Brixton Metals (TSX-V: BBB; WKN A114WV) reports fresh results from the now completed 2025 drilling campaign, maintaining its momentum. At the Trapper Gold Target, a total of 6,272 meters have been drilled in 30 holes to date, with lab results still pending for 13 holes. Among the sections now reported, 22.15 meters grading 4.44 g/t gold, including 1.50 meters grading 57.20 g/t gold, and 30.85 meters grading 1.47 g/t gold and 4.32 g/t silver stand out. The zone remains open in multiple directions, according to the company.
Brixton Metals: 2025 drilling keeps giving
The latest announcement focuses on holes THN25-340, THN25-342, THN25-345, and THN25-346. THN25-345 intersected 22.15 meters at 4.44 g/t gold from 203.85 meters, including 1.50 meters at 57.20 g/t gold from 223.00 meters. THN25-342 intersected 4.00 meters at 2.22 g/t gold (including 0.35 meters at 13.95 g/t gold) from 210.00 meters. THN25-340 returned 30.85 meters at 1.47 g/t gold and 4.32 g/t silver starting at 61.65 meters, including 3.10 meters at 4.75 g/t gold and 16.01 g/t silver, and 6.00 meters at 4.24 g/t gold and 7.90 g/t silver. THN25-346 did not return any significant intersections but remains important for geological delineation.
Brixton Metals continued its work on a high-grade trend that was already outlined in earlier campaigns. The newly published holes THN25-342 and THN25-345 were drilled at the same starting point as THN25-344 and are intended to define the previously drilled high-grade mineralization more precisely. The reference is made to drill hole THN22-205 from 2022 with 64 meters at 5.74 g/t gold, which the current campaign specifically ties into. The picture is becoming clearer: high-grade cores flanked by broader mineralized shells – a setup that will guide further target prioritization.

Geology and Mineralization: Contacts Provide the Highlights
Gold mineralization at the Trapper target is associated with Triassic lapilli tuff interspersed with Cretaceous quartz diorite and a feldspar porphyry vein of unknown age. Pyrite, sphalerite, and galena dominate the veins. According to the company, higher-grade intervals are preferentially found at the contacts between the units – a geological key that is reflected in several drill holes. Lower grades occur between the reported sections, underscoring the zoned nature of the system.
An additional highlight comes from drill hole THN25-340: the near-surface gold and silver hit is associated with feldspar porphyry veins and extends the footprint of known mineralization eastward beyond previous boundaries. This observation expands the working model – with potential implications for step-out drilling along structural lines.
Status, Outlook and Relevance for Brixton Metals
With 6,272 meters drilled from 30 holes, Brixton has conducted extensive drilling at Trapper in 2025. The focuswas on infill drilling to test the continuity of mineralization, step-outs to extend mineralization along strike, and additional depth testing. (The fact that THN25-346 did not yield any significant intersections is not unusual in exploration and helps to define the boundaries of the system.) The 13 outstanding sets of results will now provide decisive impetus: they should further sharpen the picture of the high-grade cores, contact zones, and structural controls.
For Brixton Metals, these results are operationally significant: the combination of narrow, high-grade intervals (e.g., 1.50 meters at 57.20 g/t gold) and broader mineralized packages (e.g., 22.15 meters at 4.44 g/t gold and 30.85 meters at 1.47 g/t gold and 4.32 g/t silver) supports the company’s confidence in the scale and continuity of the zone. The working model aims to identify preferential locations that repeat along lithological boundaries. Successful further pursuit of the system to the east and at depth could significantly expand the mineralization footprint of the Trapper target.