WPC Resources Inc. announced the discovery of a very large porphyry-style copper system at its 100% owned ZPG Project in Lander County, Nevada. The project is located about 30 kilometers from the town of Battle Mountain and 12 kilometers southwest of Newmont's Phoenix Mine, a large open pit Cu-Au project. At the ZPG property, the company is testing a copper target buried under 100 metres to 200 metres of post-mineral sediments. The target is defined by a coincident circular aeromagnetic feature and a strong IP chargeability high, together defining a target area of about 4.4 kilometres by 1.8 kilometres. The first drill hole, ZPG11-1, was recently completed to a depth of 731.5 metres (2,400 ft). It was designed to test the northern edge of the chargeability high and the top of the magnetic anomaly. Significantly, this hole intersected an extensive thickness of porphyry-style altered sedimentary rocks beginning at 239.3 metres and continuing to the bottom of the hole at 731.5 metres, it penetrated 492.2 metres of strong hornfels alteration with pyrite and chalcopyrite throughout. Additionally, this entire interval carried strong copper values averaging 688 ppm copper (0.069% Cu) over the same 492.2 metres. The best result was from 664.5 to 672.1 metres, which assayed 0.31% copper and 6.2 g/t silver over 7.6 metres. The last 67.0 metres of the hole, from 664.5 metres to 731.5 metres averaged 1,131 ppm copper (0.113% Cu). High copper values persist through the altered zone, with very few values of less than 400 ppm copper. Silver values are prevalent throughout the hole as well with values up to 10.2 g/t. Strong zinc mineralization occurs from 239.3 to 277.4 metres and averages 0.12% zinc over 38.1 metres.