St George Mining Limited announced further nickel-copper sulphide targets at the Mt Alexander Project, located near Leonora in the north Eastern Goldfields, which have potential to significantly expand the large footprint of high-grade mineralisation at the Project. Drilling to date by St George at the Cathedrals Belt has identified a 4.5km strike of high-grade nickel-copper sulphide mineralisation. Large parts of the Cathedrals Belt, including extensions to the east and west of the known mineralisation, remain undrilled and offer highly prospective targets for the discovery of additional nickel-copper sulphides. Drilling and DHEM surveys are being used concurrently to successfully scope out the scale of the discoveries along the Cathedrals Belt. DHEM surveys were completed earlier this month on a number of the diamond drill holes drilled in the last quarter of 2018 at the Investigators and Stricklands Prospects. Off-hole EM anomalies were identified from the surveys in several of the drill holes, as summarised below in Table 1. Modelling of some of the EM anomalies is continuing. A reconnaissance field inspection of the Cathedrals Belt in December 2018 by technical team has located several new gossans in the area between the Cathedrals and Stricklands Prospects. This area covers a 1,000m east-west strike of the Cathedrals Belt and has been named the Fairbridge Prospect. Gossans are weathered or decomposed rock located at surface, and may represent the upper and exposed part of an ore deposit at depth. In nickel sulphide exploration, the presence of oxidised nickel bearing rocks at surface may represent the surface expression of a nickel sulphide deposit below surface. Similar gossans drilled at the Stricklands and Cathedrals Prospects have been confirmed as associated with proximal massive nickel-copper sulphide sources. The first surveys to be completed will be high resolution fixed loop electromagnetic (FLEM) and induced polarisation (IP) surveys. Only a small part of the target area has been surveyed so far. Early data indicates a large anomaly over more than 100m in strike situated immediately to the west of the Cathedrals Prospect. Further details will be announced as the new data is acquired and interpreted. The earlier SAMSON EM survey completed over this area identified several weak EM responses. However, the SAMSON survey may not have been ideally configured to test this area for mineralisation at depth. Drill hole MAD104 at Stricklands intersected more than 6m of sulphide mineralisation that was not detected by ground-based EM surveys. This supports the potential for massive sulphides to be present along the Cathedrals Belt notwithstanding the absence of a strong EM signature from surface EM surveys. An RC drill programme is scheduled to commence in mid-February 2019 to test the Fairbridge Prospect, and will employ a two-pronged approach. Firstly, discrete anomalies modelled from the geophysical data will be drill tested. Secondly, a series of drill holes will be completed as a reconnaissance programme using DHEM surveys to further assist in locating any mineralisation at depth. Further details of the drill programme will be announced soon, once the geophysical surveys are completed and the new targets are modelled and interpreted by Newexco and technical team.