Sego Resources Completes IP Survey at Miner Mountain
Sego completes an IP survey and returns $1.4 million in cash to advance its 1,500-meter drill program at the Miner Mountain project.

Sego Resources Inc. has completed its June 2026 Induced Polarization (IP) survey at the Miner Mountain Project in British Columbia. The survey infills 2009 data to create a combined dataset with 100 m line spacing, improving resolution of targets down to 500 m below surface. Target areas include the Cuba copper-gold zone and the Southern Gold Zone.
The company plans a fully funded drill campaign of approximately 1,500 metres following data compilation and modeling. Sego reports being fully funded with over $1.4 million in cash, following a $1.06 million flow-through financing closed in June 2026.
Sego Resources Inc. (SGZ) has completed its induced polarization (IP) survey, a standard procedural step in the exploration workflow following the April 2026 drill program. The company confirmed it is fully funded for the next phase of exploration, eliminating near-term dilution risk. This funding supports a planned 1,500 m drill campaign, which serves as a direct continuation of the 2,000 m program that began in April 2026. The progression aligns with the June financing and prior drilling updates, suggesting the market had already accounted for this development.
Sego Resources Inc. (SGZ) is a pre-revenue junior explorer focused on the Miner Mountain Project, a 2,056-hectare alkalic copper-gold porphyry property located 15 km north of Hudbay Minerals' Copper Mountain Mine in British Columbia. The project features two primary exploration targets: the Southern Gold Zone, characterized by near-surface disseminated gold, and the Cuba Zone, which hosts deeper porphyry copper-gold mineralization.
Recent drilling in December 2025 and April 2026 identified a new copper porphyry system within the Southern Gold Zone and intercepted significant phyllic and potassic alteration at depth in the Cuba Zone. The company holds a memorandum of understanding with the Upper Similkameen Indian Band and has received an award of excellence for reclamation work.