Carlie Mining Limited – Gold Projects, Ghana

Kandia Gold Project

Kandia Prospect: RC drilling locations
Kandia section 1104480N showing 24KARC002 (Infill) and 24KARC004 (extension) holes. Grade, width of high-grade and dip appear to be increasing with depth.
Kandia Prospect location within Wa East Region
Castle senior geologist, George Asamoah, inspecting artisanal workings at Kandia 4000-zone

The Kandia Gold Project is located within Ghana’s highly prospective Upper West Region and forms part of Castle Minerals’ broader Carlie Mining Limited gold portfolio. The project lies along a major granite-sediment contact within the Wa-Lawra/Boromo Birimian greenstone belt system, a region associated with several significant West African gold deposits and operating mines.

Kandia was discovered in 2010 during reconnaissance mapping when Castle identified extensive previously unrecorded artisanal gold workings developed over approximately 600m of strike. Follow-up mapping and sampling represented the first known systematic gold exploration in the area and identified nine gold anomalies across a 12km mineralised trend.

Gold mineralisation at Kandia is hosted within silicified and weakly pyritic Birimian sediments and schists, forming a generally west-dipping mineralised corridor adjacent to granite intrusions. Aeromagnetic interpretation indicates a broad magnetic low associated with magnetite destruction and widespread hydrothermal alteration related to the mineralising event.

Since discovery, Castle has completed extensive exploration including soil sampling, airborne geophysics and 264 RC drill holes for approximately 19,541m. Drilling has consistently confirmed broad zones of shallow gold mineralisation with strong continuity and increasing grade at depth.

Recent RC drilling at the “4,000-Zone” returned significant shallow intercepts including:

These results confirmed continuity and down-dip extension of mineralisation, with both grade and mineralised width appearing to strengthen with depth.

Castle believes the broader opportunity at Kandia is the potential delineation of multiple near-surface open-pittable gold deposits along more than 16km of prospective contact geology. Current exploration is focused on extensional drilling at the “4,000-Zone”, advancing historical targets including the “8,000-Zone”, and generating new drill-ready targets through extensive auger drilling campaigns commenced during 2025.

Kpali Gold Project

Ghana’s Upper West Region and Castle’s key prospects. Also shown is the convergence on Castle’s Degbiwu and Gbiniyiri licences of the Wa-Lawra and Bole-Bolgatanga Birimian greenstone belts plus three regional-scale structures associated with several major gold deposits.
Kpali Gold Prospect: Notable intercepts from June 2025 RC drilling programme with selected historical drilling results.
North-south long-section through mineralised hangingwall and footwall lodes.
Cross-section (1029330mN) showing latest drill holes and multi-lode distribution of high-grade mineralisation.
Bundi Prospect: Plan of recent and historical drill results.
Key prospects on VTEM with structural interpretation highlighting controls of known mineralisation and numerous areas to be tested.
cdt-wa-2408-051328
Drilling at Kpali, August 2024
cdt-wa-2408-051322
Drilling at Kpali, August 2024
cdt-wa-2211-191148
Drilling at Kpali, August 2024

The Kpali Gold Project comprises the Kpali, Bundi and Kpali East prospects located approximately 30km west of Sawla in Ghana’s Upper West Region. The project sits within the 170km² Degbiwu Prospecting Licence and the surrounding 1,033km² Gbiniyiri Retention Licence, both held 100% by Castle through its wholly owned Ghanaian subsidiary, Carlie Mining Limited.

The project lies at the convergence of the Wa-Lawra/Boromo and Bole-Bolgatanga Birimian greenstone belts together with several major regional structures associated with multi-million-ounce gold deposits and operating mines across Ghana and Burkina Faso. Castle considers this geological setting highly favourable for the development of a major West African gold camp.

Kpali was discovered in 2013 through systematic RAB drilling and auger geochemistry beneath transported soil cover. Mineralisation occurs within steeply dipping north-south lodes hosted in Birimian sediments and volcaniclastics adjacent to a felsic intrusive body.

Recent RC drilling has consistently extended mineralisation along strike and at depth, delivering strong high-grade intercepts including:

At the nearby Bundi Prospect, infill drilling during 2025 confirmed thickening mineralised zones at depth, with all recent holes intersecting gold mineralisation above 1g/t Au.

Castle continues to advance the Kpali Gold Project through follow-up RC drilling, auger programs and reinterpretation of high-resolution aeromagnetic datasets to define additional high-conviction drill targets across the broader project area.

Back to top