Sarama Resources Ltd. announced that reconnaissance soil geochemistry surveys at its Cape Mount East exploration property in Liberia have successfully extended the anomalous gold-in-soil zone previously encountered at the Cape Mount exploration property to a total 15km along trend. Follow-up trenching programs on the Cape Mount property, approximately 10km north of Aureus Mining Inc.'s New Liberty Gold Project, have returned several intervals of significant mineralisation, confirming the presence of in-situ gold mineralisation and reinforcing previously reported soil geochemistry results. The company exploration efforts in Liberia have largely focused on the western part of the country at the Cape Mount Project, comprised of the Cape Mount, Cape Mount East and Cape Mount West exploration properties.

The Project is immediately adjacent to Aureus Mining Inc.'s New Liberty Gold Project, which is currently under mine development on a mineral resource base of 1.1 Moz measured and indicated and 1.2 Moz inferred. The Cape Mount East exploration property contains the northern and southern limbs of an interpreted regional-scale fold defined by the trace of the east-west trending Bea Mountain iron formation. Results of a wide-spaced soil geochemistry survey completed on the northern limb have confirmed the eastward extension of the 9km-long gold-in- soil anomaly present on the Cape Mount property for another 6km, bringing the strike length of the trend hosting the anomalous zones over the two properties to 15km.

The company plans to conduct infill soil geochemistry surveys in this area as well as expanding the coverage of the reconnaissance geochemistry program to include the southern interpreted limb structure of the formation. The company had previously identified parallel 11km-long and 3.5km long anomalous gold-in-soil zones in the southern portion of the Gbarpolu exploration property, co-incident with active artisanal gold mining sites and several geologically prospective features identified by an airborne geophysical survey conducted by the Company in 2012. A trenching program consisting of 14 excavations in north-south orientations along the length of the anomalous zone was commenced in second quarter/third quarter of 2013.

The walls of the trenches were sampled at uniform 1m intervals over their length at a depth of approximately 2-3m below surface. Results indicate the presence of high-grade zones of gold mineralization situated on the 3.5km-long southern anomalous zone as well as a broad low-grade zone in the northern 11km-long anomalous zone. The weathering environment is similar to that at the Cape Mount Project, with high rainfall influencing the upper part of the regolith profile, leading to varying levels of in-situ gold dispersion.

It is encouraging to note the presence of the very high grade intersection in BPTR003 of 7m @ 13.11g/t Au which is supported by the nearby intersection of 4m @ 4.63g/t Au in BPPT2.