The Great Antimony Revival Begins at West Gore
New magnetic targets, historic potential, and a strategic 2025 drill campaign position Military Metals at the forefront of Canada’s antimony resurgence.

Military Metals Corp (CSE: MILI | OTCQB: MILIF) is kicking off the second half of 2025 with momentum and precision as it announces newly identified exploration targets and the official start of fieldwork at its 100% owned West Gore Antimony Project in Nova Scotia. With Canada’s critical minerals strategy in full swing and federal funding of $3.8 billion committed to building out a secure supply chain, the timing for this news couldn’t be better. Military Metals is positioning itself as a key player in North America’s antimony supply, a strategic mineral essential for defense, semiconductors, batteries, and flame retardants.
The new targets were generated through the reinterpretation of high-resolution drone magnetics originally flown in 2021. This legacy dataset, reanalyzed by Halifax-based Resourceful Geoscience Solutions, has now unveiled three distinct anomalies with potential to expand the historical footprint of mineralization. What makes this particularly compelling is that the magnetic signature correlates with areas of known antimony mineralization that were previously mined over a century ago, providing a bridge between past production and future potential.
Scott Eldridge, CEO of Military Metals, isn’t mincing words. According to him, these results accelerate the Company’s strategy and allow for a confident, cost-effective drill program. Rather than starting blind, the 2025 field campaign begins with data, historical context, and a modern understanding of geophysics.
