New IP Data Reveals Massive Copper Anomaly for Super Copper in Chile
Historical drilling barely scratched the surface, but newly acquired IP data reveals a massive, entirely untested high-grade core at the Cordillera Cobre project in Chile, setting the stage for a highly anticipated 2026 drill program.
Sometimes in the mining industry, you can be standing right on top of a massive discovery and still miss the main event entirely. That is precisely the geological drama playing out for Super Copper Corp. (CSE: CUPR | OTCQB: CUPPF), a company that just published new geophysical data revealing a kilometre-scale, previously untouched copper anomaly at its Cordillera Cobre Project in Chile. Armed with a modern induced polarization (IP) survey, the company has peeled back the layers of the Atacama belt to map a potential sulphide corridor that makes historical exploration efforts look like they were shooting in the dark.
The newly released data is nothing short of a paradigm shift for the project. The IP survey tracked a strong, coherent chargeability corridor spanning a minimum of 800 metres in strike and plunging approximately 400 metres deep. Better yet, this sprawling system remains wide open in every direction. With chargeability responses hitting up to >5.0 mV/V, the geological signatures are flashing exactly the kind of bright neon signs you want to see when hunting for world-class IOCG-style or porphyry copper systems.

