Max resource corp. reported the newly acquired CESAR West, encompassing approximately 2,000 square kilometres of highly prospective areas for copper-silver mineralization, at the Company's wholly owned CESAR project, North Eastern Colombia. Max believes that the stratabound mineralized system in the CESAR Basin is analogous to the Kupferschiefer Basin in Poland. The Kupferschiefer deposits, Europe's large copper source, produced 3MT of copper in 2018 and 40 million ounces of silver in 2019 from an orebody 0.5 to 5.5-metres thick, grading 1.49% copper and 48.6 g/t silver. This silver yield is almost twice the production of the world's second large silver mine. The CESAR project in North Eastern Colombia covers the major portion of over 200-km long Cesar Basin with identified statabound sediment-hosted copper-silver mineralization. This region enjoys major infrastructure as a result of oil & gas and mining operations, including Cerrejon, the large coal mine in Latin America, jointly owned by global miners BHP Billiton, XStrata and Anglo American. Max has entered into three non-exclusive confidentiality agreements regarding the CESAR project: one with one of the copper producers; a second with a global mining company and a third with a mid- tier copper explorer. The exploration priorities for the CESAR project are: regional geochemical sampling, structural modelling interpretation of seismic data, analysis of oil & gas drill cores and expansion of landholdings. Max has initiated its fully funded 2021 exploration campaign.