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GALILEO MINING LTD Capital/Financing Update 2026

Feb 2, 2026

64962_rns_2026-02-02_4bcc412b-b1b5-4baf-8d8f-83ee2ac322c0.pdf

Capital/Financing Update

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ASX Announcement

3 February 2026

ASX: GAL

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Drill Results Confirm Mineralisation at Norseman PGE Project

Highlights

  • Results from recent RC drill campaign confirm prospective zones of palladium-platinum-gold at the Mission Sill prospect

  • Drill results include wide zones of shallow Platinum Group Elements (PGE); o 8m @ 1.33 g/t 3E[1] from 24m within 44m @ 0.78 g/t 3E (NRC514)

  • 8m @ 1.20 g/t 3E from 8m within 40m @ 0.92 g/t 3E (NRC513)

  • 8m @ 0.66 g/t 3E from 40m (NRC510)

  • Assay results are four metre composite samples with one metre sampling planned to delineate higher grade zones for follow up drilling

  • Diamond core drilling targeting potential mineralisation beneath the 17.5Mt Callisto resource is scheduled to begin in three weeks

  • New metallurgical test work planned for the Callisto deposit as palladiumplatinum-gold-rhodium-copper metal prices have increased since the Callisto Mineral Resource estimate in 2023[2]

Galileo Mining Ltd (ASX: GAL, “ Galileo ” or the “ Company ”) is pleased to provide drill results and updated work programs for the Company’s 100% owned Norseman project in Western Australia.[12]

Galileo Managing Director Brad Underwood commented ; “Results from our recent RC drill campaign at Norseman have confirmed strongly anomalous PGE mineralisation near surface at the Mission Sill prospect. We are consistently seeing results above 1 g/t (3E PGE) which we believe may represent the shallow expression of a deeper and bigger mineralised system. We have an extensive 10km of prospective strike at the Mission Sill and the latest drilling has identified a structural target

1 3E = Pd + Pt + Au expressed in g/t

2 Refer to ASX announcement dated 2nd October 2023

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Registered Office: 13 Colin St, West Perth, WA, 6005 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 415, West Perth WA 6872 Phone: +61 8 9463 0063 Email: [email protected] Website: galileomining.com.au

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that may have localised mineralisation in the bedrock.

We look forward to advancing the Mission Sill prospect while at the same time undertaking further work at our existing Callisto deposit. At Callisto we will be completing the first deep exploration drill hole beneath the resource looking for repeats of the intrusive sill which hosts the sulphide mineralisation. This drill hole will also provide us with additional samples for metallurgical test work as we note that the metal price environment has improved since the Callisto resource was first published in 2023.

With over $9 million in funding[3] Galileo is very well positioned to continue exploration for high value PGE-gold deposits in one of the most prospective regions of Western Australia.”

Approximately 2,000m of RC drilling was undertaken in December 2025 targeting anomalous aircore geochemical anomalies and structural/geological boundaries. RC drilling was completed at priority prospects including Mission Sill (15 drill holes), Jimberlana South (one drill hole) and Callisto North (two drill holes), focusing on interpreted ultramafic–mafic contacts and structural positions considered favourable for sulphide-hosted PGE-gold mineralisation. These geological settings are analogous to that which hosts mineralisation at the existing Callisto palladium-platinum-gold-rhodium-nickel–copper deposit. The location of the prospects relative to the existing Callisto resource is shown in Figure 4.[3]

Multiple drill intersections from the Mission Sill prospect confirm and expand on aircore drill results with broad intersections of anomalous PGE greater than 0.4 g/t recorded in five drill holes from two sections spaced 200m apart (see Figure 1 and Appendices for details). These results have highlighted a structural target at the southern end of the 10km long Mission Sill prospect where the magnetic imagery is distinctively reoriented. One metre split samples will be collected and assayed over selected intervals to help determine the location of higher-grade zones prior to follow up drilling.

