Greenvale Energy Ltd. has identified nine priority exploration areas within the Oasis uranium project in Queensland, highlighting its potential to deliver more intrusive-related uranium discoveries.
Data from a regional-scale Sentinel-2 multi-spectral data analysis identified multiple helium and radon (gas) and chlorite (alteration) anomalies.
The gas anomalies coincide with key structural intersections between north-south and northeast-southwest oriented structural sets. Helium and radon are both indicators of uranium mineralisation in many hard-rock uranium deposits.
Greenvale CEO Alex Cheeseman said: “While much of the company’s exploration effort has so far been focused on or immediately around the Oasis deposit itself, there has also been constant regional target development going on in the background.
“We have invested time and effort to build up a pipeline of quality regional targets ready for the start of our 2026 exploration effort.
“Beyond the known deposit, the broader Oasis region has been under-explored, so we are excited about the opportunity to make regional discoveries and ultimately build the scale potential at Oasis.”
The Oasis project is a high-grade uranium deposit, containing drill intercepts up to 0.72 per cent uranium.
Greenvale submitted permitting notices to commence the next stage of exploration, with an immediate focus on ground-truthing and further development of these key regional targets.
Field work is scheduled to begin within the first quarter of 2026, with initial programs involving geological mapping, ground surveying and potential rock chip sampling and analysis.



