20-F 1 form20f.htm ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED MAY 31, 2006 Filed by Automated Filing Services Inc. (604) 609-0244 - Teryl Resources Corp. - Form 20-F

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 20-F

[   ]   REGISTRATION STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OR (g) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

OR

[X]   ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 –

For the fiscal year ended May 31, 2006

OR

[   ]   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 – n/a

OR

[   ]   SHELL COMPANY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934- n/a

Commission File Number 000-31076

TERYL RESOURCES CORP.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

British Columbia, Canada
(Jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

240 - 11780 Hammersmith Way
Richmond, British Columbia V7A 5E9, Canada
(Address of principal executive offices)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
None

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
Common Stock, no par value
(Title of Class)

Indicate the number of outstanding shares of each of the issuer’s classes of capital or common stock as of the close
of the period covered by the annual report. 39,468,188

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
Yes [   ]   No [X]

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant
was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes [   ]   No [X]

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.):
Yes [   ]   No [X]


Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated
filer. See definition of “accelerated filer and large accelerated filer” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):

Large accelerated filer [   ]      Accelerated filer [   ]      Non-accelerated filer [X]

Indicate by check mark which financial statement item the registrant has elected to follow:
Item 17 [X]   Item 18 [   ]

Index to Exhibits on Page 79

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

PART I   6
ITEM 1. IDENTITY OF DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT AND ADVISORS 6
ITEM 2. OFFER STATISTICS AND EXPECTED TIMETABLE 6
ITEM 3. KEY INFORMATION 7
A. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA 7
B. CAPITALIZATION AND INDEBTEDNESS 9
C. REASON FOR THE OFFER AND USE OF PROCEEDS 9
D. RISK FACTORS 9
ITEM 4. INFORMATION ON THE COMPANY 16
A. HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE COMPANY 16
B. BUSINESS OVERVIEW 17
C. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE 28
D. PROPERTY, PLANTS AND EQUIPMENT 28
ITEM 4A. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS 54
ITEM 5. OPERATING AND FINANCIAL REVIEW AND PROSPECTS 54
A. OPERATING RESULTS 54
B. LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES 55
C. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, PATENTS AND LICENSES, ETC 59
D. TREND INFORMATION 59
E. OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS 60
F. TABULAR DISCLOSURE OF CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS 60
G. SAFE HARBOUR 61
ITEM 6. DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT AND EMPLOYEES 61
A. DIRECTORS AND SENIOR MANAGEMENT 61
B. COMPENSATION 62
C. BOARD PRACTICES 66
D. EMPLOYEES 66
E. SHARE OWNERSHIP 66
ITEM 7. MAJOR SHAREHOLDERS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS 67
A. MAJOR SHAREHOLDERS 67
B. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS. 67
C. INTERESTS OF EXPERTS AND COUNSEL. 68
ITEM 8. FINANCIAL INFORMATION 68
A. CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS AND OTHER FINANCIAL INFORMATION 68
B. SIGNIFICANT CHANGES 69
ITEM 9. THE OFFER AND LISTING 69
A. OFFER AND LISTING DETAILS 69
B. PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION 71
C. MARKETS 71
D. SELLING SHAREHOLDERS 71
E. DILUTION 71
F. EXPENSES OF THE ISSUE 71
ITEM 10. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 71
A. SHARE CAPITAL 71
B. MEMORANDUM AND ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION 71
C. MATERIAL CONTRACTS 73
D. EXCHANGE CONTROLS 73
E. TAXATION 74
F. DIVIDENDS AND PAYING AGENTS 75
G. STATEMENT BY EXPERTS. 75
H. DOCUMENTS ON DISPLAY. 75
I. SUBSIDIARY INFORMATION 76
ITEM 11. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK 76
ITEM 12. DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES OTHER THAN EQUITY SECURITIES 77
PART II   77
ITEM 13. DEFAULTS, DIVIDEND ARREARAGES AND DELINQUENCIES 77
ITEM 14. MATERIAL MODIFICATIONS TO THE RIGHTS OF SECURITY 77

