Canary Gold Corp. (CSE: BRAZ; OTCQB: CNYGF; Frankfurt: K5D) announced that it has received additional technical observations and recommendations from Clara Maria Lamus Molina, an internationally recognized geologist-engineer specializing in the evaluation and sampling of alluvial gold deposits. The review outlines a practical pathway to advance the Rio Madeira project from preliminary geological observations toward systematic, representative, and auditable technical data.
Ms. Molina's work supports Canary Gold's view that Rio Madeira represents a prospective large-scale alluvial exploration target. Key recommendations include the use of sonic drilling in priority target areas, standardized logging, granulometry, gold-particle classification, and robust QA/QC and chain-of-custody procedures. The review also highlights positive indicators such as active alluvial gold mining within the Madeira River system and visible free gold observed during inspections, though the company cautions these observations provide regional context only and are not necessarily indicative of mineralization on its property.
Mark Tommasi, President of Canary Gold, emphasized the importance of disciplined validation: "Rio Madeira exhibits several characteristics commonly associated with alluvial gold systems, including interpreted paleochannel targets, favourable gravel horizons and active alluvial mining within the broader Madeira River region. The next step is disciplined validation. Ms. Molina's review gives us a clear technical pathway to test the project in a way that is systematic, auditable and meaningful for investors."
Alluvial gold systems are evaluated on a volumetric basis, where the size and continuity of paleochannels, gravel thickness, recoverable gold content, stripping ratio, and processing efficiency are critical. The company's immediate objective is to define the channel, measure the gravel, validate the grade, test recovery, and build the database step by step. Future work is expected to focus on systematic sonic drilling, metre-by-metre geological logging, recovered-volume measurement, controlled sample processing, and geological-volumetric modelling.
The company also referenced the Nechí alluvial gold system in Colombia, operated by Mineros S.A., as an educational benchmark for how alluvial systems can be evaluated and advanced. However, Canary cautioned that Nechí is not directly comparable to Rio Madeira and is materially more advanced. "Nechí is not a direct comparison to Rio Madeira. It is a useful example of the level of technical discipline required to move an alluvial system from concept to resource and operating model," Tommasi added.
Canary Gold is now reviewing budgets, logistics, and sequencing for a priority sonic-drilling and sample-processing program. The company cautions that exploration remains at an early stage, and no mineral resource has been defined. There can be no assurance that continued exploration will result in the delineation of an economic mineral deposit.
The scientific and technical information in this news release has been reviewed and approved by Andrew Lee Smith, P.Geo., a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101. Mr. Smith is not independent of the company, serving as Executive Chairman.
For further information, contact Mark Tommasi, President, at (604) 318-1448 or visit www.canarygold.ca.


