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The Tennessee Mountain Tungsten project hosts high-grade tungsten mineralisation within a classic skarn system extending over ~2.5 km of strike, with trenching exposing continuous near-surface zones such as a 107 m long, 4.5 m thick bed grading 0.61% WO₃.
Historical sampling, guided by scheelite fluorescence, often began and ended in mineralised zones, suggesting reported intercepts represent minimum true widths within larger, untested halos.
Most historical drillholes terminated in mineralisation and remain open at depth and along strike, highlighting strong growth potential. Situated in Elko County, Nevada—a Tier-1 U.S. jurisdiction—the project offers potential to deliver a domestic supply of Tungsten, a mineral critical to defence, aerospace, and industrial applications.