American Creek Resources Ltd. announced that the late fall exploration program conducted on its 100% owned Gold Hill property located in the Boulder Creek drainage, a tributary of the Wildhorse River east of Fort Steele, British Columbia has now concluded. The program included four diamond drill holes totaling 2,096 meters of drilling. The drill program successfully intersected several syenite dike targets as well as significant intervals of highly altered, silicified rock associated with the dikes. The alteration includes but is not limited to sericitization, epidote alteration and silicification of sedimentary rocks adjacent to the dikes as well as large intersections of albitization alteration of the feldspars contained within the syenite dikes. Minor crystals and amorphous galena, chalcopyrite and molybdenite are present in several sections of the core. It has been reported in British Columbia Geological Assessment Report 34920 (July 2015) by a P. Geo. as well as a trained and experienced prospector that there appears to be a relationship between galena deposition and the presence of gold. The Gold Hill property covers approximately 836 hectares and is located along the eastern edge of the Kimberly Gold Trend. The property is road accessible by paved highway to Fort Steele and then by main logging roads to (and through) the property. Driving time from Cranbrook to the center of the property is less than one hour. The property contains a significant portion of the Boulder Creek drainage. Gold rushes have taken place there since the 1860's that have yielded over 48 tonnes of reported gold. The majority of the gold recovered from the Wild Horse was located along a 6 km stretch between Boulder Creek (upstream) and Brewery Creek (downstream). Early efforts by prospectors to locate the source of the Wild Horse placer gold led explorers up Boulder Creek to what is now called the Gold Hill property.