US Copper Corp. provided an update on the Dixie fire and its impact on the Company's activities at its Moonlight-Superior Copper Project in north-east California. The evacuation orders for the Dixie Fire are slowly being lifted, but access to the company's Moonlight-Superior property is still restricted. The Dixie fire has now burned over 950,000 acres across 6 counties and is the 2nd largest forest fire in California history. This fire burned across its entire property, but the drill rig, which remained on site, was not damaged. However, due to prior commitments, the drill contractor will be moving the rig to their next project. With only a couple of months remaining in the drill season it is unlikely that its current drill contractor will return this season. Alternatives are being considered. The company's core shed in Crescent Mills was untouched by the fire although power was interrupted. Power is expected to be restored this week permitting to fully resume activity. Seven holes (5,872 ft) had been completed on its Superior deposit up until the evacuation order of July 20, 2021. Five holes have been logged and split core sent to the lab for assay. Core from holes 6 & 7 still need to be logged, cut and sent to the lab in Reno. The company expects all assays to be completed and received by late October 2021. The company initially planned 10-12 holes at Superior to be able to reclassify the Superior resource (60 million tonnes at 0.41% copper as per its Technical report) from inferred to indicated. The 7 holes completed will allow to only partially achieve this objective, but the company will be able to quantify the gold and silver credits in the deposit that were largely ignored in assays by prior owners.