American Eagle Gold Delivers Multiple High-Grade Copper Equivalent Intercepts at NAK

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  • NAK24-33 intercepts:
    • 50 m of 1.00% Copper Equivalent (CuEq) and;
    • 104 m of 0.78% CuEq and;
    • 103 m of 0.67% CuEq within;
    • 505 m of 0.52% CuEq within;
    • 888 m of 0.40% CuEq
  • NAK24-34 Intercepts:
    • 80 m of 0.75 % CuEq within;
    • 323 m of 0.36% CuEq
  • Assay results for five holes are pending

Toronto, Ontario–(Newsfile Corp. – December 18, 2024) – American Eagle Gold Corp. (TSXV: AE) (OTCQB: AMEGF) (“American Eagle” or the “Company”) continues to deliver exciting results at NAK, with NAK24-33 delivering three distinct zones of high-grade within an intercept of 505 metres at 0.52% CuEq. NAK24-33 is the second most northerly drill hole assayed by the Company to date. It confirms the presence of strong copper-gold mineralization, highlights NAK’s scale, and extends the system northward and to depth.

View Video of CEO Anthony Moreau and Lead Geo Neil Prowse Discuss Results

NAK24-32 and -34 are drill holes that were part of the Company’s objective to connect the North and South zones. Along with the results for previously released holes, such as NAK24-24 and -26, they show that this part of the system is large, continuous and hosts localized zones of higher-grade copper-gold mineralization, some of which extend to surface. Results from five additional holes from the 2024 drilling program are pending. All parts of the NAK system tested to date remain open, with the Company just beginning to unlock the property’s full potential (refer to drill hole map).

“NAK continues to deliver standout results, with multiple intercepts of significant high-grade mineralization,” stated CEO Anthony Moreau. “The more we drill, the clearer our understanding of this remarkable project becomes, showcasing impressive grade, scale, and near-surface mineralization. In 2024, we’ve seen substantial expansion in the South Zone, and now the North Zone is demonstrating similar potential.”

American Eagle’s treasury is $37 million after South32’s recent $29 million investment (see NR here), providing the resources necessary to test the full extent of the property’s exploration potential.

Plan Map, Long Section and Drill Core Images:

NAK24-33 Assay Results (Table 1) and Details*

HoleFrom (m)To (m)Length (m)Cu (%)Au (g/t)Ag (g/t)Mo (ppm)CuEq (%)
NAK24-3330235250.000.690.117.652501.00
And
NAK24-334915951040.520.222.41080.78
And
NAK24-336947971030.390.253.47890.67
Within
NAK24-333028075050.310.142.281290.52
Within
NAK24-33669548880.250.101.67910.40

Cross Section of NAK24-33

* Copper Equivalent (CuEq) shown in Tables for drill intersections are calculated on a basis of US$ 3.75/lb for Cu, US$ 1,900/oz for Au, US$ 20/oz for Ag and US$ 25/lb for Mo, with 80% metallurgical recoveries assumed for all metals (Since it’s unclear what metals will be the principal products, assuming different recoveries is premature at this stage). The formula is: CuEq. = Cu % + (Au grade in g/t x (Au recovery / Cu recovery) x [Au price ÷ 31] / [Cu price x 2200]) + (Ag grade in g/t x (Ag recovery / Cu recovery) x [Ag price ÷ 31] / [Cu price x 2200] + (Mo grade in % x (Mo recovery / Cu recovery) x [Mo price x 2200] / [Cu price x 2200]). The assays have not been capped.

NAK24-33 was collared 100 m to the north of NAK24-30, and drilled to the east, representing the northernmost western step-out hole from the north-south trend outlined by historical drilling. It intersected generally weakly mineralized siltstone and sandstone cut by several narrow copper-bearing porphyry dykes to a depth of 493 m, with conglomerate intersected from there to a depth of 593 m; thereafter, to the end of the hole at 962 m, intrusive rocks of the Babine porphyry stock were intersected. Mineralization sharply increased downhole at 302 m, where it is driven by the presence of bornite-chalcocite bearing sparsely feldspar phyric monzonitic dykes and by a younger intervening seriate-textured relatively crowded porphyry dyke. The dykes are flanked by envelopes of local but prominent coarse bornite veining in host sedimentary rocks, and the dykes themselves, here and elsewhere within this hole return strongly elevated molybdenum, both as local disseminations and in purple anhydrite-bearing veins that resemble those intersected much farther south in drill hole NAK23-17.

