It just keeps getting better! Brixton Metals (WKN A423P0 / TSXV BBB) has just released the latest series of drill results from its exploration program at the Langis Silver Project – and they surpass everything seen so far!
Langis is located in the historic Cobalt silver camp and is the focus of a drilling campaign aimed at both infilling and expanding previously identified high-grade silver zones. With the results now reported, Brixton impressively underscores that the historic mining area continues to host exceptionally high-grade silver mineralization.
In the recently reported drill hole LM-26-290 not only showed an 11.35-meter interval with very high silver grades of 4,560 g/t encountered starting at a depth of 112.0 meters, but within this section, a sensational grade of 82,334 g/t silver was recorded over 0.5 meters! This corresponds to 8.23% silver, or 2,647 troy ounces of the precious metal per ton!
According to the company, this is the highest-grade single sample in Brixton Metals’ history and, at the same time, a grade that stands out even by international standards!
To date, Brixton Metals has completed a total of 8,282 meters in 43 drill holes as part of the 2026 program at Langis. The current release covers four additional drill holes totaling 649.8 meters. Nine drill holes had previously been reported, along with five others in a second batch. The company is thus gradually expanding its data set in the area of the known silver zones.
Brixton Metals hits ultra-high-grade silver at Langis
The results from LM-26-290 clearly define Brixton Metals’ new series of results. What is decisive here is not only the exceptionally high individual value, but also the broader mineralized context in which it occurs as the 0.5 meters grading 82,334 g/t silver are embedded within an 11.35-meter interval grading 4,560 g/t silver. And according to the company, abundant native silver was observed in the drill core within this area.

This reference to visible native silver is particularly important for understanding the Langis project. Brixton Metals emphasizes that, despite historical mining, the silver mineralization continues to contain high-grade silver potential that can be delineated and expanded through further drilling. This also underscores Langis’s character as a primary silver project, where exploration is specifically focused on high-grade structures.
In addition to LM-26-290, Brixton Metals is also reporting significant silver values from other drill holes. Drill hole LM-26-292 returned 18.6 meters grading 155.4 g/t silver starting at a depth of 106.4 meters. This includes 1.0 meters grading 771.5 g/t silver starting at 111.5 meters and 1.2 meters grading 1,166 g/t silver starting at 116.8 meters. Drill hole LM-26-291 returned 8.6 meters grading 96.7 g/t silver starting at a depth of 158.0 meters, including 0.5 meters grading 1,245 g/t silver starting at 162.2 meters.
Langis remains the focus of the 2026 drilling campaign
For Brixton, the 2026 drilling program marks an important phase in the further development of the Langis silver project. The company is focusing on infill and extension drilling in areas where high-grade silver zones are already known. The results reported today show that this strategy continues to encounter significant mineralization.
The project is located in an area with a long history of high-grade silver production. The site in Cobalt, Ontario, is one of Canada’s best-known silver camps. For Brixton Metals, this means that the company is not operating in an early-stage, largely untested area, but rather in a historically productive region with an established geological foundation. At the same time, the new result from LM-26-290 in particular makes it clear that potentially additional high-grade silver zones may still exist even after previous mining.
The current drilling campaign is therefore not only confirmatory in nature but also provides new indications of additional discovery potential. Brixton Metals interprets the results as a sign that the mineralized system at Langis has not yet been exhausted and that new high-grade zones can continue to be identified. The focus therefore remains on the systematic expansion and densification of the known areas.
High-grade results reinforce the picture of an active silver system
The third set of results adds further high-grade intervals to the existing picture of the Langis Silver Project and simultaneously confirms that the project is mineralized on multiple levels. For Brixton Metals, it is particularly significant that not only do individual peak values occur, but these are often embedded within broader mineralized intervals. This applies particularly to LM-26-290, but also to LM-26-292 and LM-26-291.
The significance of these results therefore lies not solely in the highest individual value, but in the combination of exceptional grades and broader mineralized zones. The company emphasizes that these drill sections rank among the most significant silver intervals drilled to date within its own portfolio and worldwide.