Aeris Resources Limited announced an updated Mineral Resource for the Roses Pride deposit at the company's 100% owned Cracow Gold Operations in Queensland. The updated Roses Pride Mineral Resource estimate represents a 260% increase in total contained gold ounces compared to the previously reported Mineral Resource (December 2019). The updated Mineral Resource contains 177,000 tonnes at 4.6 grams per tonne gold for 26.1 thousand ounces of gold. Mineralisation at the Roses Pride deposit remains open along strike to the north and further drilling is planned in the first half of 2021. The updated Roses Pride Mineral Resource is reported in accordance with the Australasian Code for Reporting of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves 2012 (JORC Code). Material changes from the previous reported Roses Pride Mineral Resource (Table 2) include the conversion of additional mineralisation to JORC classified Indicated and Inferred categories. The increased Inventory is based on a combination of additional drilling data and an alternate reporting schema. The updated Mineral Resource was reported from within nominal 2.2g/t Au cut-off shells. In some places blocks below cut-off were included within the reported volume to retain a geometry consistent with a potential "mineable" shape. The previous Mineral Resource was reported at a 2.8g/t Au cut-off within a more tightly constrained footprint around the current mine workings. Resource classification was based primarily on drill density with some consideration given to the confidence of the model, geological complexities including vein geometry and continuity, faulting, assay variability. The resource model has been classified as Indicated and Inferred Mineral Resource. Indicated Mineral Resource is reported from areas with a drill density up to 40m x 40m. Inferred Mineral Resource is classified either from drill spacings up to 60m x 60m or projected a maximum of 15 metres beyond the base of Indicated Mineral Resource. Gold mineralisation at Roses Pride is hosted in steeply dipping low sulphidation epithermal veins. These veins are found as discrete lodes (often with stockwork veining), composed of quartz, carbonate and adularia, with varying percentages of each mineral. Epithermal vein textures include banding (colloform, crustiform, cockade, moss), breccia channels and massive quartz; all indicative of depth within the epithermal system. Gold is very fine grained and found predominately as electrum but less commonly within clots of pyrite. Estimation domains are based on a combination of lithological and gold grade information. Both discrete vein lode domains and halo or stockwork domains were interpreted separately. The dominant mineralised structure and mineralised splay faults are characterised by robust quartz/carbonate vein development with logged vein percentages >50%. Peripheral stockwork domains are characterised by erratic and generally low grade gold mineralisation. A 0.1g/t Au cut-off grade was used to define the margins of the stockwork domains. Sample data used for estimation include a combination of underground face samples (73%), diamond drill hole samples (20% including half core HQ and NQ and full core LTK60) and RC samples (7%). Face sample data is located within the existing mined Mineral Resource. The remaining Mineral Resource is informed by diamond drilling and RC samples. Sample intervals for drill core and face samples were determined by visual logging of lithology type, veining style/intensity and alteration style/intensity to ensure a representative sample was taken. Sampling lengths ranged from a minimum of 0.4m to a maximum of 1.2m with sampling completed across the full width of mineralisation. RC samples were collected on 1m intervals. Surface and underground drill core was halved with a core saw, with one half dispatched for analysis and the other half retained. All underground LTK60 was whole core sampled, with a small number of underground NQ holes whole core sampled during 2013. RC samples were collected with a cyclone and 7-1 split was taken at the drill rig using a riffle splitter.