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HOLDERS AND USE OF PROCEEDS. 77
A. MATERIAL MODIFICATIONS TO THE RIGHTS OF SECURITY HOLDERS 77
B. USE OF PROCEEDS. 77
ITEM 15. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES 78
ITEM 16. [Reserved] 78
ITEM 16A. Audit Committee Financial Expert 78
ITEM 16B. Code of Ethics 78
ITEM 16C. Principal Accountant Fees and Services 78
ITEM 16D. Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit Committees 79
ITEM 16E. Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers 79
PART III 79
ITEM 17. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 79
ITEM 18. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 80
ITEM 19. EXHIBITS 80
GLOSSARY OF MINING TERMS 81
   
SIGNATURE PAGE 84

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Unless the context otherwise requires, all references refer to Teryl Resources Corp. All monetary figures are in terms of Canadian dollars unless otherwise indicated.

INTRODUCTION

Teryl Resources Corp. (hereinafter referred to as the “Registrant” or the “Company” or “Teryl”) was incorporated on May 23, 1980, as Candy Mountain Gold Corporation under a perpetual charter pursuant to the Company Act (British Columbia) by the registration of its Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association. On January 20, 1984, a special resolution was passed changing its name to Teryl Resources Corp.

In September 1985 we made a public offering of our Common Shares to residents of British Columbia and, following the completion of the offering, our shares were listed on the Vancouver Stock Exchange (now the TSX Venture Exchange) on September 13, 1985.

On October 25, 1985 a special resolution was passed authorising the creation of 5,000,000 preferred shares with a par value of $1.00.

On November 30, 1988, a special resolution was passed altering our Memorandum and adopting new Articles which changed our authorized capital from 10,000,000 Common Shares without par value to 30,000,000 Common Shares without par value and 5,000,000 Preferred Shares of non-voting stock with a par value of $1.00.

On November 20, 2000, a special resolution was passed altering our Memorandum and adopting new Articles which changed our authorized capital from 30,000,000 Common Shares without par value to 100,000,000 Common Shares without par value, of these, 39,468,188 Common Shares were issued and outstanding as of May 31, 2006, and 39,468,188 as at January 2, 2007 also as of the date of this Form 20-F. 5,000,000 Preferred Shares of non-voting stock with a par value of $1.00 have also been authorized. No Preferred Shares have ever been issued.

At the annual general meeting held January 22, 2003, the board of directors of the Company was granted approval to apply to have the Company's named changed to Teryl Gold Inc. The name change was accepted by the Province of British Columbia on February 4, 2003; however, the Company did not complete the paperwork for informing regulatory authorities, and, therefore, continued to use the name of Teryl Resources Corp. On November 25, 2004, the name was changed back to Teryl Resources Corp. with the Province of British Columbia.

On March 29, 2004, the new British Columbia Business Corporations Act (the "BCA") came into force in British Columbia and replaced the former Company Act (“Former Act”), which is the statute under which we were previously governed. Under the BCA, we have two years within which to transition ("Transition") under the new statute. In accordance with the BCA, we cannot amend our Articles or Notice of Articles until the Transition to the BCA is completed. We filed a transition application with the Registrar of Companies British Columbia to transition to the BCA and completed the Transition on September 13, 2004.

On November 15, 2004, at the Annual General Meeting of shareholders, our shareholders passed a special resolution to delete and replace our Articles as they applied to the Former Act in their entirety for new articles under the BCA. Our Incorporation Number is BC0187279.

