and eastern Liberia consists of
tightly folded paragneiss, migmatite and amphibolite. The north-east-trending Cestos Shear
Zone separates it from the Liberian age province. Rocks of the Pan African-age province (c.
550 Ma) underlie an elongate, fault-bounded zone along much of Liberia’s coastline. They

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comprise metasedimentary and mafic meta-igneous rocks containing granitic bodies and
subordinate norite intrusions.

Mesozoic rocks in Liberia include extensive north-west-trending dolerite dykes emplaced


during a period of rift-related magmatism (180–200 Ma). Reactivation of north-east-trending
Archean basement structures, and the subsequent emplacement of kimberlites, occurred during
a later period of rifting (90–140 Ma). Diamond-bearing kimberlites are restricted to the
Liberian age province. Both the Eburnean and Pan African-age provinces were thought to be
barren (Haggerty, 1992). However, recent discoveries of alluvial diamonds in southeastern
Liberia cast doubt on this assumption and highlight some uncertainty in the understanding of
the tectonic evolution of the region.

2.2.2 LOCAL GEOLOGY

The property is located within the Eburnean (Birimian) age provinces. The southeastern part
of this province in Liberia, extending west from Côte d'Ivoire to Greenville, consists of tightly
folded paragneiss, migmatite and amphibolite. The northwestern part of the province, to the
north of Greenville, has similar lithology and geophysical characteristics, but younger isotopic
ages.
The Disco class C mining claim is underlain by a massive granitic-dioritic gneiss formation

2.3 STRUCTURAL SETTING


The Disco Mining Agency is situated in a geologic terraine that has experience huge volume
of rock deformation due to intense regional stress. The property is located midway of the South-
Northeast trending Dugbe Shear zone (DSZ) and the slightly NN-S trending Dube Shear Zone
(DSZ) and comprises of series of south-north dipping faults associated with intense zone of
mylonite.

Figure 1: Structural setting of the Disco Mining Claim


3.0 FIELD PROCEDURE

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2.4 FIELD PROCEDURES

The primary objective of this geological assessment is to carry out a surface mapping and field
measurement within the Disco mining claim and to provide a technical guidance of the method
of mining for class C and the preliminary assessment of the claim gold potential for a class B
or prospecting License acquision. The field procedure was limited to field observation and
mini-surface mapping.

Day one of the assessment was limited to Field observation and field photo taking to have a
broader view of the entire terrain.
Day two witness actual outcrop surface mapping and field measurements of structural
orientation. This was done by physically going out into the field and recording geological
information from the rocks that outcrop at the surface. Due to the scarcity of outcrops, the field
approach was to capture surface exposure of rocks that are associated with gold mineralization.
Where suitable outcrops or surface signature for gold mineralization were encountered,
accurate GPS readings were taken and field names given to the rock based on the observed
percentage of mineral distribution, in addition to this, physical description of rock units, taking
into account the rock’s texture, colour, mineral composition, size and appearance of the outcrop
and the sample environment were accurately recorded and captured into an excel database.

Figure 2: A 2m by 100m artisanal mining pit excavated into a granite to recover gold from a quartz vein

During the mini-surface mapping, it was observed that the artisanal miner were carrying out
Hard rock gold mining. The host lithology for the gold mineralization is an East-West trending
massive granite that was intruded by east-west trending quartz vein that is following a weak
fault zone within the massive granite. Veins that the artisanal miners were exploiting, the gold-
bearing quartz vein was encounter at a depth of 0.3m below the saprolite to a depth of 8.0 m
below the surface since the year 2016.

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The mapping exercise afforded me to have a better understanding of the rock types and
associated minerals in the claim area
4.0 FIELD RESULTS

3.1 GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES

3.1.1 HOST ROCKS

Figure 3: A massive granite that host the gold bearing quartz vein

A significant field methods for the presence of gold mineralization was the search of geologic
structures that serves as conduit for gold mineralization.During the field assessment,it was
observed that the entire claim is underlain by granite –diorite gneiss. There are common strong
structural controls, which testify to the essential roles of permeability and fluid flow in creating
these hydrothermal ore bodies. The controls can be crudely classified in terms of the hosting
structure as breccia’s, faults and shear zones.

The Disco Mining Claim gold is hosted by hydrothermally altered granite-diorite trending
East -west, that is transected by smaller dykes striking northeast- southwest. These vary in
width from a few centimeters to a few meters, and in composition from ultramafic to mafic.