Strong mineralization also manifests between 493 m and 593 m as consistent bornite-chalcopyrite disseminations and veining within the conglomerate. Within the lower part of the hole, in host rocks of the Babine stock, is a broad interval between 694 m and 797 m of hydrothermal brecciation where angular fragments of the stock are cemented by cryptocrystalline (chalcedonic) to colloform banded to drusy quartz in open space fillings displaying local geopetal fabrics. Sulphide mineralization within the interval occurs primarily as wispy chalcopyrite stringer veins and veinlets, and as angular mm- to cm-scale masses within quartz veining, as well as sparsely distributed bornite within earlier emplaced veins within breccia fragments. These mineralogical and textural features along with local zones of bladed barite and the pervasively pyrite- and chalcopyrite-mineralized chalcedonic veining are indicative of an epithermal environment, suggesting that this system has been telescoped onto the porphyry system at NAK. It also suggests that additional similar epithermal-style targets may lie within the porphyry stock core farther to the east where little drill-testing has taken place.

Overview of NAK24-32 and NAK24-34 and Central Part of the NAK Main Trend

Drill holes NAK24-32 and NAK24-34 were both drilled to the east at steep inclinations, sub-parallel with drill holes NAK24-20 and -22, respectively. Together, these two pairs of holes establish east-west drill sections, or preliminary’ fences,’ that lie approximately 100m apart in the area midway between the historical North and South zones. This area of the 20/32 and 22/34 drill fences had seen only minimal shallow historical drilling, and American Eagle itself has only drilled two holes in it, with both drilled early in the 2022 campaign (NAK22-02 and 03). In hole NAK22-03, a vertical hole, the upper part generally returned weaker grade with grade increasing downhole, and NAK22-02, which was drilled northerly from the South zone, only reached the latitude of the 20/32 and 22/34 drill fences at considerable depths, where it, like NAK22-03 intersected significant mineralized intervals. More recently, drill holes NAK24-24 and NAK24-26, drilled on more northerly headings, pass through both drill fences at moderate depths, again with significant mineralized intercepts.

Given the above, the expectations for results for the 20/32 and 22/34 drill fences were not high. While NAK24-20 and NAK24-22 returned generally lower grades, both holes returned long intervals of continuous mineralization. However, the up-dip and more easterly holes, NAK24-32 and NAK24-34, returned grades that show that the deeper mineralization intersected in those more westerly holes generally increases toward surface. Together with the results from the Company’s earlier drill holes, these results provide still further evidence for the existence of a broad zone of continuous mineralization roughly 350m across and extending to at least 750m to depth, lying outboard of the Babine porphyry contact and connecting the North and South zones at NAK. This zone corresponds with the presence of a variety of dykes and sedimentary host rocks, both of which are commonly well-mineralized, and its continuity, displaying local broad intercepts of higher-grade mineralization within continuously mineralized lower grade material, now stretches for more than a kilometer from south to north.

Another notable feature of this North-South mineralized connection that is apparent from the recent results is the subtle but steady increase in grade between the two drill fences. Given that the North zone has returned excellent grades, such as in the two drill fences defined by 1) American Eagle holes NAK23-12 and NAK24-27, and 2) holes NAK24-14, NAK24-30 and NAK24-33, in addition to the historical North zone drilling, this further suggests that a number of additional “up-dip” or “infill” holes in the intervening area between the 22/34 and 12/27 fences warrant drilling. These drill holes should be designed to test to moderate and shallow depths outboard of and across the Babine porphyry contact, and while focused initially in that area, larger gaps in drill data that exist farther to the south should also be considered.

NAK24-34 Assay Results (Table 3) and Details*

HoleFrom (m)To (m)Length (m)Cu (%)Au (g/t)Ag (g/t)Mo (ppm)CuEq (%)
NAK24-34346426800.510.214.54750.75
Within
NAK24-343466693230.220.131.64340.36
Within
NAK24-34276696420.160.091.08510.27

Cross Section of NAK24-34

NAK24-34 was collared 100 m east of NAK24-22 and north of NAK24-32, and was drilled eastward. Like NAK24-32, it was designed to infill between the western string of holes drilled eastward to depth toward the Babine porphyry stock contact during phase 1 of the 2024 program, and the historically drilled holes targeting the same contact at shallow depths farther east. NAK24-34 was collared, surprisingly, into a crowded porphyry dyke very similar in texture and composition to the Babine porphyry stock, and apparently extending parallel to the trend of the intrusion to a depth of 346 m, where pebble to cobble conglomerate was intersected. Within the intrusion, mineralization, while sparse, was similar to that hosted by rocks of the Babine porphyry stock to the east, with veinlets and fracture coatings of bornite and chalcopyrite, along with two meter-scale intercepts of strongly bornite mineralized feldspar phyric monzonite dykes. A sharp increase in the tenor of mineralization coincides in the hole with the appearance of conglomeratic wall rocks, where both disseminations and veins are common.