Table 1 –Anomalous RC drill sample assays above 0.4 g/t 3E (further details in Appendices)

Hole ID From
(m)
To (m) Interval
(m)
3E (Pd+
Pt+ Au;
g/t)
Palladium
(g/t)
Platinum
(g/t)
Gold
(g/t)
Copper
(%)
Nickel
(%)
NRC509 24 32 8 0.54 0.30 0.23 <0.01 0.06 0.63
NRC510 20 28 8 0.50 0.32 0.19 <0.01 0.04 0.37
and 44 52 8 0.66 0.39 0.25 <0.01 0.07 0.50
NRC513 0 40 40 0.92 0.73 0.19 <0.01 0.09 0.23
including 8 16 8 1.20 1.00 0.19 <0.01 0.11 0.34
NRC514 4 48 44 0.78 0.58 0.13 0.06 0.09 0.18
including 24 32 8 1.33 1.09 0.17 0.07 0.10 0.11
NRC515 20 36 16 0.52 0.34 0.17 0.01 0.07 0.25

3 As at 31 December 2025, see ASX Quarterly Report released on 21st January 2026

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Figure 1 – Mission Sill reported RC drilling with anomalous drill holes, mineralisation trend, and structural targets. TMI-1VD magnetic background image. See Appendices for drill hole details.

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Mission Sill mineralisation
trend ( > 10km)
Structural target
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Drill holes at the Jimberlana and Callisto North prospects successfully intersected disseminated sulphides at the predicted geological contacts however mineralisation was below the reporting cut-off of 0.4 g/t. Results from these areas highlight the overall prospectivity of the Norseman project, in particular the Callisto trend where mapped ultramafic lithologies occur over 20km strike. Additional one metre split samples from these prospects will be collected to assist in understanding sulphide and metal deportment at mafic-ultramafic lithological contacts.

Upcoming diamond drill program

In 2025 Galileo successfully applied for Western Australian state funding to drill beneath the Callisto PGE-nickel-copper deposit at Norseman.[4] Up to $180,000 is available to assist in drilling costs through the Exploration Incentive Scheme (EIS). Diamond core drilling will focus directly below the Callisto

4 Refer to ASX announcement dated 30th April 2025

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resource to test for additional mineralisation and to increase the understanding of how the deposit was formed. As well as the potential of making a new discovery, the information obtained from drilling will assist in further exploration along strike from Callisto and in the Norseman project area. The initial EIS diamond drill hole is planned to 600m with further extensions possible as determined by results. Diamond drill contractors have provided an expected start date in three weeks (last week in February).

Figure 2 – Callisto mineralisation schematic cross section and target zone for EIS funded diamond core drilling beneath the resource.

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Target zone beneath
Callisto mineralisation
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Improving Metal Prices

Since the release of the Callisto Mineral Resource Estimate in October 2023[5] metal prices have improved for palladium, platinum, gold, rhodium, and copper compared to the price assumptions made in the resource estimate. Table 2 shows the different metal prices between those used to calculate the Mineral Resource Estimate and the spot price as at 2[nd] February 2026.

Based on the strong improvement in metal prices, Galileo intends to undertake new metallurgical test work with the aim of optimising the Company’s understanding of metal extraction from the Callisto resource. Early-stage metallurgical results[6] showed excellent metallurgical recoveries from industry

5 Refer to ASX announcement dated 2nd October 2023

6 Refer to ASX announcement dated 20th February 2023

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standard sulphide flotation test work. New metallurgical samples will be obtained from the diamond drill hole planned to test for mineralisation beneath the Callisto resource. This drill hole will intersect the Callisto mineralisation at shallow levels before continuing deeper to test the undrilled zones immediately beneath the resource.

Table 2: Comparison of metal prices used in the 2023 Callisto Mineral Resource Estimate and current spot prices (USD)

Metal Mineral Resource Estimate5 Spot Price - 2 February 2025*
(USD) (USD)
Palladium $1,600 $1,639
Platinum $975 $2,067
Gold $1,870 $4,725
Rhodium $9,420 $10,000
Copper $8,420 $13,548
Nickel $23,800 $17,446
  • Source: Kitco https://www.kitco.com/price/precious-metals

Figure 3 – Sulphide flotation metallurgical test work of drill core sample from NRCD337 (details

in ASX announcement dated 20/02/2023)

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Figure 4 – Norseman Project outline (blue line) with recently completed gravity survey (black dashed line), Callisto Deposit (red star), and prospects requiring follow up drilling (grey stars). December 2025 drilling was completed at the Mission Sill South, Jimberlana South, and Callisto North prospects.

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Figure 5 – Callisto deposit and prospective geological trends at Galileo’s Norseman project.

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Figure 6 – Norseman project location map with a selection of mines, resources, and infrastructure in the region.