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Figure 4: Schematic Diagram E-W trending granite that host the gold bearing quartz vein

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3.1.2 MINI STRUCTURAL MAPPING

Figure 5:Measuring structural orientation of the host granite Lithology

In order to have a broader view and accurate structural orientation of the regional trend,
several structural measurements were taken along strike. The trench excavated into the
granite is 100m long in an E-W orientation. Several readings and structural measurement
were taken at specific interval within the pit (refer to table 1)

3.1.3 MINERAL VEIN AND THEIR STRUCTURAL SETTING


Table 1: structural measurements of mapped quartz vein

No. STRIKE DESCRIPTION


ID UTM_EAST UTM_NORTH DIP
1. qtzV_001 561386 556761 Vein Segment1
0 0
2. qtzV_002 561401 556774 265 70 Vein Segment2
3. qtzV_003 561411 556768 2840 100 Vein Segment3
4. qtzV_004 561439 556760 0050 700 Vein Segment4

During the geological field assessment, it was observed that economic gold mineralization at
Disco Mining Claim is in sub vertical trending quartz veins in the cores of Fault-fill zone within
the granite host rock. According to the artisanal miners, most of the gold were recovered from
whitish quartz veins that cut-cross through the granite. The veins are commonly laminated and

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contain foliated wall rocks, which indicates that they developed after the initial development
of the fault-fill fracture within the granitic host body. (See Figure 7).

Table 2: UTM Coordinates of various segment of the granite

NO. ELEVATION DESCRIPTION


ID UTM_EAST UTM_NORTH
1. 275m Granite
grnt_001 561367 556756 Segment1
2. 274m Granite
grnt_002 561385 556764 Segment2
3. 273m Granite
grnt_003 561405 556765 Segment3
4. 272m Granite
grnt_004 561417 556757 Segment4
5. 113m Granite
grnt_005 561456 556753 Segment5
6. 270m Granite
grnt_006 561472 556753 Segment6
7. 108m Granite Midpoint
grntMP 561443 556762

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The veins are mainly composed of quartz with subordinate amounts of tourmaline, pyrite,
chalcopyrite, and pyrrhotite. Gold occurs as inclusions in sulphide, as fracture-fillings in the
recrystallized quartz, and associated with complex tellurides.

Figure 6: field photograph of 0.4m gold bearing quartz vein cover by rain water

Field measurement of the gold-bearing quartz veins show that they are up to 0.4 m wide,
strike 271° E (geographic), and dip sub vertically to steeply (>70°) to the north.

Figure 7: A 0..4m wide gold bearing quartz vein that strikes 271°E hosted by massive granite
The main types of quartz veins observed cut through the granitic host rock and is oriented
east-west. Within the vein system granitic wall rock selvages are common (refer to Fig. 10).

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Granitic rocks host gold at Disco Mining Claim quartz vein system. As part of the structural
mapping, the quartz vein was mapped and some samples were collected for further detail
examination.

3.2 VEIN TEXTURE AND ALTERATION MINERALOGY

The veins show a wide variation in texture (refer to figure 9). Some show a characteristic stock
work texture comprising a network of narrow discontinuous and closely spaced fractures. The
mineralized quartz veins are defined by rose to milky white vuggy quartz. Although some of
these vugs are empty, most are filled with euhedral quartz crystals and sulphides. Alteration
processes thus identified in the Disco Mine Claim quartz vein system include silicification,
carbonization, sericitization, hematitization, sulphidation and carbonitization.

3.3 SHEAR ZONE

The geologic terrane has experienced the result of huge volume of rock deformation due to
intense stress in the region, as evidence by the Dugbe Shear Zone (DSZ) and the Dube Shear
Zone (DSZ). The most important bedrock gold deposits in this terrane are spatially associated
with the major regional shear zones trending either northeast to south or north-north-east to
South.

Figure 8: field photograph of rock specimens from which gold are recovered within Disco Claim

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4.0 INTERPRETATION AND DISCUSSION

In a bid to identify features useful in discriminating barren from gold-bearing veins and thus
assist the artisanal in the selection of targets for shallow-depth gold exploitation from
weathered veins,

Figure 9: field photograph of the gold bearing quartz vein under surface water cover

I investigated a major vein set in the Government Gold Camp, Sinoe County Southeastern
Liberia hereafter referred to as the Disco Mining Claim vein system. The mineralized veins
trend E-W and are foliated with sericitic, carbonate, sulphides and

Figure 10: Surface water interaction with the wall of the granite
hematitic alterations. Quartz in the mineralized veins is brecciated, fibrous and smoky. Gold
grains occur as inclusions in hematite mainly derived from the weathering of sulphides. Thus
the quartz vein should be the main target for the local miners since they are the main host of
primary mineralization in the mining claim.

