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Successful Sample Program Reported For KT Mine

BURLINGTON – Silver Bullet Mines Corp. (SBMI) reported on the recently completed highly successful bulk sample from the KT Mine in Arizona.
SBMI announced its acquisition of the KT Mine on July 23, 2025. As part of its due diligence review of KT, the Company took roughly 50 tons from approximately 400 tons of waste material to its mill for later processing into concentrate. Samples from that waste material processed at SBMI’s assay lab averaged 0.3 oz/ton gold and ran as high as 1.8 oz/ton gold.
SBMI took other random samples from the concentrate throughout the process. Five such samples were sent to the ISO-accredited Activation Laboratories Ltd. (ActLabs) for detailed analysis. ActLabs advised the initial concentrate values for the gold, silver and lead were higher than the maximum values for the tests performed, requiring a different test to determine how high the values were for the gold, silver and lead.
Values for the retested samples returned as high as 809 g/tonne (23.6 oz/ton gold and 959 g/tonne (28 oz/ton) silver, and the lead returned 48%. No significant deleterious elements were found. These gold and silver values are extremely high but in line with the historical numbers provided by the previous owner of KT. SBMI is currently shipping additional material from the mine to the mill for processing and to produce a concentrate for sale.
In anticipation of these final results the Company has improved access to the site, secured the area and proceeded to open the existing adit. The adit has been timbered to provide access to the vein and the field team occasionally pans for gold from the tunnel along the vein.
The Company is also working at surface to better define the vein structure, with the vein having been traced for over 1000 feet to date. Samples for assay are being taken throughout the process.
The Company believes that the KT property as well as the Super Champ Mine provide significant potential to provide high grade gold and silver to its mill for processing for the foreseeable future. In light of this SBMI is working with its engineering group to increase the capacity of its mill and add additional circuits to recover other minerals.

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