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About Galileo Mining:

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Galileo Mining Ltd (ASX: GAL) is focussed on the exploration and development of PGE (palladiumplatinum), nickel, copper, and cobalt resources in Western Australia. GAL’s tenements near Norseman are highly prospective for new discoveries as shown by the Callisto deposit. GAL also has Joint Ventures with the Creasy Group over tenements in the Fraser Range which are prospective for nickelcopper sulphide deposits similar to the operating Nova mine.

Norseman (100% GAL)

The wholly owned Norseman project contains the Callisto Discovery and adjacent regional prospects Jimberlana and Mission Sill with potential for palladium, platinum, nickel, copper, cobalt, and rhodium mineralisation. Galileo’s tenure at Norseman comprises mining, exploration, and prospecting licenses covering a total area of 255 km[2] .

The Callisto deposit was discovered in 2022 and is the first deposit of its type identified in Australia, analogous in mineralisation style to the Platreef deposits found in South Africa. An initial Mineral Resource Estimate was reported in 2023 with 17.5 Mt @ 1.04g/t 4E[7] , 0.20% Ni, 0.16% Cu (2.3g/t PdEq[8] or 0.52% NiEq[9] ).

Table 1 - Callisto Deposit Maiden Mineral Resource Estimate (JORC 2012) (see ASX announcement: 2 October 2023)

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Metal equivalent price assumptions of Callisto Resource released on 2[nd] October 2023

Based on metallurgical test work completed to date, the Company believes that Callisto’s mineralisation is amenable to concentration using a conventional crushing, milling and flotation process and has Reasonable Prospects for Eventual Economic Extraction.

Metallurgical recovery assumptions used for metal equivalent value calculations were: Pd – 82%, Pt – 78%, Au – 79%, Rh – 63%, Ni – 77%, Cu – 94%

Metal price assumptions, based on 12 month calculated averages to 11[th] September 2023, were used for metal equivalent values: Pd – US$1,600/oz, Pt – US$975/oz, Au – US$1,870/oz, Rh – US$9,420/oz, Ni - US23,800/t, Cu – US$8,420/t

Fraser Range (67% GAL / 33% Creasy Group JV)

Galileo is actively exploring for magmatic massive sulphide- nickel-copper deposits across its Fraser Range tenements covering over 600km[2] of highly prospective ground in the Albany-Fraser Orogen. The project is well positioned within the nickel-copper bearing Fraser Range Zone, with the Nova-Bollinger mine located between 30km and 90km from Galileo tenure.

74E = Palladium (Pd) + Platinum (Pt) + Gold (Au) + Rhodium (Rh) expressed in g/t

8 PdEq (Palladium Equivalent) = Pd (g/t) + 0.580 x Pt (g/t) + 1.13 x Au (g/t) + 4.52 x Rh (g/t) + 4.34 x Ni (%) + 1.88 x Cu (%)

9 NiEq (Nickel equivalent) = Ni % + 0.230 x Pd (g/t) + 0.133 x Pt (g/t) + 0.259 x Au (g/t) + 1.04 x Rh (g/t) + 0.432 x Cu (%)

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Competent Person Statement

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The information in this report that relates to Exploration Results is based on, and fairly represents, information and supporting documentation prepared by Mr Brad Underwood, a Member of the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, and a full time employee of Galileo Mining Ltd. Mr Underwood has sufficient experience that is relevant to the styles of mineralisation and types 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 Reserves” (JORC Code). Mr Underwood consents to the inclusion in the report of the matters based on his information in the form and context in which it appears.

With regard to the Company’s ASX Announcements referenced in the above Announcement, the Company is not aware of any new information or data that materially affects the information included in the Announcements.

Authorised for release by the Galileo Board of Directors.

Investor information: phone Galileo Mining on + 61 8 9463 0063 or email [email protected]

Media: David Tasker Chapter One Advisors E: [email protected] T: +61 433 112 936

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Appendix 1: Anomalous RC Drill Hole Intersections

>0.4g/t 3E cut-off over minimum 8 metre interval (2 x 4m composite samples), maximum one sample internal dilution. Reported as downhole width, true width unknown. 3E = Palladium (Pd) + Platinum (Pt) + Gold (Au); expressed in g/t.

