Aloro mining corp.  announced that it recently mobilized crews to sample high grade gold veins on the northwest side of the Company’s Los Venados Project. This area was previously not accessible for exploration until the Company recently obtained a surface access agreement with El Duraznito Ranch for private surface lands that were not covered under the Company’s Mulatos Ejido Agreement. Sampling with concurrent geological evaluation has been initiated with recent receipt of 28 surface sample assays. The maximum rock sample result reported was 32 grams Au/t over 0.6 meter width where prior nearby samples also reported high values. This area on the northwest side of the Los Venados concessions contains an irregular quartz vein system of 3.5 km length that is now partially mapped over an area up to 400 meters wide containing quartz veins ranging from 10 centimeters up to 10 meters. Closely spaced sheeted quartz veins striking from NW-SE 30° to NE 05-20° with both high and low angle dips make up part of the quartz veining. Previous sampling data, that has been determined to be reliable, from two other sample campaigns reported higher values in the range of 3 to 224 g/t Au. Quartz veins sampling included some with visible gold grains in oxidized, low pyrite bearing chalcedonic to drusy quartz veins, that are low sulfidation forms of mineralization. Additional mapping and sampling is planned to continue to evaluate this area of gold mineralization for targets hosted in volcanic flow units of the Mulatos volcanic sequence. The mine processing area of Agnico Eagle’s La India mine is located about 10 km west of this area. Rock samples were collected by Aloro’s geological and technical employees utilizing normal standards of collection, recording of descriptive data with hand held GPS determined locations in UTM NAD 27 grid locations. Rock material collected was contained in numbered plastic sample bags with plastic ties closing them, with numbered paper tags inserted in the bags to confirm identification inside and written identification of the bag’s surface. Bags were locked in secure locations under the supervision of Aloro personnel and then transported by personnel to the Bureau Veritas sample preparation facility located in Hermosillo, Sonora Mexico. Bureau Veritas’ Hermosillo preparation lab work consisting of splitting and grinding to fine pulp produces a 30 gram sample that is lead fusion fire assayed for gold (with atomic absorption finish) with secure shipment of 200 grams of pulp to the Bureau Veritas analytical laboratory in Vancouver, B.C. There a second small fraction was dissolved in 4 acid liquid mixture that was processed by ICP determination of normal 35 additional elements including silver.