BUSINESS OF TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

We make expenditures on acquiring mineral properties and carrying out exploration work. We also acquire oil and gas property interests and participate in drilling wells. The recoverability of amounts shown for investments, mineral properties, interest in oil and gas properties and the related deferred expenditures are

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dependent upon the existence of economically recoverable reserves, the ability to obtain the necessary financing to complete the exploration, the profitability of future production or our ability to dispose of those assets on a profitable basis. Our ongoing operation is dependent upon cash flow from successful operations and equity financing. The Company has incurred a loss of $430,646 in the year ended May 31, 2006 (2005 - $515,740; 2004 - $791,776). These consolidated financial statements do not include adjustments that would be necessary should it be determined that we may be unable to continue as a going concern.

FINANCIAL AND OTHER INFORMATION

In this Registration Statement, unless otherwise specified, all dollar amounts are expressed in Canadian Dollars (“CDN$” or “$”). The Government of Canada permits a floating exchange rate to determine the value of the Canadian Dollar against the U.S. Dollar (US$).

FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER STATUS

Teryl Resources Corp. (the "Company”), is a Canadian corporation incorporated under the laws of the Province of British Columbia. Over 50% of its common stock is held by non-United States citizens and residents; our business is administered principally outside the United States; and more than 50% of our assets are located outside the United States. As a result, we believe that we qualify as a "foreign private issuer" for continuing to report regarding the registration of our common stock using this Form 20-F annual report format.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Certain statements in this document constitute “forward-looking statements”. Some, but not all, forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “plan,” “estimate,” “expect,” and “intend,” statements that an action or event “may,” “might,” “could,” “should,” or “will” be taken or occur, or other similar expressions. Although we have attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expected results, such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause our actual results, performance or achievements, or other future events, to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors include, among others, the following risks: the risks associated with outstanding litigation, if any, risks associated with project development; the need for additional financing; operational risks associated with mining and mineral processing; fluctuations in metal prices; title matters; uncertainties and risks related to carrying on business in foreign countries; environmental liability claims and insurance; reliance on key personnel; the potential for conflicts of interest among certain officers, directors or promoters with certain other projects; the absence of dividends; currency fluctuations; competition; dilution; the volatility of our common share price and volume; and tax consequences to U.S. Shareholders. We are obligated to keep our information current and revise any forward-looking statements because of new information, future events or otherwise.

PART I

ITEM 1.        IDENTITY OF DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT AND ADVISORS

This Form 20-F is being filed as an annual report under the Exchange Act, and accordingly, the information called for in Item 1 is not required. Please see “Item 6 – Directors, Senior Management and Employees – Directors and Senior Management”.

ITEM 2.        OFFER STATISTICS AND EXPECTED TIMETABLE

This Form 20-F is being filed as an annual report under the Exchange Act, and accordingly, the information called for in Item 2 is not required.

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ITEM 3.        KEY INFORMATION

A.        SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

Our selected financial data for Fiscal 2006, 2005 and 2004 ended May 31st was derived from our financial statements that have been audited by Morgan and Company Chartered Accountants, as indicated in their audit reports. Our selected financial data for Fiscal 2003/2002 ended May 31st was derived from our financial statements that have been audited by June Fitzmartyn, Chartered Accountant, as indicated in her audit reports. Both Morgan and Company and June Fitzmartyn are members of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants.

The selected financial data should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and other financial information included elsewhere in the Registration Statement.

We have not declared any dividends since incorporation and do not anticipate that we will do so in the foreseeable future. Our present policy is to retain all available funds for use in our operations and the expansion of our business.

The information in the following table is derived from our financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with Canadian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and Canadian/USA Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (GAAS). All material numerical differences between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP, are described in footnotes to the financial statements.

The selected financial data set forth in the following table is expressed in Canadian dollars. Since June 1, 1970, the Government of Canada has permitted a floating exchange rate to determine the value of the Canadian dollar as compared to the United States dollar. At May 31, 2006, US$1.00 was equal to approximately C$1.1027.

