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ARUMA RESOURCES LIMITED Capital/Financing Update 2020

May 10, 2020

64273_rns_2020-05-10_c31518af-fc25-4691-b62d-7a55c0bde1f3.pdf

Capital/Financing Update

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11 May 2020 ASX Announcement

ARUMA'S NEW

ASX: AAJ

PILBARA GOLD PROJECTS

Capital Structure 709M Shares on Issue 8M Options on issue

Highlights

  • Aruma has applied for leases over two prospective gold projects in the Pilbara Minerals District in WA

  • The Melrose Project is located adjacent to Northern Star Resources’ Paulsens Gold Mine and covers an area of 100km[2]

  • Structural corridors that control Paulsens mineralisation interpreted to continue into Aruma’s Melrose Project area

  • Initial exploration targets have been identified

  • The Saltwater Project covers an area of 312km[2] and previous drilling has delivered elevated anomalous gold and silver results

  • Both projects sit within the Nanjilgardy Fault - reported as the primary source of mineralisation at the Paulsens and Mt Olympus gold mines

Cash: $740,000 (31/03/2020)

Board of Directors

Non-Executive Chairman Paul Boyatzis Managing Director Peter Schwann Non-Executive Director Mark Elliott Company Secretary Phillip MacLeod

Active Gold Projects

Aruma Resources Limited (ASX: AAJ) (Aruma or the Company) is pleased to announce the generation of a portfolio of gold prospective projects (Portfolio) in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

SLATE DAM PROJECT TROJAN RESOURCE

The Portfolio consists of the Melrose Gold Project, which is strategically located in close proximity to Northern Star Resources’ (ASX: NST) Paulsens Gold Mine, and the Saltwater Gold Project, situated approximately 250 kilometres to the south-east.

Both Projects are interpreted to sit near the same regional structure (the Nanjilgardy Fault) reported as the primary source of gold mineralisation at Paulsens and also at Northern Star’s Mt Olympus Gold Mine. (see Figure 1).

The Projects have been acquired following a review by Aruma of its project holdings, designed to rationalise its current project portfolio and to pursue new potentially value-accretive projects. The leases were applied for on vacant land after a comprehensive in-house research study of Pilbara gold identified prospective areas.

The study utilised open file data as well as the research papers from the Capricorn Orogeny Study (Geology Survey of WA) which involved major field mapping with integrated geological, geochronological, geochemical and prospectivity studies.

Head Office

Level 1, 6 Thelma Street West Perth, WA 6005 T +61 8 9321 0177 F +61 8 9226 3764

E [email protected] W www.arumaresources.com

Postal Address

PO Box 152 West Perth, WA 6872 ABN 77 141 335 364

The Company will now embark upon on a detailed initial ground truthing and targeting program to rank priority exploration areas within the new Project areas.

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Figure 1: Project Location Map of Melrose (blue circle) and Saltwater (red ellipse) Projects, with Nanjilgardy Fault shown in black dashed line.

PROSPECTIVITY RATIONALE

Both Projects are situated on the regional structure that is reported as the main source of gold mineralisation at the Paulsens Gold Mine and Mt Olympus Gold Mine. The structural corridors that control the Paulsens mineralisation appear to continue into Aruma’s Melrose Project area, where initial exploration targets have been identified (shown in Figure 2).

The different ages of the host rocks at Paulsens and Mt Olympus is not seen as critical, and these targets are in similar host rocks in the repeated sediment sequences in the corridors.

The hydrothermal alteration associated with the deposits indicates that multi-spectral mapping will form a key component of the first stage of work at both Projects, and will provide a guide for follow-up mapping and sampling. These methods use currently available satellite data which, when, combined with the large amount of data from the open file and research reports will be invaluable in targeting future work.

THE MELROSE PROJECT

The Melrose Gold Project consists of four Exploration Licence Applications (ELA08/3183, ELA08/3184, ELA08/3188 and ELA47/4362) and covers a total area of 90km[2] . It is located approximately 105 km south of the mining town of Pannawonica on the border of the Ashburton and West Pilbara Mineral Fields. Refer Figure 2 and Table 1 below for details of the Melrose ELA’s.

Project Lease Application Blocks km2
Melrose ELA08/3183 20/4/2020 8 25
Melrose ELA08/3184 20/4/2020 5 16
Melrose ELA08/3188 21/4/2020 14 43
Melrose ELA47/4362 21/4/2020 5 16
Total 32 100

Table 1: Melrose Project lease details

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Figure 2: Aruma’s Melrose leases (in yellow with red border) with initial exploration targets indicated by yellow dash ellipses. Interpreted structural corridors shown in magenta outline. Northern Star Resources leases shown in blue (GDA94)

Melrose Project Background

The Paulsens Deposit was discovered and mined in the early 1930s and was then called the Melrose Mine. It is situated in a +3M oz. gold camp and most production has come from multiple lodes at the Paulsen Mine.

