Matsa Resources Ltd
AngloGold Ashanti Drilling Outlines 2km Gold Trend on Matsa's Lake Carey Tenement
Matsa Resources Limited (ASX: MAT) has reported that drilling completed by AngloGold Ashanti on tenement M39/599 at the Lake Carey Gold Project has identified a mineralised gold trend over a 2km strike extent. According to the ASX announcement, 41 holes for 11,355 metres have now been completed, with assay results received for 34 holes so far.
The update is material for investors because the work is being carried out under the Tenement Option Agreement announced in February 2025, meaning a major gold producer is funding and executing exploration on Matsa's ground. The results reported to date indicate broad gold distribution across multiple holes, multiple depths and a footprint that, according to Matsa's interpretation, remains open to the north and south.
When big ASX news breaks, our subscribers know first
Standout Drilling Results Reported So Far
In the announcement, Matsa highlighted several intercepts from AngloGold Ashanti's drilling programme. The strongest reported composite interval came from hole TYRC089D, which returned 14m at 3.13 g/t Au from 153m, including 6m at 5.54 g/t Au from the same depth.
Other key results include shallow and deeper high-grade intervals, which can be important when assessing the possible scale and geometry of a gold system.
| Hole ID | From (m) | Interval (m) | Grade (g/t Au) |
|---|---|---|---|
| TYRC089D | 153 | 14 | 3.13 |
| TYRC089D | 153 | 6 | 5.54 |
| TYRC089D | 275 | 2 | 4.51 |
| TYRC088D | 238 | 1 | 10.87 |
| TYRC088D | 46 | 2 | 7.59 |
| TYRC088D | 38 | 1 | 5.19 |
| TYRC167D | 87 | 1 | 5.63 |
| TYRC167D | 104 | 3 | 5.36 |
| TYDD037 | 217 | 1 | 8.79 |
| TYDD037 | 146 | 1 | 5.78 |
| TYDD038 | 260 | 1 | 6.75 |
| TYRC079D | 250 | 2 | 8.30 |
| TYDD080D* | 375 | 1 | 6.14 |
| TYDD080D* | 144 | 1 | 4.23 |
| TYDD080D* | 314 | 1 | 4.18 |
| TYRC081D | 74 | 7 | 1.20 |
*The company announcement refers to TYDD080D in the highlights, while the assay tables list TYRC080D.
Across the dataset received by Matsa, the company stated that:
- 22 of 36 holes with assays received intersected gold mineralisation
- 114 intercepts graded better than 1.00 g/t Au
- 53 intercepts graded better than 2.00 g/t Au
- Peak values reached 10.87 g/t, 10.91 g/t, 11.64 g/t and 12.61 g/t Au
That spread matters considerably. Investors often look beyond a single standout hit and focus on how often mineralisation appears, how broadly it is distributed, and whether it repeats across the same structure. On that basis, the current dataset suggests a system with continuity worth further testing, though it remains an exploration-stage interpretation.
What a Mineralised Trend Means for Investors
A mineralised trend is a zone where gold occurs repeatedly along a geological corridor rather than in a single isolated point. In practical terms, it tells the market that drilling is intersecting gold across a measurable distance and that the system may follow a larger structure such as a fault, shear zone or rock contact.
At Lake Carey, Matsa has interpreted a 2km strike length based on AngloGold Ashanti's drilling on M39/599. Strike length refers to the horizontal distance along which the mineralised zone extends. A trend of this scale can become important because it provides room for follow-up drilling to test for continuity, additional lodes and deeper extensions.
Why Does Strike Length Matter?
A 2km gold trend does not define a resource on its own, but it can indicate the footprint of a larger mineralised system. If later drilling confirms continuity, geometry and grade distribution, a trend of this size may support more advanced exploration and resource work.
Furthermore, several technical terms in the announcement are worth clarifying for investors:
- RC drilling: Reverse Circulation drilling, a common method that brings rock chips to surface for sampling.
- Diamond drilling: A method that recovers solid rock core, which helps geologists examine structures, rock types and alteration in detail.
- g/t Au: Grams of gold per tonne of rock.
- JORC: The reporting code used in Australia for exploration results, mineral resources and ore reserves.
Geological Setting Points to a Familiar Eastern Goldfields Style
According to the announcement, the gold mineralisation is associated with quartz-sericite-carbonate breccias and veins within dolerite and andesite sequences, with common albite alteration. In simpler terms, the gold is occurring in broken and altered rock zones filled by quartz and carbonate minerals, which is a style seen widely across the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia.
Matsa stated that the drilling is also coincident with a regional-scale magnetic and gravity anomaly. Geophysical anomalies of this type can be useful because they may help define larger rock structures that control where gold-bearing fluids travelled and where mineralisation formed.
The company also noted that multiple stacked lode intercepts were recorded in several drill holes. This means gold was intersected at more than one depth in the same hole rather than in one narrow interval only. For exploration investors, that can point to a more vertically extensive system, although the exact geometry is still being worked out.
The project is described in the announcement as being proximal to the Red October gold mine, placing it within a known gold-bearing corridor. That does not mean the Lake Carey trend will develop into a comparable deposit, but it does provide geological context that investors often use when assessing exploration results in the Yilgarn region.