Hole ID From
(m)
To (m) Interval
(m)
3E (Pd+
Pt+ Au;
g/t)
Palladium
(g/t)
Platinum
(g/t)
Gold
(g/t)
Copper
(%)
Nickel
(%)
NRC509 24 32 8 0.54 0.30 0.23 <0.01 0.06 0.63
NRC510 20 28 8 0.50 0.32 0.19 <0.01 0.04 0.37
and 44 52 8 0.66 0.39 0.25 <0.01 0.07 0.50
NRC513 0 40 40 0.92 0.73 0.19 <0.01 0.09 0.23
including 8 16 8 1.20 1.00 0.19 <0.01 0.11 0.34
NRC514 4 48 44 0.78 0.58 0.13 0.06 0.09 0.18
including 24 32 8 1.33 1.09 0.17 0.07 0.10 0.11
NRC515 20 36 16 0.52 0.34 0.17 0.01 0.07 0.25

Appendix 2: Reported Drill Hole Collar Details

Hole ID East North RL Azimuth Dip Total Depth (m)
NRC507 373903 6435249 314 90 -55 84
NRC508 373837 6435255 315 90 -55 96
NRC509 373791 6435247 317 90 -55 120
NRC510 373741 6435251 316 90 -55 120
NRC511 374167 6435444 327 90 -55 60
NRC512 374127 6435448 327 90 -55 60
NRC513 374082 6435450 325 90 -55 120
NRC514 374034 6435450 323 90 -55 90
NRC515 374012 6435451 322 90 -54 120
NRC516 373949 6435447 319 90 -54 120

Note: Easting and Northing coordinates are GDA94 Zone 51.

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Appendix 3: Drill Sections with Anomalous Results (see Figure 1 for plan view and Appendices 1 and 2 for drill hole details)

Section 1: 6,435,250N

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Section 2: 6,435,450N

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Appendix 3:

Galileo Mining Ltd – Norseman Project

JORC Code, 2012 Edition – Table 1

Section 1 Sampling Techniques and Data

(Criteria in this section apply to all succeeding sections.)

Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
Sampling
techniques
Nature and quality of sampling (eg cut
channels, random chips, or specific specialised
industry standard measurement tools
appropriate to the minerals under investigation,
such as down hole gamma sondes, or handheld
XRF instruments, etc). These examples should
not be taken as limiting the broad meaning of
sampling.
Include reference to measures taken to ensure
sample representivity and the appropriate
calibration of any measurement tools or
systems used.
Aspects of the determination of mineralisation
that are Material to the Public Report.
In cases where ‘industry standard’ work has
been done this would be relatively simple (eg
‘reverse circulation drilling was used to obtain 1
m samples from which 3 kg was pulverised to
produce a 30 g charge for fire assay’). In other
cases more explanation may be required, such
as where there is coarse gold that has inherent
sampling problems. Unusual commodities or
mineralisation types (eg submarine nodules)
may warrant disclosure of detailed information.
•Reverse Circulation (RC) drilling was
used to obtain one metre individually
bagged chip samples from pre-collars
and RC test drill holes.
•Each RC bag was spear sampled to
provide a 4-metre representative
composite sample for analyses.
•A 1m sample split for each metre is
collected at the time of drilling from the
drill rig mounted cone splitter.
•Selected 1m split sample intervals
were selected from zones of interest
and sent to the laboratory for analysis
with remainder of drill hole assayed
using 4m composite samples.
•QAQC standards (blank & reference)
and duplicate samples were included
routinely with 1 per 20 samples being a
standard or duplicate.
•Samples were sent to an independent
commercial assay laboratory.
•All assay sample preparation
comprised oven drying, pulverising and
splitting to a representative assay
charge pulp.
•A 50g Lead Collection Fire Assay with
ICP-MS finish is used to determine Au,
Pt and Pd results.
•A four acid digest is used for sample
digest with a 48 element analysis suite
including Ag, Al, As, Ba, Be, Bi, Ca,
Cd, Ce, Co, Cr, Cs, Cu, Fe, Ga, Ge,
Hf, In, K, La, Li, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Nb,
Ni, P, Pb, Rb, Re, S, Sb, Sc, Se, Sn,
Sr, Ta, Te, Th, Ti, Tl, U, V, W, Y, Zn,
Zr by ICP-OES finish.
•QAQC standards (blank & reference)
and duplicate samples were included
routinely with 1 per 20 samples being a
standard or duplicate.
•Samples have been sent to an
independent commercial assay
laboratory
Drilling
techniques
Drill type (eg core, reverse circulation, open-
hole hammer, rotary air blast, auger, Bangka,
sonic, etc) and details (eg core diameter, triple
•RC drilling was undertaken by Raglan
Drilling using a 5.5“ face sampling drill
bit.