NAK24-32 Assay Results (Table 2) and Details*

HoleFrom (m)To (m)Length (m)Cu (%)Au (g/t)Ag (g/t)Mo (ppm)CuEq (%)
NAK24-32458545870.210.121.15330.33
And
NAK24-323235452220.160.090.69340.25
Within
NAK24-32495454960.100.080.40870.22

Cross Section of NAK24-32

NAK24-32 was collared 100 m east of NAK24-20 and north of NAK24-29, and was drilled eastward to a total depth of 605 m. It was designed to infill between NAK24-20 and the north-trending set of shallow historical holes. drilled close to the Babine porphyry stock contact approximately 200 m to the east. The main aim of this hole was to better define the untested near-surface geology and mineralization, not far outboard to the west of the contact, where both the historical holes and the Company’s 2022-24 holes encountered the best grades. NAK24-32 intersected finer-grained sedimentary rocks, sandstone and siltstone, down to a depth of 100 m, beyond which, and down to a depth of 544 m, pebble to cobble conglomerate, interrupted by local thin sandstone interlayers, and intruded by common porphyry dykes, was intersected. At 544 m, rocks of the Babine porphyry were intersected. Mineralization within NAK24-32 was consistent, but subdued although notably stronger than that intersected in NAK24-29 to the south. Like NAK24-20 and NAK24-29, the strength of mineralization increases with depth, and is supported by local meter scale zones of very strong grade in the form of cm-scale veins with semi massive bornite, and locally abundant bornite and chalcopyrite disseminations within conglomerate.

Collar details for holes drilled in the 2022, 2023 and 2024 drill program (table 4):

HoleUTM_GridUTM_EastUTM_NorthAzimuthDipTDNews Release
NAK22-01NAD83_Z96752816129359n/a-9088107-Nov-22
NAK22-02NAD83_Z96752816129359340-7098405-Dec-22
NAK22-03NAD83_Z96752016129658n/a-9094125-Jan-23
NAK22-04NAD83_Z96751816129862n/a-9054825-Jan-23
NAK22-05NAD83_Z96751056130067n/a-9082402-Mar-23
NAK22-06NAD83_Z96753766129782260-7792002-Mar-23
NAK22-07NAD83_Z96751816129862170-8187402-Mar-23
NAK23-08NAD83_Z96753416129341270-6088109-Aug-23
NAK23-09NAD83_Z9675990612928420-6583714-Sep-23
NAK23-10NAD83_Z96753576129415270-6085519-Sep-23
NAK23-11NAD83_Z96752156129340270-6083619-Sep-23
NAK23-12NAD83_Z9674999612984680-7092912-Oct-23
NAK23-13NAD83_Z96752056129773270-6062008-Jan-24
NAK23-14NAD83_Z96752606129934260-7074908-Jan-24
NAK23-15NAD83_Z96752116129232270-6061708-Jan-24
NAK23-16NAD83_Z96751666129479265-6574308-Jan-24
NAK23-17NAD83_Z96749696129377105-7381008-Jan-24
NAK24-18NAD83_Z9674961612947290-7791420-Aug-24
NAK24-19NAD83_Z96752196129388120-5595120-Aug-24
NAK24-20NAD83_Z9674946612957390-7293320-Aug-24
NAK24-21NAD83_Z96752646129415n/a-9041920-Aug-24
NAK23-22NAD83_Z9674927612967384-7194321-Oct-24
NAK24-23NAD83_Z96752646129415340-7052620-Aug-24
NAK24-24NAD83_Z96752646129415340-5595021-Oct-24
NAK24-25NAD83_Z9674930612976686-7492321-Oct-24
NAK24-26NAD83_Z96752646129415300-6058621-Oct-24
NAK24-27NAD83_Z9674898612985790-7097707-Dec-24
NAK24-28NAD83_Z96753576129415115-5563221-Oct-24
NAK24-29NAD83_Z9675063612948588-7059907-Dec-24
NAK24-30NAD83_Z9675021612993988-7289907-Dec-24
NAK24-31NAD83_Z9675063612935275-78494Pending
NAK24-32NAD83_Z9675049612958188-70605This Release
NAK24-33NAD83_Z9675044613001888-70962This Release
NAK24-34NAD83_Z9675031612967187-70669This Release
NAK24-35NAD83_Z9675105613006743-65922Pending
NAK24-36NAD83_Z96755096129440115-55641Pending
NAK24-37NAD83_Z9675105613006775-55842Pending
NAK24-38NAD83_Z967518161298620-55890Pending

