With the resumption following the drying of melted snow at the field, the company is moving back to the next drill collar location.

Aldrin CEO and director Johnathan More said, "We now get to test the most intense conductor on the Forest Lake Fault, and the even stronger conductor on the Anticline Target, knowing that both areas have the potential to yield a high-grade uranium discovery."

The uranium explorer had completed 25% of the planned 4,000m drill at the four holes focused on the Forrest Lake Fault target before it the operations were halted.

The completed drill holes have intersected locally brecciated pelitic gneiss, with extensive chlorite and pyrite alteration with last completed hole named ALN140-004 and total depth 339.4 m intersected two graphitic fault zones with elevated radioactivity as detected by handheld scintillometers.

Aldrin is currently drilling the next four holes of the Forrest Lake Fault, after which the program is scheduled to move to the Anticline target that is reported to comprise a strong sub-horizontal conductor, with coincident gravity low and radon high anomalies.

Meanwhile, the company has sent the samples of the pelitic gneiss, breccia, and graphitic fault zones to the Saskatchewan Research Council laboratory in Saskatoon for analyses.