Investigator Resources Limited announced that an infill drill program was undertaken in late 2016 on the selected central area of the shallow Paris silver Mineral Resource held 100% by Investigator Resources. The objectives of this infill drilling program were to verify the prior geological model and determine the extent of the grade continuity in the previous scattered high-grade silver intersections within the central area of the resource. The ultimate aims are to upgrade the Mineral Resource estimate to Indicated status to enable project studies to proceed. The Paris Inferred Mineral Resource (JORC 2012) was revised in late 2015 to 8.8 million tonnes at 116g/t silver for 33 million ounces of contained silver (at a 50g/t silver cut- off). Infill drilling was completed in late November 2016 within a 375m by 200m central area between Lines 6 and 8. This area of infill drilling represents about 20% of the resource area. A total of 50 vertical Reverse Circulation Percussion (RCPholes (PPRC364 - 398 and PPRC406 - 420) were completed for a total of 5,862m, with depths of between 60m and 150m (average depth 117m). In addition, six vertical diamond twin holes (PPDH148 - 153) were drilled for a total of 648m, with depths of between 68m and 129m (average depth 108m). The infill drilling program was designed to achieve a nominal 25m by 25m pattern, locally adjusted to minimise vegetation disturbance, within the prior drill pattern for the infill area. The infill RCP and diamond twin drilling was undertaken with due care and a focus on sample recovery. All RCP holes were sampled at one metre intervals and the diamond core was sampled on nominal one metre intervals with adjustments for lithological/mineralisation boundaries. The final RCP assays including the extended additional assaying for over-range assays for many holes were received on 23 December 2016. The diamond twin core assays are still pending. The infill drill holes intersected the hosts of polymict breccia and upper altered dolomite at the expected positions across the infill drill area. The silver intersections are in consistent flat-lying tabular layers at 10m to 120m depth within the polymict breccia and altered dolomite. Cross-cutting faults and dacite dykes are interpreted as mineral conduits that influence the distribution of higher grade silver zones. The large number and widespread distribution of high-grade and broad silver intersections. support the prior intersections in previous wider-spaced drilling. These also provide increased confidence in the likely upgrade of the Paris silver Mineral Resource. Further work Work continues on quality assurance /control for the RCP drill assays. This will be complimented by the awaited assays for the diamond twin holes expected by mid-January. Detailed assessment of the geology intersected in each of the RCP and diamond holes is on-going including iterative comparison with the new assays. One aspect particularly receiving attention is the possibility of further structural controls on the silver mineralisation within the deposit to explain the widespread distribution of high-grade silver intersections in the infill drilling. A re-estimation of the Paris silver resource is anticipated during the first Quarter of 2017. Bulk samples of the RCP drilling have been collected and preserved for further metallurgical testwork commencing later in the March 2017 quarter.