The technical report presents the results of the details of land tenure, summarizes historical work performed and recommends a two-phased exploration program to evaluate the potential for gold mineralization. Information derived from past exploration programs on the Grub Line property area, the vast majority conducted by Falconbridge Ltd. in 1990 and 1991 on 2,504 metres of diamond drilling, and regional geochemical surveys and geological mapping conducted by the Geological Survey of Newfoundland, suggest that the geological setting of the Grub Line project is prospective of volcanogenic base metal deposits and orogenic-type gold deposits.The 1,791-acre Grub Line project is bracketed on its east border by the Gander River ultramafic belt (GRUB), a tectonic fault formed during the closing of the Iapetus Ocean, signifying a deep-seated, mantle-tapping structure associated with known mineralization. Actively explored in the past for base metals, prominent and deep regional crustal breaks connected and parallel to the GRUB could provide conduits for gold-bearing fluids to migrate to the near surface and precipitate out into related secondary and tertiary structures. With the recent discovery hole by New Found Gold nearby, interest in the region and further delineation of these mineralizing structures has intensified.Based on technical information on projects bordering the Grub Line project and recent discoveries nearby, the technical report proposes a two-phase exploration program in 2021 to test the existing new base metal mineralization and gold targets. Contingent upon results from the phase 1 geochemical soil sampling and mobile-metal ion surveys, a 1,200 m diamond drill testing program is recommended. Further work is in particular required along strike to the north from the historical drill intersections completed by Falconbridge.