QuestEx Gold & Copper Ltd. announced the results of a 24-line-kilometre ("km") Induced Polarization ("IP") survey conducted on QuestEx's KSP property, located in British Columbia's prolific Golden Triangle district. The IP survey identified a new top tier porphyry copper-gold exploration target by testing beneath the extensive 8 by 3.5 km Sericite Ridge alteration zone, where it identified an approximately 1,500 by 1,000 metre ("m") area with coincident high chargeability and high resistivity (Figures 1, 2 and 3), a geophysical signature consistent with porphyry copper-gold systems. Geological Highlights: At 8 km long, Sericite Ridge is host to one of the largest alteration zones in the Golden Triangle (Figure 1). Located in the footwall of the Khyber thrust fault (Figure 1), a setting analogous to other significant deposits in the Golden Triangle including Kerr, Sulphurets, Iron Cap and Saddle North. Includes the Tami gold showing where gold and copper occur in association with sheeted and stockwork quartz-magnetite-chalcopyrite veins. Geochemical Highlights: Three silt samples from streams at the base of Sericite Ridge rank within the 100th percentile for porphyry copper-gold prospectivity within the Golden Triangle according to a 2018 study by Geoscience BC1. Some of the best historic results at Tami include 2.8 g/t gold ("Au") and 0.48% copper ("Cu") over 16.0 m in trench 14-006b, and 1.74 g/t Au and 0.24% Cu over 40 m in drill hole 17-115 from 5.0 m depth. Geophysical Highlights: Newly identified coincident chargeability and resistivity highs covering a 1,500 by 1,000 m area not yet drill-tested below 250 vertical m. Three-dimensional ("3D") model of airborne magnetic data indicates a buried magnetic high associated with the newly identified chargeability and resistivity highs.