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Criteria
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Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
or standard tube, depth of diamond tails, face-
sampling bit or other type, whether core is
_oriented and ifso, by what method, etc). _
•All RC holes were surveyed during
drilling using a north seeking gyro tool
Drill sample
recovery
Method of recording and assessing core and
chip sample recoveries and results assessed.
Measures taken to maximise sample recovery
and ensure representative nature of the
samples.
Whether a relationship exists between sample
recovery and grade and whether sample bias
may have occurred due to preferential loss/gain
of fine/coarse material.
•RC sample recoveries are visually
estimated for each metre with poor or
wet samples recorded in drill and
sample log sheets.
•The sample cyclone was routinely
cleaned at the end of each 6m rod and
when deemed necessary.
•No relationship has been determined
between sample recoveries and grade
and there is insufficient data to
determineifthereis a sample bias.
Logging Whether core and chip samples have been
geologically and geotechnically logged to a
level of detail to support appropriate Mineral
Resource estimation, mining studies and
metallurgical studies.
Whether logging is qualitative or quantitative in
nature. Core (or costean, channel, etc)
photography.
The total length and percentage of the relevant
intersections logged.
•Geological logging of RC drill holes
was done on a visual basis with
logging including lithology, grainsize,
mineralogy, texture, deformation,
mineralisation, alteration, veining,
colour and weathering.
•Logging of RC drill chips is qualitative
and based on the presentation of
representative drill chips retained for
all 1m sample intervals in the chip
trays.
•All RC drill holes were logged in their
entirety
Sub-
sampling
techniques
and sample
preparation
If core, whether cut or sawn and whether
quarter, half or all core taken.
If non-core, whether riffled, tube sampled,
rotary split, etc and whether sampled wet or
dry.
For all sample types, the nature, quality and
appropriateness of the sample preparation
technique.
Quality control procedures adopted for all sub-
sampling stages to maximise representivity of
samples.
Measures taken to ensure that the sampling is
representative of the in situ material collected,
including for instance results for field
duplicate/second-half sampling.
Whether sample sizes are appropriate to the
grain size of the material being sampled.
•All RC assays reported are from 1m
cone split samples.
•1m cone split samples were collected
for all metres at the time of drilling from
the drill rig mounted cone splitter.
•Selected 1m cone split samples for
intervals deemed of interest by the
geologist supervising the drill rig were
submitted for priority assay.
•The samples are dried and pulverised
before analysis.
•QAQC reference samples and
duplicates are routinely submitted with
each batch.
•The sample size is considered
appropriate for the mineralisation style,
application and analytical techniques
used.
•QAQC standards (blank & reference)
and duplicate samples were included
routinely with 1 per 20 samples being a
standard or duplicate.
•Samples have been sent to Intertek-
Genalysis, an independent commercial
assay laboratory where the samples
are weighed to the nearestgram.

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Criteria
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Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
•The samples are dried, crushed to
nominal 2mm and pulverised to
nominal 85% passing 75um before
analyses.
•QAQC reference samples and
duplicates are routinely inserted for
submission witheachbatch.
Quality of
assay data
and
laboratory
tests
The nature, quality and appropriateness of the
assaying and laboratory procedures used and
whether the technique is considered partial or
total.
For geophysical tools, spectrometers, handheld
XRF instruments, etc, the parameters used in
determining the analysis including instrument
make and model, reading times, calibrations
factors applied and their derivation, etc.
Nature of quality control procedures adopted
(eg standards, blanks, duplicates, external
laboratory checks) and whether acceptable
levels of accuracy (ie lack of bias) and precision
have been established.
•RC Chip and diamond core samples
are analysed for a multielement suite
(48 elements) by ICP-OES following a
four-acid digest. Assays for Au, Pt, Pd
are completed by 50gram Fire Assay
with an ICP-MS finish. The assay
methods used are considered
appropriate.
•QAQC standards and duplicates are
routinely included at a rate of 1 per 20
samples
•Further internal laboratory QAQC
procedures included internal batch
standards and blanks
•Sample preparation was completed at
Intertek Genalysis Laboratory,
(Kalgoorlie) with digest and assay
conducted by Intertek-Genalysis
Laboratory Services (Perth) using a
four acid (4A/MS48) for multi-element
assay and 50gram Fire Assay with an
ICP-MS finish for Au, Pt, Pd,
(FA50/MS).
•A Niton portable handheld XRF (pXRF)
has been used only to assist field
logging and as a guide for sample
selection. No pXRF values are
reported.
Verification
of sampling
and
assaying
The verification of significant intersections by
either independent or alternative company
personnel.
The use of twinned holes.
Documentation of primary data, data entry
procedures, data verification, data storage
(physical and electronic) protocols.
Discuss any adjustment to assay data.
•Field data is collected on site using a
standard set of logging templates
entered directly into a laptop computer.
Data is then sent to the Galileo
database manager for validation and
upload into the database.
•Assays are as reported from the
laboratory and stored in the Company
database and have not been adjusted
in any way.
Location of
data points
Accuracy and quality of surveys used to locate
drill holes (collar and down-hole surveys),
trenches, mine workings and other locations
used in Mineral Resource estimation.
Specification of the grid system used.
Quality and adequacy of topographic control.
•Drill hole collars are surveyed with a
handheld GPS with an accuracy of +/-
5m which is considered sufficient for
drill hole location accuracy.
•Co-ordinates are in GDA94 datum,
Zone 51.
•Downhole depths are in metres
measured downhole from the collar
locationonsurface.

