Future Fuels Completes Gravity Survey At Hornby; Multiple Priority Anomalies Identified; Marketing Update
VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESS Newswire / January 14, 2026 / Future Fuels Inc. (TSXV:FTUR)(FSE:S0J)(OTCQX:FTURF) ("Future Fuels" or the "Company") is pleased to announce the results of its 2025 ground gravity survey (the "Survey") at its 100%-owned Hornby …
VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESS Newswire / January 14, 2026 / Future Fuels Inc. (TSXV:FTUR)(FSE:S0J)(OTCQX:FTURF) ("Future Fuels" or the "Company") is pleased to announce the results of its 2025 ground gravity survey (the "Survey") at its 100%-owned Hornby Basin Uranium Project (the "Hornby Project" or the "Project"), located approximately 95 kilometres southwest of Kugluktuk, Nunavut.
The Survey was completed by EarthEx Geophysical Solutions Inc. (EarthEx) and represents the most detailed gravity dataset ever acquired across the Hornby Basin uranium district. The program successfully delineated several high-priority gravity anomalies spatially associated with major structural corridors, stratigraphic boundaries, and known uranium mineralization, significantly advancing Future Fuels' understanding of subsurface density architecture across the Mountain Lake area.
Future Fuels President & CEO Rob Leckie commented: "The data we were able to collect meets the expectations we had for this initiative at Hornby. The gravity response over Mountain Lake has generated clear targets, and the new anomalies we've uncovered have the features of a much larger uranium system. We are optimistic and excited to advance these targets into drilling and unlock what we believe is a district-scale opportunity and use this geophysical technique elsewhere on this massive land tenure."
The 2025 program forms part of Future Fuels' broader district-scale exploration strategy at the Hornby Project, supporting the Company's objective of expanding on the historical Mountain Lake uranium system and identifying additional mineralized zones along the Helmut-Imperial structural corridor. Field operations were conducted between mid-September and early October. The Company more than doubled the size of the historical IsoEnergy gravity data set, and EarthEx merged the new data together with the datasets from 2022 and 2024.
The field program deployed multiple Scintrex CG-5 gravimeters and a dual-frequency Emlid Reach RS2/RS2+ RTK GNSS system. The 2025 campaign included establishing and verifying control stations, drift testing all instruments through extended 24-hour warm-up cycles, and performing daily tie-ins to the Gravity Control Station (GCS) established during the 2024 program. Raw GNSS and gravity data were quality-controlled daily, uploaded from camp, and processed off-site using the Oasis Montaj Gravity and Terrain Correction Module. All newly acquired gravity data were corrected for instrument drift, levelled to the GCS, and merged with the 2022 and 2024 data. Elevation corrections were calculated using high-resolution ArcticDEM models reprojected for NAD83 (CSRS) UTM Zone 11N, and Complete Bouguer Anomaly ("CBA") values were generated at a density of 2.67 g/cm³. The merged dataset was gridded at 12.5-metre resolution, and tilt-derivative filtering was applied to enhance subtle density contrasts (see figure 2).

