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Vangold enters exclusive Petroleum Exploration Sharing Agreement

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  • Vangold enters exclusive Petroleum Exploration Sharing Agreement

    Vangold Resources Ltd. (TSX-V:VAN)
    Suite 1730, 650 West Georgia Street,
    P.O.Box 11622, Vancouver, BC, V6B 4N9
    Phone 606 684 1974 Fax 604 685 5970
    www.vangold.ca


    NEWS RELEASE

    VANGOLD ENTERS INTO EXCLUSIVE PETROLEUM EXPLORATION PRODUCTION SHARING
    AGREEMENT FOR THE EXPLORATION OF 13,775 SQ KMS IN ARMENIA

    May 22, 2007 - Vangold Resources Ltd. (`Vangold') announces that it
    will participate in a Production Sharing Agreement (the `PSA') between
    the Ministries of Energy and Environmental Protection of Armenia and
    Blackstairs Energy plc (`Blackstairs'). Vangold will participate as
    to a 50% interest in Blocks 4, 5 and 6 which cover an area of 13,775
    sq. km (over 3.4 million acres) in central and southern Armenia.
    Under the PSA, the term of exploration is five years which may be
    extended (subject to an agreed work program) by two additional
    periods, each of two years. The total financial commitment for five
    years is US$2.4M of which Vangold will expend US$1.2M. The Blocks are
    governed exclusively by this PSA which was effective as of April 27th
    2007.

    Dal Brynelsen, President and CEO of Vangold states: `I am very pleased
    with this acquisition on two fronts. These particular concessions
    encompass half of Armenia and are adjacent to Iran, Azerbaijan and
    Georgia, all countries with very extensive oil and gas resources. We
    believe a similar potential exists in southern Armenia. We are very
    pleased to have aligned ourselves with executive oil and gas experts
    from Blackstairs who have extensive exploration and development
    experience in both Armenia and in east Africa. We look forward to
    working closely with Mr. Sheehan and his crew not only in Armenia but
    also in Rwanda and Kenya. The addition of the Armenian basin brings
    Vangold's land package in Africa and Armenia to a total of 45,200 sq
    kms.'

    Blackstairs Energy Plc

    Blackstairs, a private company based in Dublin, Ireland, will operate
    the Blocks under the terms of the PSA. An office is being opened in
    Yerevan, an experienced General Manager, Mr. Tim Papworth, has been
    appointed, and the recruitment of key technical and commercial staff
    is underway. Mr. Papworth is a UK-based petroleum exploration
    consultant with over thirty years of experience in areas including the
    North Sea, onshore UK, Libya, Egypt, Tunisia, Malaysia, Gabon,
    Namibia, Georgia and Russia. He has worked intermittently in Armenia
    since 1994. The Technical Summary included in this news release was
    authored by Mr. Papworth.

    The operation in Armenia will also be supported by other members of
    the Blackstairs' team of experienced geological, geophysical and
    petroleum engineering staff including the Managing Director of
    Blackstairs Mr. Gerard Sheehan, B.Sc., M.Sc., FRAS and Mr. John
    D. Scott, B.Sc., M.Sc. Mr. Sheehan is a former Exploration Manager
    and New Ventures Manager for Tullow Oil plc. Throughout his nineteen
    years with Tullow, Mr. Sheehan worked on a variety of petroleum
    projects in Africa, the Indian Subcontinent and Eastern and Central
    Europe. Mr. Sheehan resigned from Tullow in July 2006 to concentrate
    on the development of Blackstairs. Mr. Sheehan is member of the
    Society of Exploration Geophysicists, the American Association of
    Petroleum Geologists and a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society.



    Mr. Scott is a non-executive director of Blackstairs and is a
    petroleum engineer with over 35 years experience in the oil sector.
    His extensive career includes the position of Petroleum Engineering
    Manager for Tullow Oil plc where he assumed responsibility for all of
    Tullow's field development projects in the UK, Syria, Pakistan,
    Bangladesh and across Africa. Mr. Scott is a member of the Society of
    Petroleum Engineers, the Society of Professional Well Log Analysts and
    an Associate of International Petroleum Negotiators.

    As reported by Vangold on March 1, 2007, Tullow had announced that its
    Kingfisher-1 exploration well in Block 3A in Uganda (50% Tullow : 50%
    Heritage Oil) was flowing 13,893 bopd in total. This Ugandan
    discovery is part of the Albertine Graben which may extend into
    Vangold's White Elephant concession which is 7,208 sq kms in Rwanda,
    not 2,708 as previously announced by Vangold. Vangold is very pleased
    that Messrs. Sheehan and Scott will also provide their extensive
    expertise to the geological evaluation of this area.

    Work Program Armenia

    Blackstairs and Vangold will undertake a comprehensive technical
    program. The objective of these programs is to elucidate the petroleum
    system, high-grade the most prospective areas, and identify prospects
    which may be considered for additional delineation or drilling.

    The projects identified for the initial phase of exploration are:
    Collation and re-assessment of the existing technical database
    Reprocessing of suitable geophysical data, including seismic data
    Satellite imagery interpretation Gravity surveys Geochemical surveys
    Field geological mapping Acquisition of at least 170 km. of 2D
    seismic.