Modern evaluation and mining of the Paulsens mine by NuStar Mining Corporation commenced in May 2004 and the Paulsens process plant poured the first bar in June 2005. In July 2010, Northern Star Resources took over the mine and successfully mined it until late 2017 producing up to 100,000 oz. Au per year through both existing and new ore shoots.

Since 2017 Northern Star have relinquished areas in the Paulsens district following initial exploration, and these areas represent the ground that Aruma has appraised, using "gold in sediment" models to seek stratigraphic repetitions in favourable structures associated with the Nanjilgardy Fault.

Most of the reported historic drilling and sampling was conducted on east-west traverses at a spacing that Aruma believes has left windows of opportunity for the discovery of further gold mineralisation.

Geological Assessment

The Paulsens gold mine is situated at the north-western end of the Wyloo Inlier, within metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks of the Hardey Formation, near the base of the Fortescue Group. These strata are cut at a low angle by a ~50-metre-thick, folded and faulted, medium-to-coarse-grained mafic dike, known as the Paulsens gabbro, which, over short distances, follows the contact between fine-grained sandstone and laminated carbonaceous shale.

The figure below shows a classic sediment hosted "saddle" or dilational reef scenario and Aruma’s geological theory is that these may be repeated in the sediments within its Melrose Project area.

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Figure 3: Interpretation of Paulsens showing the typical dilation central zone of bucky quartz with the selvedge high-grade laminated or shaly zones (Source: NSR Report).

THE SALTWATER PROJECT

The Saltwater Gold Project consists of three Exploration Licence Applications (ELA52/3816, ELA52/3818 and ELA52/3825) and covers a total area of 311km[2] . It is located approximately 100 kilometres south-west of the regional mining centre of Newman.

Refer Figure 4 and Table 2 below for details of the Saltwater ELA’s.

Project Lease Applied Blocks km2
Saltwater E52/3816 15/4/2020 6 19
Saltwater E52/3818 17/4/2020 55 171
Saltwater E52/3825 5/5/2020 39 121
Total 61 311

Table 2: Saltwater Project lease details.

Aruma’s interest in the Saltwater Project was instigated by prospectors who have found several gold nuggets in the area and targeting of the area with subsequent Minedex research defined several anomalous areas.

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Figure 4: Aruma’s Saltwater Leases (in yellow with red border) with extensions of the Nanjilgardy Fault shown as a Cyan line. Results of a Tempest airborne electromagnetic survey (Figure 5) are shaded in magenta and overlies the fault in ELA52/3818. FMG Pilbara leases shown in green outline. (GDA94)

Saltwater Project Background

Various open file papers have provided some interpretation for crustal geology across the Pilbara and Capricorn Orogens but not in the detail needed for mineral system analysis. The significance of a structure at surface is not always apparent. The location of significant structures that could have acted as focused fluid pathways is an important consideration for exploration of uranium and gold-silver in the region. This choice has outlined the area highlighted on the figure below as an attractive cluster of gold-silver-uranium hydrothermal sediment hosted mineralisation on the Nanjilgardy or splays off it.

In the 1980s several uranium exploration companies explored and drilled the Turee Creek area as part of regional exploration programs. These results only revealed uranium measured by scintillometer and no other geochemistry.

In 2009 drilling was undertaken by U3O8 and targeted an EM target identified from an Airborne Electromagnetic (AEM) survey conducted using the Tempest System which covered a total area of 1088.3 line kilometres (Figure 5).

Reports on the WA government’s mines and mineral deposits (MINEDEX) database showed that reverse circulation (RC) drill hole AJVRC24 (location in Table 3) reported low uranium but elevated gold and silver results. The assays are helpful in defining hydrothermal alteration and quartz veining - with anomalous gold and silver values up to 100ppb and 210ppb respectively as well as hydrothermal mineralisation mineralogy and chemical indicators such as tungsten (W), tellurium (Te) and copper (Cu) in a quartz vein in a shale (Table 4: Drill hole assays).

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Figure 5: Plan of Tempest AEM survey with the pink highs representing the strong structure within ELA3818. The black-yellow triangle is drill hole AJVRC24 from U3O8 Limited in 2009. Minedex open file data . (GDA94)

The Report on the AEM Survey said,

"This survey identified a zone of intense structural deformation in the Saltwater Pool area."

This survey was used to site the RC holes in the area.

Historical Drilling at Saltwater

Hole ID Prospect Easting Northing Azimuth Dip End of hole
AJVRC22 Atlantis 667505 7354375 350 -60 58m
AJVRC23 Atlantis 667500 7353530 340 -60 160m
AJVRC24 Atlantis 667860 7353950 360 -60 148m

Table 3: Drill hole locations from Minedex open file data. (GDA94)

Below are the anomalous assays from U3O8 drilling from the Minedex Open File data base (Table 4). They show a definite hydrothermal assemblage and are also in the area of the highly deformed conductor that is the Nanjilgardy Fault.

