Jaguar Uranium started an initial rare earth element assessment program at its Berlin Project in Caldas, Colombia. The work will re-sample and assay preserved historic drill core from more than 20,000 m of prior drilling, with no new drilling planned for this initial analysis. The company said the Berlin Project covers 9,053 hectares across two concessions. Jaguar Uranium plans to integrate any rare earth assay results with existing uranium, vanadium, and phosphate data to build a multi-element geological model. Steven Gold said the program will evaluate rare earth elements and other associated metals reported in prior technical work, including vanadium, phosphate, nickel, molybdenum, rhenium, and zinc.
Disclaimer: This news brief was created by Public Technologies (PUBT) using generative artificial intelligence. While PUBT strives to provide accurate and timely information, this AI-generated content is for informational purposes only and should not be interpreted as financial, investment, or legal advice. Jaguar Uranium Corp. published the original content used to generate this news brief via CNW (Ref. ID: 202603170752CANADANWCANADAPR_C5542) on March 17, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained therein.
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