Business
Glenstar Minerals Completes Successful Initial Drilling at Wildhorse Project in Nevada
Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - May 13, 2026) - Glenstar Minerals Inc. (CSE: GSTR) (OTCQB: GSTRF) (FSE: VO20) ("Glenstar" or the "Company")

About this update from Glenstar Minerals Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":" Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - May 13, 2026) - Glenstar Minerals Inc. (CSE: GSTR) (OTCQB: GSTRF) (FSE: VO20) (\"Glenstar\" or the \"Company\") announces that the Phase 1 reverse circulation drill program at the Company's Wildhorse Project in Mineral County, Nevada, (see news release dated April 14, 2026), has been completed, with a total of six reverse circulation drill holes being completed at the Rattlesnake Zone, in addition to four holes previously reported at the Coca Cola Zone (see news release dated April 29, 2026). Each of these six holes explored the Rattlesnake Zone's down dip extension 85 to 110 meters east of outcropping mineralization which were worked by a series of historic decline developments. All holes drilled showed intervals of strong alteration with quartz veinlets contained within a strongly foliated meta sedimentary host rock. Contacts between this receptive host rock and a feldspar porphyry intrusive rock are particularly well altered, with visual mineralization containing abundant oxide minerals and quartz veinlet swarms. The overall plan of the drilling at Rattlesnake was to target the area believed to be the core of a high-grade polymetallic system that previously showed promising results. This style of mineralization is being intersected both at depths of 100 to 150 meters down hole, as well as at near surface positions on hole RTSRC-3 and hole RTSRC-6, where strong quartz veinlet development is present at 0 to 25 meters down hole. The visual results of the drilling at Rattlesnake continues to indicate strong potential for a polymetallic resource discovery in both near surface and in the down dip extensions of the historic working positions. As a result of observations in the field during the drill program, the total number of feet drilled at Wildhorse increased from a planned 3,500 feet to 4,300 feet. Reverse Circulation drill rig at the Wildhorse Project's Rattlesnake Zone in Mineral County, Nevada Field work and observations during this initial drill program suggest this zone is part of a larger area that may host a high-grade polymetallic system Project Geologist and Exploration Manager Bob Marvin stated, \"The drilling program at the Wildhorse Project went as well as could have been expected and we are very pleased to have intersected what appears to be robust area-wide occurrenc...