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Kellogg, Idaho. New Jersey Mining Company (OTCBB:NJMC) announces
it has driven a crosscut on the 740 level across the Coleman
quartz-gold vein. The vein is 4.7 meters wide on the left
rib and 3.6 meters wide on the right. Gold mineralization
is concentrated toward the hangingwall with pyrite, tennantite
and some visible gold. A picture of the vein is posted on
our website: www.newjerseymining.com.

Looking Southeast at Coleman Vein
Exposed by New Crosscut
(Yellow lines are one meter apart)
Chip sampling of the vein on the left rib averages 1.93 grams
per tonne (gpt) gold and 11 gpt silver with the two meter
wide portion near the hangingwall grading 3.27 grams/tonne
gold and 9 grams per tonne silver. The grade of the right
rib is 1.59 gpt gold and 16 gpt silver with the two meter
wide portion near the hangingwall grading 2.02 gpt gold and
13 gpt silver. Thin stringers of tennantite, a copper-arsenic
sulfosalt mineral which is a member of a group of minerals
known as fahlore, are visible in the higher grade section
of the vein. Grab samples of this mineralization assayed 93
gpt silver.
Company President Fred Brackebusch, commented, "The Coleman
vein has an impressive width where our crosscut intersected
it which is 150 meters below the surface outcrop. Fluid inclusion
testwork indicates the vein is mesothermal which implies the
vein could extend to depths of three kilometers or more."
The exploration plan is to drift on the vein in both directions
so that an updated resource calculation for the Coleman vein
can be completed, and explore for a mineable, high-grade ore
shoot that can be profitably processed at the New Jersey mill.
Earlier sampling shows that 1.4 meter wide face about 20 meters
southeast of the intersection averages 9.0 gpt gold, and a
2002 drill-hole intercepted the vein about 100 meters north
of the intersection and assays 6.8 gpt gold over 2.5 meters.
Vein material mined during the resource definition drifting
will be processed in the nearby New Jersey mill to accurately
establish the grade of the vein.
Drifting on the vein should increase the resources of the
Coleman vein. The 740 level was originally driven before 1910
but little drifting was done on the vein. Oscar Hershey, a
well-known Bunker Hill geologist, commented in 1916 that if
the vein were developed for 2,000 feet of length rather than
only 200 feet, mineable shoots might be discovered. Although
nearly 100 years later, our exploration plan is to essentially
follow his advice.
New Jersey Mining Company is involved in exploring for and
developing gold, silver and base metal ore resources in the
Coeur d'Alene Mining District of northern Idaho. The Company
has a portfolio of mineral properties in the Coeur d'Alene
Mining District including the Niagara copper-silver deposit,
the Golden Chest mine, the New Jersey mine, the Silver Strand
mine, and several other exciting exploration prospects.
This release contains certain forward-looking statements within
the meaning of the Federal Securities Laws. Such statements are based on assumptions
that the Company believes are reasonable but which are subject to a wide range
of uncertainties and business risks. Factors that could cause actual results to
differ from those anticipated are discussed in the Company's periodic filings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its annual report on Form
10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 2005.
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