The following represents our selected financial data for each of the past five fiscal years, ending on May 31. The data presented is prepared in accordance with Canadian generally accepted accounting principles:

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Fiscal Years Ended May 31

  May 31, 2006 May 31, 2005 May 31, 2004 May 31, 2003 May 31, 2002
CANADIAN GAAP          
Revenue 27,154 28,307 21,037 24,255 19,510
Income (Loss) for the Period (430,646) (515,740) (791,776) (323,812) (82,360)
Basic Income (Loss) Per Share (0.01) (0.01) (0.03) (0.01) (0.00)
Dividends Per Share Nil Nil Nil Nil Nil
Weighted Average. Shares 36,889,399 34,436,365 28,295,934 23,939,714 23,033,238
Period-end Shares (#) 39,468,188 36,777,688 33,180,688 25,238,088 23,033,238
Working Capital 207,994 138,460 20,032 (1,395,628) (1,023,465)
Mineral Properties 190,236 219,397 196,795 176,150 156,698
Long-Term Debt Nil Nil Nil Nil Nil
Capital Stock 10,624,107 9,944,335 9,018,122 6,297,375 6,020,427
Shareholders’ Equity (Deficit) 3,326,053 3,083,461 2,736,381 638,054 772,990
Total Assets 3,501,603 3,409,709 3,144,121 2,117,591 1,829,524
           
U.S GAAP          
Net Loss (1) (555,426) (756,744) (1,444,266) (543,950) (169,321)
Loss Per Share (0.02) (0.02) (0.05) (0.02) (0.01)
Mineral Properties 190,236 219,397 196,795 176,150 156,698
Shareholders’ Equity 428,460 408,838 234,842 (1,214,996) (860,909)
Total Assets 534,038 665,114 642,583 264,541 195,625

(1) Cumulative Net Loss since incorporation through May 31, 2006 under US GAAP was $8,966,620 approximately.

(2) Under US GAAP, options granted to non-employees as compensation for services provided are fair valued and an expense recorded.

(3) Under SEC interpretation of US GAAP, all costs related to exploration-stage properties are expensed in the period incurred.

Reference is made to "Item 4. Information on the Company" and "Item 5. “Operating and Financial Review and Prospects” for a description of the initiation and progression of our activities since incorporation.

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Currencies and Exchange Rates:

We publish our financial statements in Canadian dollars. Unless otherwise indicated, monetary amounts referred to in this annual report are in Canadian dollars. Unless otherwise indicated, all translations from Canadian dollars to US dollars have been made at a rate of CDN$ 1.1027 to US$ 1.00, the noon buying rate as certified for customs purposes by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (the "Noon Buying Rate") on May 31, 2006. We do not represent that Canadian dollar or US dollar amounts could be converted into US dollars or Canadian dollars, as the case may be, at any particular rate, the rates below or at all. The following table sets forth noon buying rate for US dollars in New York City for cable transfers in Canadian dollars as certified for customs purposes by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for the periods indicated:

The following table lists the average exchange rate for US$1.00 to the Canadian dollar for the last five years based on the average month-end exchange rates.

Year Average (CAD $) Low/High (CAD$) May 31 (CAD $)
2006 1.1738 1.0989/1.2578 1.1027
2005 1.2602 1.1775/1.3772 1.2512
2004 1.3435 1.2690/1.4114 1.3666
2003 1.5257 1.3446/1.5963 1.3712
2002 1.5679 1.5102/1.6128 1.5275

B.        CAPITALIZATION AND INDEBTEDNESS

This Form 20-F is being filed as an annual report under the Exchange Act, and accordingly, the information called for in this Item 3.B is not required

C.        REASON FOR THE OFFER AND USE OF PROCEEDS

This Form 20-F is being filed as an annual report under the Exchange Act, and accordingly, the information called for in Item 3.C is not required.

D.        RISK FACTORS

The occurrence of any of the following risks could hurt our business, financial condition or results of operations. In such case, the trading price of our shares could decline and you could lose all or part of your investment. Other risks and uncertainties not now known to us or that we think are immaterial may also impair our business.