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Criteria
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Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
•Topographic control has an accuracy
of 2m based on detailed satellite
imagery derived DTM or on laser
altimeter data collected from
aeromagnetic surveys
Data spacing
and
distribution
Data spacing for reporting of Exploration
Results.
Whether the data spacing and distribution is
sufficient to establish the degree of geological
and grade continuity appropriate for the Mineral
Resource and Ore Reserve estimation
procedure(s) and classifications applied.
Whether sample compositing has been applied.
•Drill hole spacing was designed to
target potential mineralisation as
indicated by previous drilling and
geological interpretation.
•This spacing has been deemed
adequate for first pass assessment
only and is not considered sufficient to
determine JORC Compliant Inferred
Resources and therefore laboratory
assay results and additional drilling
would be required.
•RC drill holes were sampled from
surface on a 4m composite basis or as
1m, 2m, or 3m samples as determined
by the end of hole depth or under
instruction from the geologist
supervising the program.
•1m cone split RC samples were
collected through zones of geological
interest.
Orientation
of data in
relation to
geological
structure
Whether the orientation of sampling achieves
unbiased sampling of possible structures and
the extent to which this is known, considering
the deposit type.
If the relationship between the drilling
orientation and the orientation of key
mineralised structures is considered to have
introduced a sampling bias, this should be
assessed and reported if material.
•It is unknown whether the orientation
of sampling achieves unbiased
sampling as interpretation of
quantitative measurements of
mineralised zones/structures has not
yet been completed.
•The drilling is oriented either
perpendicular to the lithological strike
and dip of the target rock or as holes
adjacent to previous aircore drilling.
Sample
security
The measures taken to ensure sample security. •Each sample was put into a tied off
calico bag and then several placed in
large plastic “polyweave” bags which
were zip tied closed.
•Samples were delivered directly to the
laboratory in Kalgoorlie by Galileo
staff.
Audits or
reviews
The results of any audits or reviews of sampling
techniques and data.
•Continuous improvement internal
reviews of sampling techniques and
procedures are ongoing. No external
audits have beenperformed.

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Section 2 Reporting of Exploration Results

(Criteria listed in the preceding section also apply to this section.)


(Criteria listed in

the preceding section also apply to this section.)
Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
Mineral
tenement
and land
tenure status
Type, reference name/number, location and
ownership including agreements or material
issues with third parties such as joint ventures,
partnerships, overriding royalties, native title
interests, historical sites, wilderness or national
park and environmental settings.
The security of the tenure held at the time of
reporting along with any known impediments to
obtaining a licence to operate in the area.
•The Norseman Project comprises two
mining leases, four exploration
licenses, and eighteen prospecting
covering 251km2of contiguous tenure
•All tenements within the Norseman
Project are 100% owned by Galileo
Mining Ltd.
•A 1% Net Smelter Royalty is payable to
Australian Gold Resources Pty Ltd on
mine production from within the
Norseman Project (NSR does not apply
to production from any laterite
operations)
•The Norseman Project is centred
around a location approximately 10km
north-west of Norseman on vacant
crown land.
•All tenements in the Norseman Project
are 100% covered by the Ngadju
Native Title Determined Claim.
•The tenements are in good standing
and there arenoknown impediments.
Exploration
done by
other parties
Acknowledgment and appraisal of exploration by
other parties.
Between
the
mid-1960’s
and
2000
exploration was conducted in the area for
gold and base-metals (most notably Ni
sulphides). Exploration focussed on the Mt
Thirsty Sill and eastern limb of the Mission
Sill.
Central Norseman Gold Corporation/WMC
(1966-1972)
•Explored the Jimberlana Dyke for Ni-Cu-
PGE-Cr.
Soil
sampling
generated
several Cu anomalies 160-320ppm Cu.
Barrier
Exploration
and
Jimberlana
Minerals Between (1968 and 1974)

