Is This the Critical Minerals Breakthrough Europe Has Been Waiting For?
High-grade antimony and gold results position Military Metals’ Slovakian project at the center of Europe’s critical minerals strategy.

Military Metals Corp. (CSE: MILI | OTCQB: MILIF) has announced compelling historical sample results from its 100 percent owned Tiennesgrund Antimony-Gold Project in eastern Slovakia. The data reveal staggering grades of up to 39.4 percent antimony and 9.69 grams per tonne gold, underscoring the project’s potential to become a cornerstone in Europe’s strategy for securing critical mineral supply chains. Alongside the results, the company is initiating a targeted field program that could redefine the district’s exploration narrative.
High-Grade Results with Strategic Significance
The historical sampling campaign examined material from a series of adits and surface dumps where antimony-rich ore was previously mined. The highest-grade antimony sample hit an impressive 39.4 percent, with four separate samples exceeding 30 percent. On the gold front, assays reached up to 9.69 g/t, and notably, every antimony sample contained gold as well.
These numbers are more than geological curiosities. Antimony is recognized under the European Union’s Critical Raw Materials Act as vital for both industrial and defense applications, from flame retardants to munitions and advanced battery technologies. In a geopolitical climate marked by resource nationalism and supply chain uncertainty, the Tiennesgrund Project positions Military Metals at the forefront of Europe’s push for domestic sourcing.