RISK FACTORS RELATED TO OUR BUSINESS

We have no current mining operations and if we ever commence mining operations we face certain risks, any of which could result in our ceasing operations.

We have no current mining operations and no revenue from mining operations. If we ever commence actual mining operations, such operations would face the risk of changing circumstances, including but not limited to:

  • failure of production to achieve metal recovery levels indicated by pre-production testing of drill core and bulk samples;

  • estimates of reserves being adversely affected by encountering unexpected or unusual geological formations;

  • production costs being adversely affected by unforeseen factors such as substantial adverse changes in

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    exchange rates or changes in environmental protection requirements, breakdowns and other technical difficulties, slides, cave-ins or other natural disasters, work interruptions or labor strikes;

  • the grade of ore actually mined being lower than that indicated by drilling results;

  • persistently lower market prices of the products mined than those used to determine the feasibility of mining a mineral occurrence;

  • adverse changes in interest rates that may apply to project development debt.

Any oil and gas we may discover or produce may not be readily marketable at the time of production, delaying our ability to generate meaningful revenue.

Crude oil, natural gas, condensate and other oil and gas products are generally sold to other oil and gas companies, government agencies and other industries. The availability of ready markets for oil and gas that we might discover and the prices obtained for such oil and gas depend on many factors beyond our control, including:

  • the extent of local production and imports of oil and gas;

  • the proximity and capacity of pipelines and other transportation facilities;

  • fluctuating demand for oil and gas;

  • the marketing of competitive fuels; and

  • the effects of governmental regulation of oil and gas production and sales.

Natural gas associated with oil production is often not marketable due to demand or transportation limitations and is often flared at the producing well site. Pipeline facilities do not exist in certain areas of exploration and, therefore, any actual sales of discovered oil and gas might be delayed for extended periods until such facilities are constructed.

Financing Risks.

There is no assurance that we will be able to secure the financing necessary to explore, develop and produce our mineral properties.

We do not presently have sufficient financial resources or operating cash-flow to undertake solely all of our planned exploration and development programs. The development of our properties may therefore depend on obtaining a joint venture partners, and on our ability to obtain additional required financing. There is no assurance we will be successful in obtaining the required financing, the lack of which could result in the loss or substantial dilution of our interests (as existing or as proposed to be acquired) in our properties as disclosed herein. In addition, we have no experience in developing mining properties into production and its ability to do so will be dependent upon securing the services of appropriately experienced personnel or entering into agreements with other major mining companies which can provide such expertise.

As noted in our audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended May 31, 2006 we have incurred significant operating losses and have an accumulated deficit of $ 7,467,455 at May 31, 2006. Furthermore, we had working capital surplus of $ 207,994 as at May 31, 2006, which is not sufficient to achieve our planned business objectives. Our ability to continue as a going concern is dependent on continued financial support from our shareholders and other related parties, the ability of the Registrant to raise equity financing, and the attainment of profitable operations, external financings and further share issuances to meet our liabilities as they become payable.

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Our ability to continue as a going concern is dependent on continued financial support from our shareholders and other related parties, our ability to raise equity capital financing, and the attainment of profitable operations, external financings and further share issuance to satisfy working capital and operating needs.

Significant Losses for the Foreseeable Future.

We expect to incur significant losses for the foreseeable future and cannot be certain when or if we will achieve profitability. Failure to become and remain profitable will adversely affect the value of our Common Shares and our ability to raise capital and continue operations.

Volatility of the TSX Venture Exchange may adversely affect the price of the Common Stock.

Certain stocks listed on the TSX Venture Exchange have experienced significant price and volume fluctuations and decreases which have adversely affected the market price of our and other stocks listed on the TSX Venture Exchange without any regard to the underlying fundamentals of such stocks. These broad market fluctuations, which may occur in the future, as well as issues more specifically related to our business activities or prospects, our financial performance, intellectual property, may continue to adversely affect the market price of the Common Stock.