    Brief Technical Summary of the SE Armenia Licence Area, Blocks 4, 5 &
    6

    Armenia lies within the Caucasus orogenic belt situated between the
    Black and Caspian seas. This orogenic belt was formed as a result of
    the closure of a number of Tethyan Ocean tracts, since as long ago as
    the Devonian. The remnants of some of these paleo-oceans are
    represented in Armenia by up to three narrow, discontinuous belts of
    ophiolites, which strike approximately north-west to south-east. The
    outcropping ophiolites range in age from Jurassic to Cretaceous. They
    do not necessarily represent fully oceanic material, but may instead
    be parts of the floors of narrow marine basins similar to the present
    Gulf of Suez. These ophiolite belts serve to divide the country into
    tectonic zones (see below).


    (Geological map of Armenia shown)

    The south-western zone is represented by three basins, the
    Oktemberyan, Artashat, and Surinaven. They lie along the course of
    the present day River Araks, which forms the border with Turkey. They
    are referred to collectively as the Ararat Intermontane Depression.
    Their sedimentary section is Tertiary in age, which is floored by
    ophiolites (Cretaceous / Jurassic) or Paleozoic sediments. These
    gas-prone basins lie within Transeuro Energy Block 2, due west of
    Block 4, with part of the Surinaven Basin within Block 5.

    To the north-east, the section rises onto a regional high composed of
    Paleozoic metasediments, before dipping again into a large sedimentary
    basin referred to as the Central Depression. These sediments ranging
    in age from Permian to Recent. Folding, wrench faulting, and possibly
    reverse and thrust faulting, are all recognised structural phenomena
    within this zone. Near the north-western end of the Central depression
    lies the Aragats volcano, dormant since Pliocene times.

    Further north-east, a major tectonic suture occurs within the
    Sevan-Shirak zone, and Cretaceous and Jurassic age ophiolites outcrop
    within it and along the northern margin. The Sevan-Shirak zone itself
    is represented by Middle Eocene tuffs and associated volcanic vents
    and intrusives. Finally, in the north of Armenia, the Somkhet Karabakh
    and Bazum zones contain Middle Jurassic to Cretaceous sediments
    overlying basement. These are deformed by reverse faulting and
    thrusting and penetrated by igneous intrusives. The section dips
    regionally to the north, into the oil productive Kura Depression of
    Georgia and Azerbaijan.

    The Central Depression, which covers much the SE Armenia Licence area,
    has been subdivided into two tectonic zones - the Yerevan -Ordubad
    zone in the north and the Miskham-Zangezur zone in the south (in Block
    6). The former is possibly the more prospective, with most exploration
    having been carried out in its western part, in the Near Yerevan
    Depression in Block 2, where oil prospects occur east of
    Yerevan. Similar prospects may exist further east into Block 4,
    especially considering that oil shows were seen in the Yeranos
    borehole just SW of Lake Sevan.

    Based upon gravity data, the Central Depression can be subdivided into
    at least seven sub-basins, these being, from west to east - Aragats
    Depression, Fontan Depression (potential oil source area in NE Block
    2, extending into Bock 5?), Near Year Depression, Sevan Depression (in
    central Block 4), Chatma-Vedi Depression (south west of Lake Sevan),
    Vardenis Syncline (SE of Lake Sevan) and Vayotsdzor Depression
    (central and south Block 5). The prospective area in Block 6 is the
    so-called Kapan block in the east, which is Jurassic and Cretaceous in
    age.

    A summary of oil and gas potential follows:

    oil traces found in the Paleocene/Upper Cretaceous of the Azat-1 well
    (eight kms from western border of Block 4), and one cubic metre of oil
    recovered (several hundred metres of oil shows) from Paleocene in
    Shorakhpur-1P well, eight kms further west; extensive oil shows in the
    Upper/Middle Eocene of the Garni-1G well (eight kms from western
    border of Block 4), and oil found in the Middle Eocene of
    Shorakhpur-1P; oil seeps seen in the old Yeranos borehole, SE of Lake
    Sevan (Block 4); gas seeps recorded in Lake Sevan and nearby shallow
    boreholes (Block 4); gas shows in the Vedi-1T well in the Cretaceous
    (western part of Block 5); heavy, waxy, asphaltic residual oil found
    within Triassic coals in the Ghermanis-4 borehole, west of
    Yeghegnadzor (Block 5); the presence of Permian organic rich, mature,
    oil- and gas-prone calcareous shales and mudstones in the general area
    (blocks 5, 6); bitumen found in the Shahumian borehole and the
    Coniacian of the Spitakjour River area (Block 6), which may be of
    Devonian origin, and an unsubstantiated report of an oil show in the
    Meghri area, which may also be Devonian (Block 6).

    (Map showing oil and gas occurrences in Armenia)


    To find out more about Vangold Resources Ltd. please visit our website
    at www.vangold.ca or contact Dal Brynelsen at 604-684-1974 or by email
    [email protected].

    On Behalf of the Board of
    VANGOLD RESOURCES LTD.
    `Dal Brynelsen'

    Dal Brynelsen, President and CEO

    The TSX Venture Exchange has not reviewed and does not accept
    responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of the content of this
    news release.
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