What Did Management Say?
"Whilst it is still early in the programme, it appears that mineralisation has been intersected over a sustained strike length. Furthermore, the drilling AngloGold Ashanti completed on their adjacent tenement also extended along the boundary. Based on these observations, it suggests that AngloGold Ashanti's findings warrant further investigation," said Paul Poli, Executive Chairman.
Understanding the AngloGold Ashanti Option Agreement
The exploration update sits within the framework of the Tenement Option Agreement between Matsa and AngloGold Ashanti. As announced previously on 27 February 2025, the agreement formed part of a broader $101 million Lake Carey deal.
For investors, the structure of this arrangement is central to the story. AngloGold Ashanti is carrying out the exploration work on Matsa's tenement, and Matsa reported that the third and final option instalment of $1.65 million prior to any exercise was received in June 2026.
In practical terms, this gives Matsa exposure to active exploration by a major producer without directly funding the current drilling campaign itself. It also means that results generated on the tenement may add technical value to the asset whether or not the option is ultimately exercised.
Key Points From the Current Update
A few points stand out from the current update:
- The scale of the work is meaningful — AngloGold Ashanti has completed 41 holes for 11,355m, using a mix of RC, diamond core and diamond tail drilling.
- The drilling depths suggest more than a first-pass programme — Several holes extend well beyond shallow testing, with some intercepts reported at depths of more than 300m.
- The programme appears systematic — According to the announcement, AngloGold Ashanti has also conducted gravity surveys, as well as flora, fauna and heritage surveys.
- News flow is ongoing — Matsa said results received so far cover 34 holes, leaving additional assays still to come.
This is relevant because the market often distinguishes between a small reconnaissance programme and a broader programme aimed at understanding the structure, depth extent and continuity of mineralisation.
How Should Investors Read Early-Stage Gold Drilling?
Early-stage gold drilling announcements can contain a large amount of technical data. However, a few simple questions usually help frame the investment relevance.
Are the Results Isolated, or Repeated?
A single high-grade hit can attract attention, but repeated intercepts across multiple holes generally carry more weight. In this case, the company reported 114 intercepts above 1.00 g/t Au and 53 above 2.00 g/t Au, which suggests the mineralisation is not limited to one hole.
How Long Is the Trend?
Length matters because it helps indicate potential scale. Matsa's interpretation of a 2km strike extent gives the system a meaningful exploration footprint, especially as the trend is reported to remain open in both directions.
Is Mineralisation Present at Different Depths?
Multiple intercepts within the same drill hole can indicate stacked lodes or several mineralised zones. That matters because it may point to a broader system rather than a single narrow vein.
What Drilling Methods Were Used?
RC drilling is useful for broad testing, while diamond drilling provides better geological detail. The fact that the current programme includes both methods allows for both assay sampling and stronger geological interpretation.
Is There Follow-Up Work Planned?
A strong exploration update is usually more relevant when there is a clear next step. In this case, the announcement states that further drilling is planned and that further geophysical and flora surveys are being considered.
What Comes Next at Lake Carey?
According to the announcement, the current results are not the end of the programme. Assays remain outstanding from several holes, and Matsa indicated that additional updates will be provided as results become available.
The company's JORC section also states that further drilling is planned. That is consistent with the open-ended nature of the trend to the north and south, as interpreted by Matsa, and with the indication that drilling on AngloGold Ashanti's adjacent tenements extended directly along the M39/599 boundary.
The drill spacing reported, approximately 100m centres on staggered lines between 200m and 400m, also suggests there is room for infill and step-out work if AngloGold Ashanti chooses to tighten coverage or test extensions.
The next major ASX story will hit our subscribers first
Why Matsa Is Drawing Investor Attention
This ASX update places Matsa in a position that is relatively uncommon for a junior explorer. A major gold producer is actively drilling its tenement, funding the work, and producing an emerging dataset that points to a broad mineralised system in a well-known Western Australian gold district.
From an investor perspective, the main takeaways are clear:
- A 2km gold trend has been interpreted on M39/599
- 41 holes for 11,355m have been completed
- Assays received so far show widespread gold mineralisation
- Multiple holes contain stacked lode intercepts
- The trend is interpreted to remain open north and south
- Further assays and drilling are still expected
The announcement does not define a mineral resource, and Matsa also notes that some cross-section information reflects data received from AngloGold Ashanti that Matsa has not yet had the opportunity to fully QAQC. Even so, the current results indicate that Lake Carey is moving beyond an early concept and into a more detailed exploration phase.
For ASX gold investors, that makes future updates from Matsa Resources (ASX: MAT) and the Lake Carey Gold Project worth monitoring closely, particularly as remaining assays are delivered and AngloGold Ashanti advances the next stage of work on the tenement.
Want to Track the Next Major ASX Gold Discovery as Soon as It Hits the Market?
Discovery Alert's proprietary Discovery IQ model scans ASX announcements in real time, instantly identifying significant mineral discoveries like emerging gold trends — transforming complex exploration data into clear, actionable opportunities for investors at every level. Explore how major ASX mineral discoveries have historically delivered extraordinary returns on Discovery Alert's dedicated discoveries page, and begin your 14-day free trial today to position yourself ahead of the market.