Explored immediately south of Mt
Thirsty for Ni-Cu sulphide. IP, Ground
Magnetic Surveys, Soil Sampling, Soil
Auger Sampling and Diamond Drilling
was completed.
Resolute Limited, Great Southern Mines
Ltd and Dundas Mining Pty Ltd (1993-1996)
•Gold focussed exploration. Several gold
anomalies
were
identified
in
soil
geochemistry but were not followed up.
Resolute assayed for Au, Ni, Cu, Zn but
did not assay for PGE.
•ResoluteLimited drilledlateriteregolith

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Criteria
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Commentary
profiles over the ultramafic portions of
the Mt Thirsty Sill and identified a small
Ni-Co Resource with high Co grades.
Kinross Gold Corp Australia (1999)
Completed
a
50m
line
spaced
aeromagnetic survey.
2000-2004
Australian Gold Resources (“AGR”) held
“Mt Thirsty Project” from 2000 to 30th
June 2004. Works identified Ni-Co
resources on the Project.
Anaconda Nickel Ltd (“ANL”) explored
AGR Mt Thirsty Project as part of the
AGR/ANL
Exploration
Access
Agreement 2000-2001.
AGR/ANL (2000-2001)
Mapping focussed on identifying Co-Ni
enriched regolith areas.
RC on 800mx100m grid at Mission Sill
targeting Ni-Co Laterite (MTRC001-
MTRC035). Nickel assay maximum of
0.50%, Co 0.16%, Cu to 0.23%.
Concluded the anomalous Cu-PGE
association
suggested
affinity
with
Bushveldt or Stillwater style PGE
mineralisation. A lack of an arsenic
correlation
cited
as
support
for
magmatic rather than hydrothermal
PGE source.
AGR (2003-2004)
Soil sampling over the Mission Sill and
Jimberlana Dyke.
RC drilling (MTRC036-052) confirmed
shallow PGE anomalism with best
results of 1m at 2.04 combined Pt-Pd in
MTRC038 from surface.
Petrography identified sulphide textures
indicative
of
primary
magmatic
character.
Sixty samples were re-assayed for PGE
when assays returned >0.05% Cu. A
further 230 samples were re-assayed
based on the initial Au-Pd-Pt results.
The best combined result for Au-Pd-Pt
was 5.7g/t.
Galileo
Galileo commenced exploration on the
Norseman Project from 30th June 2004
aftersale ofthe tenements byAGR.

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Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
Geology Deposit type, geological setting and style of
mineralisation.
•The Norseman target geology and
mineralisation style is PGE-nickel-
copper mineralisation related to layered
intrusions (sills and dykes) and
komatiite nickel sulphide mineralisation
occurring within the GSWA mapped
Mount Kirk Formation (and intrusions
into this formation)
•The Mount Kirk formation is described
as “Acid and basic volcanic rocks and
sedimentary rocks, intruded by basic
and ultrabasic rocks”
Drill hole
Information
A summary of all information material to the
understanding of the exploration results
including a tabulation of the following information
for all Material drill holes:
o easting and northing of the drill hole collar
o elevation or RL (Reduced Level – elevation
above sea level in metres) of the drill hole
collar
o dip and azimuth of the hole
o down hole length and interception depth
o hole length.
If the exclusion of this information is justified on
the basis that the information is not Material and
this exclusion does not detract from the
understanding of the report, the Competent
Person should clearly explain why this is the
_case. _
•Refer to Appendices 1and 2.
Data
aggregation
methods
In reporting Exploration Results, weighting
averaging techniques, maximum and/or
minimum grade truncations (eg cutting of high
grades) and cut-off grades are usually Material
and should be stated.
Where aggregate intercepts incorporate short
lengths of high-grade results and longer lengths
of low grade results, the procedure used for
such aggregation should be stated and some
typical examples of such aggregations should be
shown in detail.
The assumptions used for any reporting of metal
equivalent values should be clearly stated.

Tables of relevant assay intervals of
significance are included in previous
releases.

Parts-per-billion and parts-per-million
data reported from the assay
laboratory have been converted to
grams-per-tonne for Au, Pd, Pt.