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4.1 STRUCTURAL CONFIGURATION OF THE DISCO MINE VEIN SYSTEM

The Disco Mine vein system is structurally controlled mainly by the Dugbe Shear Zone(DSZ)
and the Dube Shear

Figure 11: structural orientation of fault and joints on the wall of the massive granite body

Zone (DSZ) that would have contributed significantly to gold mineralization.

The regional Dugbe Shear Zone in southeast Liberia has been the focus of increasing gold
exploration in recent years. To date the most significant discoveries are located at Dugbe 1
about 40 kilometres east of Greenville in Sinoe County, hence the importance of this shear
zone to gold mineralization in the southeastern region of Liberia. Field evidence shows that
shearing in this zone is ductile and was followed by brittle deformation that post-dates the
emplacement of the Au quartz veins. Samples from the vein system bear evidence of protracted
progressive deformation at macroscopic and microscopic scales. These deformation structures
focused and enhanced crustal fluid circulation and mineralization

4.2 SOURCE OF THE GOLD

Granitic rocks host the Disco Mining Claim quartz vein system. This directly ties with the fluid
inclusion and demonstrates that the granitic plutons played an important role to Au deposition
in this area. Rather than focus only on the gold bearing quartz vein, the aureoles (surrounding
zones) of these plutons can also act as a significant target for the artisanal miners in the Disco
Mining area.

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5.0 DISCO MINING CLAIM GOLD POTENTIAL FOR CLASS B MINING

After carrying out a two day geological assessment of Disco Mining Claim, it is necessary to
comment in few sentences my field observation in relation to the preliminary gold potential of
the area.

The first thing here is that I am happy to report to you that the permit possesses all the
geologic ingredients (second-order structures to regional shear zones, structural
intersections, lithological contacts, grain-size variations within sedimentary packages and
zones of polyphase deformation) for the potential to host primary gold deposit.

Here are my field observation to support my claims:


 The entire permit lies within a granite-diorite gneiss emplacement corridor, which is
underlain by the Birimain age. Most of West African gold production has been derived
from Birimian-age greenstone belt rocks rather than from the Archean. Hence, the
permit has primary gold deposit potential

 From the USGS geologic map at a scale of 1:250,000 the claim area is noted for Bed
rock gold occurrences corridor owing to the favorable geology, structure and alluvial
placer deposits

 Little systematic modern exploration has been undertaken over the Birimian terrane in
south-east Liberia and the geology has not been studied in detail, hence the potential
for unknown bed rock gold discovery

 As in other part of Liberia, alluvial gold occurrences are numerous and widespread and
significant mineralization in bedrock is known at several localities within this area.

 Within this geologic terrane host rock lithology are varied but commonly include
metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks, mafic and granitic intrusive, pegmatites and
sulfide-rich schists and gneisses. The mineralization is commonly located at the host
rock contact with banded iron formation (BIF)

 There is a long history of artisanal gold mining in Liberia from alluvial placers with
production peaking at more than 30 000 ounces per annum in the 1940s. Between 2008
and 2012 annual production is estimated at about 20 000 ounces per annum (BGS,
2015)

 The cratonic geological environment of Liberia is favorable for two main types of gold
deposit:

 greenstone-hosted quartz-carbonate vein deposits (a subtype of lode gold


deposits) in a wide variety of host rocks

 Alluvial placer deposits.

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6.0 CONCLUSION

The following conclusions can be drawn from this field assessment:

 Gold mineralization in the Disco Mining Claim is constituted by quartz


Veins cross-cutting granitoids

 Granitic rocks host the Disco Mining Claim quartz vein system. This directly ties with
the fluid inclusion and demonstrates that the granitic plutons played an important role
to Au deposition in this area. Rather than focus only on the gold bearing quartz vein,
the aureoles of these plutons can also act as a significant target for the artisanal miners
in the Disco Mining claim gold mining area.

