Aterian plc announced the observations from the initial reconnaissance of the Akka and West Tazalaght Projects located in the Kingdom of Morocco. The Projects are part of the 897 km2 portfolio owned by Aterian, targeting copper, silver and base metals within established current and historic mining districts. The Akka and West Tazalaght Projects were awarded to the Company in August 2023, covering 47.1 km2 and 27.4 km2, respectively.

Both Projects are located within the western Anti-Atlas Mountains of Morocco, a region well known for hosting copper mineralisation within theLate Ediacaran to early Cambrian-aged Adoudou Formation sediments. The Akka project consists of 3 licences covering 47.1 km2 located 15 km west of the town of Akka in the Tata Province within the Souss-Massa Region. The Project occurs in the western Anti-Atlas Mountains, with copper as the primary target metal.

Copper occurrences within the district are typically hosted within Adoudounian and Cambrian age sediments, which lie immediately east of the Paleoproterozoic Tagragra d'Akka inlier. These sedimentary sequences are known to host copper deposits throughout the Western and Central Anti-Atlas and have been mapped in the project area with a copper occurrence identified c.1.5 km north of the Akka Project, which Managem is currently evaluating. The Akka Copper-Gold Mine (Iourirn), operated by Managem Group, lies 20 km west, with the Tazalaght Copper Mine 35 km northeast of the Akka Project (mineralisation hosted at Akka Mine (Iourirn) is not necessarily indicative of mineralisation at our Akka project).

A total of 12 outcrop samples were collected during the site visit, of which three samples were > 0.3 % Cu. The maximum reported copper value was 3.93 % Cu from a zone of quartz-carbonate veining cross-cutting a dolomitic fold hinge. The sample was collected 2.2 km south of a small operation operated by Managem, which targets the same structure.

Two samples reported 0.30 % Cu and 0.34 % Cu from quartz veins within granodiorite occurring at the contact between the basement inlier and overlying Adoudou Formation sediments. Fine disseminated, bedding parallel copper oxide is observed with a 1.8m thick dolomitic sequence at the base of the shallow Adoudou Formation, adjacent to the contact of the inlier, and reported anomalous copper of 0.16 % Cu. Future work programmes at the Akka Project will explore and map the Adoudou Formation, where evidence for sedimentary-hosted copper was observed.

Mapping along strike from the Managem workings north of the project to identify structural control (folding) and continuity. This consists of 2 licences covering 27.4 km2 located 13 km northeast of Tafraoute in the Taroudant Province of the Souss-Massa Region and lies 100 km southeast of the port city of Agadir. The Tazalaght Copper Mine, operated by Managem Group, lies 7 km east of the Project.

The Project occurs in the western Anti-Atlas Mountains and is underlain by folded sedimentary units of the Adoudou and Taliwine Formations, lying to the northeastern of the Kerdous Palaeoproterozoic inlier and west of the d'Ait Abdallha inlier. Sedimentary-hosted copper is the primary exploration target metal (note that mineralisation hosted at the Tazalaght mine is not necessarily indicative of mineralisation at our West Tazalaght Project). A total of 1 outcrop and four float samples were collected during the site visit.

The maximum reported copper value was 0.25 % Cu from an epidote-rich mafic boulder observed within a river in the north part of the licence. Isolated samples of smelter slag, with malachite lining some of the vesicles, were observed within a river channel in the southern part of the Project. This suggests ancient (of unknown age) copper mining in the region, although the source of the material was not identified during the site visit.

Limited disseminated copper oxide mineralisation was observed in the sedimentary units. Future work programmes at the West Tazalaght Project will focus on exploring and mapping the Adoudou Formation to determine the sedimentary-hosted copper opportunity. A stream sediment sampling programme is also planned to cover the licence.

ALS Limited, an accredited laboratory in Sevilla, Spain, undertook all sample preparation and analysis for these reported samples. Given the early-stage nature of these programmes, no QA/QC samples were included. Rock samples were crushed to 70 % passing -2 mm.

The less than 2 mm fraction was pulverised, with 85 % of the sample passing <75 microns. All samples were analysed using four-acid digestion for a multi-element suite of 34 metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy (ICP-AES). In addition, all sampleswere analysed for their gold content by a 50g Fire Assay method with an atomic absorption finish.