Max Resource Corp. reported the discovery of a new zone at AM North of the Company's 100% owned CESAR project, located in northeastern Colombia. Regional sampling identified the presence of several new outcrops of stratabound copper-silver mineralization, expanding the Herradura zone to over 5.7-km along strike and over 5.1-km down dip. The zone remains open along both strike and dip as the new horizons are interpreted as strike and dip continuations of Herradura. Max believes CESAR is very similar to the Kupferschiefer. Those deposits are Europe's largest copper source, which produced 3MT grading 1.49% copper and 48.6 g/t silver in 2018 from a mineralized zone of 0.5 to 5.5-metre thickness. Kupferschiefer deposits, also yielded 40Mozs of silver in 2019, almost twice the production of the world's second largest silver mine. Max cautions investors that the presence of copper-silver mineralization at Kupferschiefer is not necessarily indicative of similar mineralization at CESAR. In addition, a recent presentation by leading Kupferschiefer expert, Professor Adam Piestrzynski, identified numerous similarities between CESAR and Kupferschiefer including: basin characteristics, lithology, mineralogy, deposit parameters, grades and origin of sulfur. A notable difference is the Kupferschiefer orebody starts at 500-metres below surface, whereas Max's CESAR copper-silver mineralization starts at surface.