Larvotto Resources Limited announced encouraging nickel and associated chrome results from a recent geochemical soil survey undertaken at the Dickie Dyke prospect at the Company's 100%-owned Eyre Project, located 70km east of Norseman in the Eastern Goldfields, Western Australia. Larvotto's Eyre Project occurs on the mineralised Jimberlana Dyke, historically known to host base metal and platinum-group elements (PGE), recently highlighted by Galileo Mining Limited at its Calisto discovery. The Dickie Dyke prospect is located on the north-eastern end of the Larvotto tenement.

The majority of E63/1976 was covered by 240m by 180m geochemical soil sampling in late 2022. The sampling identified a strong nickel and chrome geochemical high. Geological mapping has identified that this is associated with the Jimberlana Dyke, an extensive intrusive rock unit noted for its nickel, copper and recently platinum- group elements (PGE) mineralisation.

Larvotto has some 40km of exposure to the Jimberlana Dyke within its 692km tenement package at Eyre and this is the third Ni anomaly identified, with the other two being located near Mt Norcott approximately 35km west of the Dickie Dyke prospect 2. The survey location is 70km east of Norseman in the Eastern Goldfields, WA. The area has historically been largely unexplored, but recently is becoming a focus for numerous companies after the discovery of nickel, lithium and PGEs in the region. The Jimberlana Dyke is a large mafic intrusive body that is up to 2.5km in width and has been referred to as analogous to the Great Dyke in Rhodesia by Western Mining Corporation, who explored the area in the 1960s and early 1970s and again from 1985 to the late 1980s.

Newmont also explored the Mt Norcott area and confirmed the concentration of Ni-Cu-PGE sulphides at the top of a norite rock unit within the Dyke.