Armory Mining Corp. Acquires Geological Data for Riley Creek Antimony‑Gold Project

Armory Mining Corp. (CSE: ARMY) announced that it has secured historical geophysical data for its Riley Creek antimony‑gold project in British Columbia. The acquisition includes the complete 1995 airborne survey performed by Dighem, which comprised magnetometer, electromagnetic, and radiometric measurements.

Survey Details

  • Survey Period: 1995
  • Data Types: Magnetometer, electromagnetic, radiometric
  • Equipment: Multicoil, multifrequency Dighem system; high‑sensitivity cesium magnetometer; 256‑channel spectrometer; four‑channel VLF receiver
  • Coverage: Approximately 575 km of east–west flight lines spaced 100 m apart
  • Original Interpretation (1997): 11 areas of interest identified; anomalies suggested fault systems, intrusive contacts, radiometric highs, and electromagnetic conductors

Planned Analysis

Armory plans to digitize and re‑process the entire dataset with contemporary algorithms and software unavailable at the time of the original survey. The company expects to start the review immediately and aims to complete the analysis within 90 days.

Strategic Context

The Riley Creek property is part of Armory’s portfolio of resources critical to energy, security, and defense sectors. Antimony, gold, and other associated minerals are positioned as strategic commodities in a world experiencing heightened geopolitical tensions and a shift toward renewable energy technologies. The company’s focus on modern interpretation methods reflects its commitment to leveraging existing data to identify viable exploration targets.

Market Information

  • Exchange: Canadian National Stock Exchange
  • Currency: CAD
  • Close Price (2026‑03‑23): 0.04 CAD
  • 52‑Week High (2025‑03‑31): 0.095 CAD
  • 52‑Week Low (2026‑03‑12): 0.03 CAD
  • Market Capitalisation: 2 797 866 CAD
  • Price‑to‑Earnings Ratio: ‑0.584

Armory Mining Corp. maintains its headquarters in Vancouver, British Columbia, and continues to pursue projects that enhance supply chain resilience for critical minerals.