Zacapa Resources Ltd. provides details regarding its upcoming drill campaign at its 100% owned South Bullfrog gold project in the Beatty District of Nevada. Follow up soil grids (25 metre stations by 50 metre lines) have been completed at Longtail and Bottom's Up to aid in defining the structural orientation of previously discovered geochemical anomalies and outcropping silicified zones. Additional reconnaissance sampling was also completed in the Sourdough area along the northward projection of a major fault that displays extensive alteration at the Vanderbilt Mine at the southern boundary of Zacapa's claims. Rock chip and grab sampling was conducted along mapped structures in the Shingleback and Sledge areas.

In total, 893 soil samples, and 294 rock chip and grab samples have been collected. Results are expected this month. The Longtail prospect consists of a intensely silicified, alunite and kaolinite altered rocks surrounded by alluvial cover and occurs near the intersection of several geophysical lineaments identified in both magnetic and gravity surveys.

Recent geological and structural mapping suggests that the western portion of the outcrop may be down dropped by faults and covered by post-mineral sedimentary units and recent alluvium. A drill fence is proposed to test this hypothesis by drilling across the silicified outcrop, into the resistivity anomaly and perpendicular to the inferred fault. The most pronounced IP/resistivity and chargeability features in the 21 line-kilometer survey occur on the south side of the Shingleback target area where several faults are present.

Zacapa has chosen to test this anomaly from the SE (SB-016) to maximize the number of fault intersections while drilling the core of the strong IP resistivity high. While this is the primary focus, Zacapa is also testing the potential for gold mineralization at the Twin Shafts fault (SB-006B) and the Basalt fault (SB-011) separately in addition to testing the structure hosting mineralization at the Schoch Shaft (SB-012) that has seen exploration activity within the last decade. The Sledge area contains several N-S trending through-going faults.

Initial drilling at Sledge is focused on testing the most significant structure, the east dipping Sledge fault, which parallels the western boundary of the property and is interpreted as a northern splay off the Montgomery-Shoshone fault which hosts the historical Montgomery-Shoshone deposit. Drilling is designed to test the gold potential at multiple locations along strike of the Sledge fault starting with three reconnaissance drill locations.