The yellow and red highlights are considered anomalous and highly anomalous. The quartz veins at the base of hole may be cherts but are highlighted from 120 to 132m. The silver, gold tellurium, arsenic, copper and tungsten are strongly suggestive of hydrothermal mineralisation and backed up by the quartz veining. The lack of copper - phosphorus relationship indicates that the mineralisation may be different from the younger Telfer-Nifty copper - silver deposits, and fits with the Paulsens - Mt Olympus deposit types.

Drill Hole Method Au-AA25 ME-MS41r ME-MS41r ME-MS41r ME-MS41r ME-MS41r ME-MS41r
AJVRC024 unit ppb ppb % ppm ppm ppm ppm
From To Rock Det Limit 10 11 0.01 0.2 0.2 0.01 2
metres metres Type Samp ID Au Ag Fe Ni Cu Te Zn
100 104 Shale 73061 10 100 6.4 80.1 53.3 0.04 176
104 108 Shale 73062 40 90 4.32 67.7 47.4 0.03 122
108 112 Shale 73063 30 130 4.43 59.9 74.4 0.06 112
112 116 Shale 73064 40 110 4.13 59.6 60.6 0.05 110
116 120 Shale 73065 50 210 3.94 86.8 85.3 0.22 94
120 122 Qtz Vein 73066 70 180 4.22 103 94 0.44 99
122 124 Qtz Vein 73067 40 130 3.68 91.9 55.6 0.18 91
124 126 Qtz Vein 73068 20 90 15.15 84.1 115.5 0.04 264
126 128 Qtz Vein 73069 50 80 10.9 108 111.5 0.05 260
128 130 Qtz Vein 73070 100 90 7.17 138.5 102.5 0.11 232
130 132 Qtz Vein 73071 <10 60 7.73 89.7 39.4 0.04 295
132 136 Shale 73072 10 60 6.52 93.8 85.1 0.06 189
136 140 Shale 73073 <10 50 6.54 74.2 67.3 0.04 182
140 144 Shale 73074 <10 90 6.1 72.7 37 0.05 185
144 148 Shale 73075 <10 60 5.55 76.5 39.7 0.05 143
144 148 Shale 73076 <10 50 5.45 76.8 42.4 0.06 137
AnomalyLevel ≥50 ≥150 ≥10 ≥100 ≥100 ≥0.20 ≥200

Table 4: Drill hole AJVRC024 assays from Minedex open file data. The yellow shaded section is the quartz veined shale zone with highlighted anomalous geochemical results showing a hydrothermal signature. ( Minedex open file data)

Authorised for release by Peter Schwann, Managing Director.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:

Peter Schwann Managing Director

James Moses Media and Investor Relations

Aruma Resources Limited Telephone: +61 8 9321 0177 Mobile: +61 417 946 370 Email: [email protected]

Aruma Resources Limited is a proud supporter and member of the Association of Mining and Exploration Companies, 2020.

COMPETENT PERSON’S STATEMENT

Mandate Corporate Mobile: +61 420 991 574 Email: [email protected]

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The information in this release that relates to Exploration Results, Mineral Resources or Ore Reserves is based on information compiled by Peter Schwann who is a Fellow of the AIG and Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. Mr Schwann is Managing Director and a full time employee of the Company. Mr Schwann has sufficient experience that is relevant to the style of mineralisation and type of deposit under consideration and to the activity being undertaken to qualify as a Competent Person as defined in the 2012 Edition of the ‘Australasian Code for Reporting of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserve’. Mr Schwann consents to the inclusion in the release of the matters based on his information in the form and context in which it appears. All exploration results reported have been sourced from Minedex open file data and reported in a similar format in those reports.

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENT

Certain statements contained in this document constitute forward looking statements. Such forwardlooking statements are based on a number of estimates and assumptions made by the Company and its consultants in light of experience, current conditions and expectations of future developments which the Company believes are appropriate in the current circumstances. These estimates and assumptions while considered reasonable by the Company are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, achievements and performance of the Company to be materially different from the future results and achievements expressed or implied by such forwardlooking statements. Forward looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements preceded by words such as “planned”, “expected”, “projected”, “estimated”, “may”, “scheduled”, “intends”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “potential”, “could”, “nominal”, “conceptual” and similar expressions. There can be no assurance that Aruma plans to develop exploration projects that will proceed with the current expectations. There can be no assurance that Aruma will be able to conform the presence of Mineral Resources or Ore Reserves, that any mineralisation will prove to be economic and will be successfully developed on any of Aruma’s mineral properties. Investors are cautioned that forward looking information is no guarantee of future performance and accordingly, investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements.