Havilah Resources Limited reported preliminary results of its recent RC drilling of a gossan outcrop at the Cockburn prospect 45 km southwest of Broken Hill. Highly anomalous surface geochemical samples containing up to 0.26% copper, 0.16% cobalt and 1.03 g/t gold were collected by earlier exploration groups and confirmed by Havilah's 2018 systematic surface lag sampling and rock chip sampling program (refer to ASX announcement of 28 August 2018 and ASX announcement of 7 December 2018 page 17, noting name change to Cockburn prospect from Viper prospect, previously). Follow up field checking by Havilah geologists identified the likely source of the geochemical anomaly as a sulphide gossan that returned up to 0.4% copper and 0.15% cobalt in Niton XRF readings. The subtle gossan outcrop is restricted to an area of a few tens of square metres while gossan surface scree covers a larger area. Four RC drillholes directed beneath the gossan intersected a 10-20 metre wide zone of fresh and oxidised sulphides with associated vein quartz. The fresh sulphides are comprised predominantly of pyrite (iron sulphide) and some chalcopyrite (copper sulphide). It is interpreted that the steeply east-dipping mineralisation occurs at the possibly sheared contact of mica schist and gneissic rocks (Figures 4 & 5 below). The presence of copper and cobalt has been confirmed by Niton XRF analyses, while gold assays will be determined by laboratory analysis of drill samples presently in progress. Gold levels of 1 g/t as detected by surface sampling would be economically significant if they persisted into the primary sulphide zone. A decision on further drilling at the Cockburn prospect will be made after receipt of laboratory assay results and completion of geological mapping and additional surface geochemical sampling. Drilling has now moved to the Mutooroo West prospect, which lies 4 km northwest of the Mutooroo deposit (Figure 2). This will be the first drilling at this prospect for over 50 years. Havilah plans several RC drillholes to test for shallow copper-cobalt mineralisation near the base of oxidation, and specifically testing a priority one AEM (airborne electromagnetic) bedrock conductor (refer to ASX announcement of 12 August 2019). HIGHLIGHTS: A new 10-20 metre wide quartz-sulphide lode discovery in 4 reverse circulation (RC) drillholes at the Cockburn prospect, 45 km southwest of Broken Hill. Logging of the RC drill chips indicates abundant vein quartz, pyrite (iron sulphide) and lesser chalcopyrite (copper sulphide), supported by Niton XRF analyser results showing anomalous copper and cobalt. At least 1.5 km of strike to be drill tested pending receipt of laboratory assays.