Flynn Gold Eyes Further Exploration Success in Tasmania’s Northeast

Flynn Gold (ASX: FG1) is preparing to follow-up on a quarter of exploration success at its key Tasmanian gold portfolio.
The company will utilise the coming months to further examine the encouraging results it received in recent programs at its Golden Ridge project and the historical Trafalgar gold mine.
Releasing its June 2025 quarterly report, Flynn highlighted a number of indications that it is on target for further success at its ten fully owned projects on the Apple Isle, which the company operates in conjunction with a suite of gold, lithium and iron ore exploration assets in the Pilbara and Yilgarn regions of Western Australia.
Grenadier Extended
Leading the way is the continued growth of its flagship Golden Ridge project in the state’s northeast, where the company has extended the Grenadier prospect.
Trenching at Golden Ridge has confirmed a significant new quartz vein system extending over a strike length of at least 300 metres.
Highlight samples included 3.4m at 1.6 grams per tonne gold including 0.7m at 6.3g/t, 2m at 1.5 g/t and 1.85m at 2.6g/t including 1.25m @ 3.8g/t.
Positive Metallurgical Results
Bulk samples collected for metallurgical test work returned an average of 10.5g/t gold, with the company achieving 95% gold recoveries in conventional leach test work.
Flynn has commenced a maiden diamond drilling campaign at Grenadier subsequent to the end of the quarter, initially planned to comprise five holes for a total of approximately 600m.
This maiden drilling program will test the down-dip continuity of high-grade quartz-sulphide veins exposed near surface in recent trenching and investigate the structural controls of the project’s gold mineralisation.
Double Event Target
The company also identified an emerging gold target at Double Event, within the Trafalgar prospect at Golden Ridge.
Double Event is located approximately 1km north of the historical Trafalgar gold mine with an 1899 note reporting that a quartz vein “widens out to 2 or 3 feet wide as it descends.”
Field work Flynn conducted during the quarter confirmed the location of the historical Double Event shaft and adit, along with several shallow historical trenches to the east of the shaft.