We do not expect to pay cash dividends.

We intend to retain any future earnings to finance our business and operations and any future growth. Therefore, we do not anticipate paying any cash dividends in the foreseeable future.

Potential lack of attractive investment targets.

Continued volatility of stock prices on the TSX Venture Exchange may have a material adverse effect on our ability to raise capital on the TSX Venture Exchange or by private investment, and the price of our common stock could fluctuate substantially.

Other Factors.

Our areas of business may be affected from time to time by such matters as changes in general economic conditions, changes in laws and regulations, taxes, tax laws, prices and costs, and other factors of a general nature which may have an adverse effect on our business.

Conflict of Interest.

Some of our current officers and directors have other unrelated full-time positions or part-time employment. Some officers and directors will be available to participate in management decisions on a part-time or as-needed basis only. Our management may devote its time to other companies or projects which may compete directly or indirectly with us.

U.S. Investors May Not Be Able To Enforce Their Civil Liabilities Against Us or Our Directors, Controlling Persons and Officers.

We are organized under the laws of Canada. All of our directors, controlling persons and officers are residents of Canada and all or a substantial portion of their assets and substantially all of our assets are located outside of the United States. As a result, it may be difficult for U.S. holders of our common shares to effect service of process on these persons within the United States or to realize in the United States upon judgments rendered against them. In addition, you should not assume that the courts of Canada (i) would enforce judgments of U.S. courts obtained in actions against us or such persons predicated upon the civil liability provisions of the U.S. federal securities laws or other laws of the United States, or (ii) would enforce, in original actions, liabilities against us or such persons predicated upon the U.S. federal securities laws or other laws of the United States.

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However, U.S. laws would generally be enforced by a Canadian court provided that those laws are not contrary to Canadian public policy, are not foreign penal laws or laws that deal with taxation or the taking of property by a foreign government and provided they are in compliance with applicable Canadian legislation regarding the limitation of actions. Also, a judgment obtained in a U.S. court would generally be recognized by a Canadian court except, for example:

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where the U.S. court where the judgment was rendered had no jurisdiction according to applicable Canadian law;

 

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the judgment was subject to ordinary remedy (appeal, judicial review and any other judicial proceeding which renders the judgment not final, or enforceable under the laws of the applicable state) or not final, conclusive or enforceable under the laws of the applicable state;

 

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the judgment was obtained by fraud or in any manner contrary to natural justice or rendered in contravention of fundamental principles of procedure;

 

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a dispute between the same parties, based on the same subject matter has given rise to a judgment rendered in a Canadian court or has been decided in a third country and the judgment meets the necessary conditions for recognition in a Canadian court;

 

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the outcome of the judgment of the U.S. court was inconsistent with Canadian public policy;

 

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the judgment enforces obligations arising from foreign penal laws or laws that deal with taxation or the taking of property by a foreign government; or

 

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there has not been compliance with applicable Canadian law dealing with the limitation of actions.

Our competitors have greater financial and technical measures and we may not be able to acquire additional attractive mineral properties on acceptable terms.

Significant and increasing competition exists for mineral opportunities in Canada and the United States. There are a number of large established mineral companies with substantial capabilities and greater financial and technical resources than us. We may be unable to acquire additional attractive mineral properties on terms we consider acceptable. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that our exploration programmes will yield any new reserves or result in any commercial mineral operations.

We face strong competition from larger oil and gas companies, which could harm our business and ability to operate profitably.

The exploration and production business is highly competitive. Many of our competitors have substantially larger financial resources, staffs and facilities. Our competitors in the United States include numerous major oil and gas exploration and production companies, especially major oil and gas companies such as BP Amoco, Exxon/Mobil, Texaco/Shell and Conoco/Phillips. These major oil and gas companies are often better positioned to obtain the rights to exploratory acreage for which we may compete. If we are unable to adequately address our competition, including, but not limited to, finding ways to secure profitable oil and gas producing properties, our ability to earn revenues will suffer.

