Silver Predator Corp. announced results from the 2012 detailed mapping and soil sampling program near the company's Taylor silver project, located in White Pine County, Nevada. The 1,166 sample soil program followed an extensive six months of mapping to produce soil results that include 1.7 g/t gold and 58.0 g/t silver.

This integrated field program identified key geologic features including anomalous gold, silver, antimony, arsenic and mercury pathfinder suite elements consistent other gold dominant 'Carlin type' sediment hosted deposits in Nevada. New gold and gold-silver target areas were identified at South Taylor, Crescent and Enterprise, with the Enterprise target area exhibiting the largest areal extent found to date. A drill plan is currently being developed to evaluate near surface and deeper underground targets at these prospects.

Starting in the resource area of the property, where historic underground and open pit mining for silver exposed abundant rock faces, the company started detailed geologic mapping in April with the goal of defining the geologic controls to mineralization. This interpretation is currently being used to complete the geologic model for a new resource estimate at Taylor planned for completion in the first quarter of 2013. Of primary importance, north-south and northwest-oriented fault zones were important mineral controls, along with the margins of felsic intrusives and silty carbonate host rocks.

The best silver grades were found where these features converged and jasperoidal alteration is present. his combination of geologic controls is also found in the northern Carlin trend and in other sediment hosted gold systems in Nevada. Using this information, extensive additional mapping was conducted to the southeast, where the highly favorable host rocks of the upper Guilmette Formation are buried and could have the potential for undiscovered precious metal deposits.