Kalo Gold's High-Flying Hunt for Epithermal Treasure: X-Raying the Islands
A massive 6,212-kilometre heli-mag survey is rapidly advancing, giving geologists a high-tech X-ray of the Earth's crust to pinpoint future drill targets at the Vatu Aurum Project.
Fiji might be globally famous for its crystal-clear waters and white-sand beaches, but for Kalo Gold Corp. (TSXV: KALO | OTCID: KLGDF), the real treasure is hidden deep beneath the volcanic soil. The Vancouver-based exploration company just dropped a highly encouraging operational update regarding its massive 6,212 line-kilometre high-resolution airborne magnetic survey at the 100%-owned Vatu Aurum Project. If you are tracking the junior mining sector, you already know that mapping the geological plumbing is the critical first step toward pulling high-grade gold out of the ground.
The choppers have been incredibly busy. As of April 29, 2026, Kalo Gold Corp. (TSXV: KALO | OTCID: KLGDF) reported that 2,764 line-kilometres have already been flown. With 3,448 line-kilometres left on the docket, the company is tearing through its flight program with striking efficiency. Anyone who has operated in remote island nations knows that Mother Nature usually dictates the schedule, but highly favourable weather conditions have allowed for productive, uninterrupted daily flights. Assuming the tropical skies stay clear, the remainder of the survey is expected to wrap up in the coming days.