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As a "foreign private issuer”, we are exempt from the Section 14 proxy rules and Section 16 of the Securities Act may result in shareholders having less complete and timely data.

The submission of proxy and annual meeting of shareholder information (prepared to Canadian standards) on Form 6-K may result in shareholders having less complete and timely data. The exemption from Section 16 rules regarding sales of common shares by insiders may result in shareholders having less data.

RISK FACTORS RELATED TO THE NATURAL RESOURCE INDUSTRY

Exploration and Development Risks.

There is no assurance given by the Company that our exploration and development programs and properties will result in the discovery, development or production of a commercially viable ore body. The business of exploration for minerals and mining involves a high degree of risk. Few properties that are explored are ultimately developed into producing mines. At present, none of the Registrant’s properties have defined ore bodies with reserves and resources, and the proposed exploration programs are an exploratory search for ore. There is no assurance that our mineral exploration and development activities will result in any discoveries of bodies of commercial ore. The probability of an individual prospect ever having “reserves” and being commercially viable is extremely remote, and, in all probability, our properties do not contain any reserves, and any funds spent on exploration will probably not be recovered. Unusual or unexpected geological structures or formations, fires, power outages, labour disruptions, floods, explosions, cave-ins, land slides and the inability to obtain suitable or adequate machinery, equipment or labour are other risks involved in the operation of mines and the conduct of exploration programs. We have relied and may continue to rely upon consultants and others for construction and operating expertise. The economics of developing gold and other mineral properties are affected by many factors including capital and operating costs, variations of the grade of ore mined, fluctuating mineral markets, costs of processing equipment and such other factors as government regulations, including regulations relating to royalties, allowable production, importing and exporting of minerals and environmental protection. Depending on the price of gold or other minerals produced, we may determine that it is impractical to commence or continue commercial production. Substantial expenditures are required to establish reserves through drilling, to develop metallurgical processes to extract metal from ore and to develop the mining and processing facilities and infrastructure at any site chosen for mining. No assurance can be given that funds required for development can be obtained on a timely basis. The marketability of any minerals acquired or discovered may be affected by numerous factors which are beyond our control and which cannot be accurately foreseen or predicted, such as market fluctuations, the global marketing conditions for precious and base metals, the proximity and capacity of milling facilities, mineral markets and processing equipment, and such other factors as government regulations, including regulations relating to royalties, allowable production, importing and exporting minerals and environmental protection.

Estimates of Mineral Deposits.

There is no assurance that any estimates of mineral deposits herein will not change. Although all figures with respect to the size and grade of mineralized deposits included herein have been carefully prepared by the Company, or, in some instances have been prepared, reviewed or verified by independent mining experts, these amounts are estimates only and no assurance can be given that any identified mineralized deposit will ever qualify as a commercially viable mineable ore body that can be legally and economically exploited.

Mineral Prices.

There is no assurance that mineral prices will not change. The mining industry is competitive and mineral prices fluctuate so that there is no assurance, even if commercial quantities of a mineral resource are discovered, that a profitable market will exist for the sale of same.

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Title Opinions.

The existence of title opinions should not be construed to suggest that we have good and marketable title to all of our properties. We follow the usual industry practice in obtaining title opinions with respect to our lands. No examination has been made of the ground to determine if any of our mineral claims have been staked or assessment work carried out.

Regulatory Approvals.

Our operations require the procurement of numerous permits and compliance with an extensive number of codes and regulations. Mining, exploration and exploitation permits are required. While we believe that all requirements in this regard have been met, failure to comply with regulatory requirements could result in permits being withdrawn or suspended. Further, changes in these regulations or in their application may adversely affect our operations.

Oil and gas price fluctuations in the market may harm results of our operations.

