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Stallion Uranium Commences Ground Gravity Survey on Additional High Priority Drill Targets
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Jan. 23, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Stallion Uranium Corp. (the ...

About this update from Stallion Uranium Corp.
[{"type":"text","content":"Stallion Uranium Commences Ground Gravity Survey on Additional High Priority Drill Targets\nVANCOUVER, British Columbia, Jan. 23, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Stallion Uranium Corp. (the “Company” or “Stallion”) (TSX-V: STUD; OTCQB: STLNF; FSE: B76) is pleased to announce the mobilization of an expanded high-resolution ground gravity survey on its Coyote Target corridor, located in the Athabasca Basin of northern Saskatchewan, Canada. The current program is designed to extend the results of Stallion’s previous ground gravity survey by expanding coverage to the west of the original survey area. Mobilization is commencing, with the objective of identifying additional gravity lows and refining the geometry and continuity of anomalies identified at the margins of the earlier survey. Highlights: The expanded survey aims to identify additional gravity lows associated with interpreted density destruction in the basement rocks, which may reflect hydrothermal alteration systems linked to uranium mineralizationParticular focus will be placed on gravity lows identified along the edges of the previous survey, several of which remain open and poorly constrainedExtending coverage westward will improve the understanding of the size, orientation, and continuity of priority anomalies at the Coyote TargetHigh-resolution ground gravity surveying has been successfully applied in the Athabasca Basin to identify alteration-related density lows, including its use in the discovery of NexGen Energy’s PCE uranium depositSurvey results will be integrated with existing geological, geochemical, and geophysical datasets to further refine priority drill targetsThe program is being conducted by MWH Geo-Surveys Ltd., utilizing ground gravity methods effective for mapping basement-hosted alteration systems Darren Slugoski, Vice President of Exploration for Stallion Uranium, said, “Extending the ground gravity survey is important not only for refining existing anomalies, but also for identifying additional target areas along the broader Coyote conductive trend. In the Athabasca Basin, multiple uranium deposits are known to occur along the same structural corridor, as demonstrated by the Patterson Lake corridor. Expanding coverage beyond the original survey boundaries will help us better define the continuity of alterat...