Coast Copper Corp. announced the acquisition of the Hanson property in northwestern British Columbia ("BC"), Canada. Hanson Property Acquisition Coast Copper announced that it has staked the road accessible Hanson property located 150 km west- northwest of Prince George in the Babine Region of northwestern BC and 25 km north of Centerra Gold Inc.'s Endako Molybdenum ("Mo") mine.

Given the widespread glacial cover, there is a possibility of finding a significant porphyry deposit particularly in areas that were not previously tested by drilling. The Hanson property is within the southern portion of the under explored Stikine Terrane, one of BC's most prolific Cu-Mo-Au belts which includes Glencore Canada Corp.'s past producing Bell and Granisle mines, the Endako mine and Pacific Booker Minerals' advanced stage Morrison deposit. In addition, new discoveries and active exploration programs on the north part of the belt by American Eagle Gold at its NAK Cu-Au porphyry and Amarc Resources/Boliden Minerals at their Duke Cu-Mo porphyry ¹ provide evidence of continuing success in the area.

The Hanson property overlies a complex mix of intrusive, extrusive and metamorphic rocks that are extensively covered with glacial overburden, but where exposed, frequently exhibit alteration and host sulphide mineralization characteristic of intrusive related hydrothermal systems. Mineralization at Hanson occurs as: low-grade copper and molybdenum in fracture controlled stockworks within coarse grained quartz monzonite, silicified zones with anomalous gold, silver, zinc, lead in quartz porphyry/quartz feldspar porphyry of probable Tertiary age, silicified zones with anomalous zinc, lead, gold and silver values in felsic breccia, and shear zones with anomalous copper and gold in older quartz diorite/amphibolite. Sulphides occur in all areas principally as chalcopyrite, sphalerite, molybdenite and galena. Many of the soil anomalies and coincident ground IP anomalies defined by previous work have not been fully tested and these may be related to sulphide mineralization in bedrock.

A 2012 airborne geophysical survey suggests there are significant conductivity anomalies outside of the main areas of previous exploration². There has been intermittent historical work conducted on the Hanson property since the 1960's, with results highlighted by: ? 1972 drillhole H2 which returned 9.14 meters ("m") of 20.0 grams per tonne ("g/t") Ag, and 0.60 g/t Au ².

? 1973 drillhole P8 which returned 91.44 m of 0.15% Cu and 0.012% Mo ². ?

Trench 89-T-12 completed in 1989 returning 0.37 g/t Au, 1.4 g/t Ag and 0.295% Cu over 70.2 m ³, and ? 1990 drillhole H90-3 which returned 22 m of 0.2% Cu and 0.1 g/t Au ².