
Greenvale Energy (ASX:GRV) bolstered the discovery potential of its Oasis Uranium Project in North Queensland following the integration of regional-scale Sentinel-2 multi-spectral data.
The high-tech acquisition, covering the company’s entire landholding, has identified a series of helium, radon, and chlorite anomalies that align closely with existing geophysical and geochemical targets.
The data reveals that these gas and alteration signatures coincide with critical structural intersections, mirroring the geological fingerprint of the known Oasis deposit.
Helium and radon are recognised globally as reliable indicators of buried uranium mineralisation, while chlorite serves as a vital geochemical marker for the biotite schist that hosts the project's primary resources.
Based on the findings, Greenvale has established a robust pipeline of nine priority exploration areas.
An additional seven "areas of interest" have been defined where multi-spectral anomalies overlap with favorable magnetic and radiometric features.
CEO Alex Cheeseman emphasised that while previous efforts focused on the central deposit, this data provides the "vectoring tools" necessary to unlock the broader region's scale.
“We have invested the time to build a pipeline of quality targets ready for our 2026 campaign,” Cheeseman stated, noting that the region remains largely underexplored.
The company has already submitted permitting notices to begin ground-truthing these targets, signaling an aggressive shift toward regional discovery as the 2026 field season commences.
At the time of reporting, Greenvale Energy's share price was $0.040.