Source : THE AGE NEWS

Chariot Resources has launched a major land expansion at its US Resurgent lithium project, in an astute move that will nearly double its footprint within one of the world’s premier battery metal districts.

The company’s 79.4 per cent-owned subsidiary, FMS Lithium Corporation, has staked 573 new mining claims at the Resurgent East prospect. The additional tenure lies in the eastern portion of the prolific McDermitt Caldera, which straddles the Nevada and Oregon border.

Chariot Corporation’s Resurgent claystone lithium project in Nevada, USA.

The land grab has boosted Chariot’s total holding from 597 claims to a pro forma package of 1170 claims, representing a 96 per cent increase in its immediate land position.

The company says the move also restores 81 per cent of the peak 1450-claim position it held prior to its disciplined reduction to preserve capital during the recent lithium market downturn.

Chariot’s aggressive re-staking strategy has been carefully calculated to capitalise on a major recovery in global lithium prices and rising inbound third-party interest across the region.

The company says the expanded project footprint also sits in the heart of a rapidly emerging lithium province that is quickly shifting from a hunting ground for explorers into a bona fide production district.

Chariot’s claims border Lithium Americas’ giant Thacker Pass development, which contains 66 million tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) and is backed by a US$2.23 billion loan from the United States Department of Energy and a strategic investment from General Motors.

The tenure is also adjacent to Jindalee Lithium’s 21.5Mt LCE McDermitt project, highlighting the district size scale and potential of the claystone-hosted lithium basin.

Historical surface sampling campaigns across Chariot’s ground have delivered high-grade results of up to an eye-catching 3865 parts per million lithium.

The United States expansion complements Chariot’s dual-track international strategy, which includes a big hard-rock lithium portfolio in West Africa. The company anticipates completing the acquisition of a 254-square-kilometre asset package in Nigeria in the second half of this calendar year, spanning the Fonlo, Gbugbu, Iganna and Saki projects.

Chariot is also in ongoing discussions with Shanghai Greatpower Nickel and Cobalt Materials for project-level financing and a 200,000-tonne-per-annum offtake deal currently centred around its Nigerian assets.

The African portfolio contains extensive spodumene-bearing pegmatites and historical artisanal workings that may offer the company a clear pathway to short-term production.

Also in the US, Chariot holds other hard rock lithium assets, including the Black Mountain project in Wyoming, together with the Copper Mountain and Tin Cup exploration assets.

The company says the next steps at Resurgent will focus on completing the formal county and Bureau of Land Management filing and recording processes for its new Resurgent East claims. Management says it also plans to update mapping and fully integrate the tenure into its regional exploration model.

Additionally, the company is advancing the permitting process for a minimal-disturbance maiden drilling program targeting 32 high-priority lithium targets at its Resurgent North prospect previously identified by historical geochemical sampling programs.

With battery mineral markets waking up and major neighbours pouring billions into adjacent processing infrastructure, Chariot appears well-placed to extract maximum value from its freshly expanded sandbox.

The savvy timing of the Resurgent project expansion may allow the company to enter its ongoing and potential funding and corporate partnering discussions with a far stronger hand.

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