 The main types of quartz veins observed cut through the granitic host rock and are
oriented NE-SW, therefore the miners at the Disco claim should follow this trend in the
exploitation of gold from this vein

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7.0 RECOMMENDATIONS

From the two- day geological assessment within the Disco Mining Claim, I am obliged to
recommend the following:

7.1. CLASS C MINING OPERATION

 The Disco Mining Claim quartz vein system is hosted by granitic rocks; Thus the quartz
vein should be the main target for the local miners since they are the main host of
primary gold mineralization

 That the artisanal miner should follow the East-West (say from in front to behind,
when facing towards Greenville City) strike direction of the quartz vein

Figure 12:An E-W gold bearing quartz vein that should be targeted for the Class C operation

 Though the gold has disappeared at approximately 8.0m depth within the granite, from
field assessment it has proven that there is huge potential for primary gold as you follow
the quartz vein vertically (downward), But I can’t comment on the grade or quantity of
gold that will be recover as you mine this quartz vein vertically (downward). This
requires further detail investigation

 Rather than focus only on the gold bearing quartz vein, the aureoles of these plutons
can also act as a significant target for the artisanal miners in the Disco Mining claim
gold mining area.

 That the Disco Mining Claim organized a one-day capacity training workshop where I
will come to educate the miners on how to use the features of quartz veins to select
suitable sites for artisanal mining.

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 Nearly 600 gold occurrences have been recorded in Liberia, with gold placer deposits
accounting for almost 80 per cent of the total,the potential for artisanal mine in this area
is high

7.2 CLASS B MINING OPERATION

 The mining claim possesses all the geologic ingredients (second-order structures to
regional shear zones, structural intersections, lithological contacts, grain-size variations
within sedimentary packages and zones of polyphase deformation) for the potential to
host primary gold deposit, therefore I am suggesting that you apply for A
PROSPECTING LICENSE covering the entire claim with emphasis in the NE-SW
direction

fig. 13: An E-W structural control fault zone that should be the focus for bedrock gold
mineralization, Class B Mining

 The essence for the prospecting license is to carried out detail investigation in relation
to the area gold potential for a class B mining License

 That the Disco should hire a geophysical instrument called VR1000, this instrument
gives the exact gold line to depth of 50m below surface with accuracy, but it does tell
you the quantity of gold to be recovered. If you are interested in using this instrument
kindly contact me (see figure 14 )

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Figure 14: VR1000 ,A geophysical instrument that detects the exact gold line 50m subsurface

 Apply for two prospecting Licenses with the following coordinates:

Prospecting License A Prospecting License B

Figure 15: Propose Maps for Class B Mining Licenses

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Table 3: Proposed Targets for Prospecting Licenses

PROPOSED DISCO PROSPECTING LICENSE 1 FOR CLASS B MINING


TARGET UTM_EASTING UTM_NORTHING LICENSE
TYPE
A1 560848 556558 PROSPECTING
A2 561548 557254 PROSPECTING

PROPOSED DISCO PROSPECTING LICENSE 2 FOR CLASS B MINING


TARG UTM_EASTI UTM_NORTHI LICENSE
ET NG NG TYPE
A1 561554 556558 PROSPECTI
NG
A2 562254 557254 PROSPECTI
NG

 The intrusive contact of the granite with the country rock is a favoured site for high
grade gold in this area.Therefore the prospecting should consider this as a major target
area
 The E-W Trending Faults and the regional Dugbe and Dube shear zone are major
fluid conduits in crustal basement, this shold be the focus for detail gold exploration
 That Next door to Disco, there are Class B gold Mining Companies that are mining
the very granite-diorite gneiss formation that is underlying Disco Claim, Therefore
Disco Claim can also be considered for the Class B Mining operation

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8.0 STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATIONS

I, Emmanuel G. Wilson, of Front Street, in the City of Monrovia, the County of Montserrado,
Republic of Liberia

1. I am a graduate of the University of Liberia (B.Sc., 2017) in Geology

2. I have over 3 years entry-level experience in Mineral exploration for base and precious
metals and industrial mineral commodities in Liberia with such companies as West African
Mining Company (Barite Exploration), HAMAK Mining Company (Gold Exploration) and
NEWFIELD Resources (Diamond Exploration)

3. I am a fellow in good standing of the Professional geologists of Liberia

4. I am an independent consulting geologist who is starting my own consulting firm in


Liberia

5. I am the author of the present report entitled “geological Assessment on the Disco Mining
Claim”

6. I have visited the Disco Mining claim on February 7-8, 2021.I have carried out initial
geological assessment of the property and I am familiar with the regional geology and local
geology of the nearby Mining claims

7. I own no interest in the Disco gold Mining Claim

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,

Emmanuel God gift Wilson, AA, B.Sc. Monrovia, Liberia


Cell#:0888-334540/0776-297-724
Email: wilsonemmanuelgeology2017@gmail.com

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