Jameson Resources Limited announced extremely positive results from pilot oven carbonization of Crown Mountain north pit coal. The testing was the most comprehensive yet for Crown Mountain coal and yielded a suite of coke test results confirming the earlier PFS conclusion that the north pit coal is an exceptional high quality hard coking coal that should command benchmark pricing. The carbonization work was performed by CanMet Energy ("CanMet"), with petrographic analysis completed by Pearson Coal Petrography ("Pearson"), both internationally respected experts in their fields. Testing on the north pit coal is complete. Samples from the south pit continue through the analysis flowsheet, with the pilot wash scheduled to commence in mid-May, followed by carbonization testing in June. Testing of the north pit blend of Crown Mountain coal is essentially complete, as is evaluation of coke Testing of the produced by that material in a pilot (movable wall) oven (345 KG capacity). The results are overwhelmingly positive and confirm the north pit coal to be a premium hard coking coal. With a pilot CSR of 73.5 (confirming the earlier SHO figure of 76) and a volatile matter of 20%, the north pit coal places in an enviable position compared to other premium hard coking coals as illustrated below. Coals such as this are required by cokemasters to achieve the targeted coke strength for optimal blast furnace fuel efficiency. In converting coal to coke, a key concern with lower volatile coals is the potential for oven wall pressure, as coals causing high wall pressures can cause structural damage to coke ovens. CanMet determined the north pit coal to have very low oven wall and gas pressures of 2.5 kPa (0.36 psi) and 1.4 kPa (0.20 psi) respectively.