QA/QC and Sampling Protocol

Sampling at NAK follows a rigorous methodology and internal QA/QC protocol. Drill core is halved on site, and samples are submitted to ALS Geochemistry in Langley, British Columbia for preparation and analysis. ALS is accredited to the ISO/IEC 17025 standard for assays. All analytical methods include quality control standards inserted at set frequencies. The entire sample interval is crushed and homogenized, and 250 g of the homogenized sample is pulped. All samples were analyzed for gold, silver, copper, molybdenum and a suite of 45 other major and trace elements. Analysis for gold is by fire assay fusion followed by Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy (ICP-AES) on 30 g of pulp. Analysis for silver, copper, and molybdenum is by four-acid digestion followed by Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy (ICP-MS). All other major and trace elements are analyzed by four-acid digestion followed by ICP-MS.

Internal QA/QC protocols dictate that individual core samples are no less than 70 cm and no greater than 3 m in length. To control standard, blank, and duplicate sample frequency, and to better constrain pass/fail re-analysis intervals, samples are submitted to the lab in 50 sample batches. Within each 50-sample batch, there is one gold-copper standard and two coarse reject duplicates, inserted at regular intervals, and two blank samples, inserted sequentially following well-mineralized samples where possible, for a total of 10% QA/QC samples. All gold and copper standard analyses from the 2023 program passed within 2 standard deviations of expected values. Where duplicate values differed significantly, the lower values from the resulting re-analyses were used.

About American Eagle’s NAK Project

The NAK Project lies within the Babine copper-gold porphyry district of central British Columbia. It has excellent infrastructure through all-season roads and is close to the towns of Smithers, Houston, and Burns Lake, B.C., which lie along a major rail line and Provincial Highway 16. Historical drilling and geophysical, geological, and geochemical work at NAK, which began in the 1960’s, tested only to shallow depths. Still, the work revealed a very large near-surface copper-gold system that measures over 1.5 km x 1.5 km. Drilling completed in 2022, 2023, and 2024 by American Eagle has returned significant intervals of high-grade copper-gold mineralization that reach beyond and much deeper than the historical drilling, indicating that zones of near-surface and deeper mineralization, locally with considerably higher grades, exist within the broader NAK property mineralizing system.

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About American Eagle Gold Corp.

American Eagle is dedicated to advancing its NAK copper-gold porphyry project in west-central British Columbia, Canada. The Company benefits from over $37 million in cash, bolstered by two strategic equity partnerships formed in the past two years with Teck Resources and South32. With substantial financial and technical resources, American Eagle Gold is well-positioned to drill, de-risk, and define the full potential of the NAK Copper-Gold porphyry project.

Anthony Moreau, Chief Executive Officer
416.644.1567
amoreau@oregroup.ca
www.americaneaglegold.ca

Q.P. Statement

Mark Bradley, B.Sc., M.Sc., P.Geo., a Certified Professional Geologist and ‘qualified person’ for the purposes of Canada’s National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Properties, has verified and approved the information contained in this news release.

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain information in this press release may contain forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements in this press release include, but are not limited to, statements regarding whether the Company will be able to complete the Offering as anticipated, the receipt of regulatory approval, including the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange, to complete the Offering, the intended use of proceeds and intended drill program or its anticipated results at the Company’s NAK project, the ability of the Company to make the qualifying expenditures as anticipated by management, and other matters ancillary or incidental to the foregoing. This information is based on current expectations that are subject to significant risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. Therefore, actual results might differ materially from those suggested in forward-looking statements. American Eagle Gold Corp. assumes no obligation to update the forward-looking statements or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those reflected in the forward looking-statements unless and until required by securities laws applicable to American Eagle Gold Corp. Additional information identifying risks and uncertainties is contained in filings by American Eagle Gold Corp. with Canadian securities regulators, which filings are available under American Eagle Gold Corp. profile at www.sedarplus.ca.

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the TSX Venture Exchange policies) accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

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