Parts-per-million data reported from
the assay laboratory for Cu and Ni
have been converted to percent values
and reported as percent values
rounded to 2 decimal places. 3E
intercepts have been calculated as the
sum of Au, Pd and Pt assays in
grams-per-tonne.
Relationship
between
mineralisatio
n widths and
intercept
lengths
These relationships are particularly important in
the reporting of Exploration Results.
If the geometry of the mineralisation with respect
to the drill hole angle is known, its nature should
be reported.
If it is not known and only the down hole lengths
are reported, there should be a clear statement
to this effect (eg ‘down hole length, true width
_not known’). _
•The drilling is oriented perpendicular to
the lithological strike and dip of the
target rock unit
•It is unknown whether the orientation of
sampling achieves unbiased sampling
of possible structures as no
measurable structures are recorded in
drill chips.
•No quantitativemeasurements of

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Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
mineralised zones/structures exist, and
all drill intercepts are reported as down
hole length in metres, true width
unknown.
Diagrams Appropriate maps and sections (with scales) and
tabulations of intercepts should be included for
any significant discovery being reported These
should include, but not be limited to a plan view
of drill hole collar locations and appropriate
sectional views.
•Project location map and plan map of
the drill hole locations with respect to
each other and with respect to other
available data are included in the text.
•Drill hole locations have been
determined with hand-held GPS drill
hole collar location (Garmin GPS 78s)
+/-5m in X/Y/Zdimensions
Balanced
reporting
Where comprehensive reporting of all
Exploration Results is not practicable,
representative reporting of both low and high
grades and/or widths should be practiced to
avoid misleading reporting of Exploration
_Results. _
•All available relevant information is
presented.
Other
substantive
exploration
data
Other exploration data, if meaningful and
material, should be reported including (but not
limited to): geological observations; geophysical
survey results; geochemical survey results; bulk
samples – size and method of treatment;
metallurgical test results; bulk density,
groundwater, geotechnical and rock
characteristics; potential deleterious or
contaminating substances.
•Detailed 50m line spaced aeromagnetic
data has been used for interpretation of
underlying geology. Data was collected
by Magspec Airborne Surveys Pty Ltd
using a Geometrics G-823 caesium
vapor magnetometer at an average
flying height of 30m.
•28 lines (for 657 stations) of 200m or
400m line x 100m station spaced
Moving Loop Electromagnetic survey
data was collected over the prospect
using a 200m loop. Data was collected
using a Smartem receiver and Fluxgate
receiver coil at base frequencies of
1.0Hz to 0.25Hz and 28-30 Amp
current. Two conductor plates were
modelled. Based on the available drill
logs these conductors appear to
represent the position of sulphide rich
sediment beneath the target mafic-
ultramafic intrusion.
•Consultants from Omni GeoX
delineated the layered units within the
sill using geochemical relationships
identified by K-means cluster analysis
and manual geochemical interpretive
workflows.

Pole-Dipole Induced Polarisation (IP)
survey data was collected using a pole-
dipole array with a SMARTem 16
channel 24-bit receiver system (EMIT).
A Search-Ex WB50 50KVA transmitter
was utilised with a 100m receiver
spacing.

Dipole-Dipole Induced Polarisation (IP)
survey data was collected using a
dipole-dipole arraywitha SMARTem

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Criteria JORC Code explanation Commentary
16 channel 24-bit receiver system
(EMIT). A Search-Ex WB50 50KVA
transmitter was utilised with a 50m
receiver spacing.
•Modelling and interpretation of IP
survey geophysical data was
undertaken by Terra Resources
•Mapping of the Norseman Project Area
prospective for PGE-nickel was
undertaken at a 1:10,000 scale by
Model Earth Pty Ltd
•Consultants from Omni GeoX
undertook geochemical analyses of
available surface and drill hole samples
from the Mission Sill prospect. Ni-Cr
ratios were plotted and sued to define
the western contact of the Mission Sill
intrusive complex.
•Ground Gravity survey data was
collected by Daishsat Geodetic
Surveyors on 400m north-south spaced
lines at 100m east-west station
spacing.
Further work The nature and scale of planned further work
(eg tests for lateral extensions or depth
extensions or large-scale step-out drilling).
Diagrams clearly highlighting the areas of
possible extensions, including the main
geological interpretations and future drilling
areas, provided this information is not
_commercially sensitive. _
•Diamond core drilling
•RC drill testing
•Air core drill testing

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