The results of our operations are highly dependent upon the prices received for our anticipated oil and natural gas production. As of the date of this 20-F, we do not own any interests in any properties which are producing more than minimal levels of oil or natural gas. Should we acquire an interest in an actual producing property, substantially all of our sales of oil and natural gas would likely be made in the spot market, or pursuant to contracts based on spot market prices, and not pursuant to long-term, fixed-price contracts. Accordingly, the prices we might receive for any eventual oil and natural gas production are dependent upon numerous factors beyond our control. These factors include the level of consumer product demand, governmental regulations and taxes, weather trends, the price and availability of alternative fuels, the level of foreign imports of oil and natural gas and the overall economic environment. Significant declines in prices for oil and natural gas could harm our financial condition, results of operations and quantities of reserves recoverable on an economic basis. Any significant decline in demand for or prices of oil or gas could harm our financial condition and results of operations.

Compliance with, or breach of, environmental laws can be costly and could limit our operations or reduce profitability causing investors to lose their investment.

Our operations are subject to numerous and frequently changing laws and regulations governing the discharge of materials into the environment or otherwise relating to environmental protection. We may now or in the future own or lease properties that have been used for the exploration and production of minerals and oil and gas and these properties and the wastes disposed on these properties may be subject to the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, the Federal Water Pollution Control Act and analogous state laws. Under such laws, we could be required to remove or remediate previously released wastes or property contamination. Laws and regulations protecting the environment have generally become more stringent and, may in some cases, impose “strict liability” for environmental damage. Strict liability means that we may be held liable for damage without regard to whether we were negligent or otherwise at fault. Environmental laws and regulations may expose us to liability for the conduct of or conditions caused by others or for acts that were in compliance with all applicable laws at the time they were performed. Failure to comply with these laws and regulations may result in the imposition of administrative, civil and criminal penalties.

Although we believe that any current operations are in substantial compliance with existing requirements of governmental bodies, our ability to conduct continued operations is subject to satisfying applicable regulatory and permitting controls. Our current permits and authorizations and ability to get future permits and authorizations, particularly in foreign countries, may be susceptible, on a going forward basis, to increased scrutiny, greater complexity resulting in increased costs, or delays in receiving appropriate authorizations. We are required to obtain an environmental permit or approval from Utah prior to conducting seismic operations, drilling a well or constructing a pipeline in that location.

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Compliance with these laws and regulations may increase our costs of operations, as well as further restrict our operations. If the costs of such compliance exceeds what we may have budgeted, our ability to earn revenues will be harmed.

Third Party Reliance.

Our rights to acquire interests in certain mineral properties have been granted by third parties who themselves hold only an option to acquire such properties. As a result, we may have no direct contractual relationship with the underlying property holder.

UNCERTAINTIES AND RISKS RELATING TO COMMON SHARES

There is only a limited public market for our common shares on the TSX Venture Exchange and that market is extremely volatile.

There is only a limited public market for our common shares on the TSX Venture Exchange, and there is a risk that that a broader or more active public trading market for our common shares will never develop or be sustained, or that current trading levels will not be sustained.

The market price for the common shares on the TSX Venture Exchange has been and we anticipate will continue to be extremely volatile and subject to significant price and volume fluctuations in response to a variety of external and internal factors. This is especially true with respect to emerging companies such as ours. Examples of external factors, which can generally be described as factors that are unrelated to the operating performance or financial condition of any particular company, include changes in interest rates and worldwide economic and market conditions, as well as changes in industry conditions, such as changes in oil and natural gas prices, oil and natural gas inventory levels, regulatory and environment rules, and announcements of technology innovations or new products by other companies. Examples of internal factors, which can generally be described as factors that are directly related to our consolidated financial condition or results of operations, would include release of reports by securities analysts and announcements we may make from time-to-time relative to our operating performance, drilling results, advances in technology or other business developments.

Because we have a limited operating history and no profits to date, the market price for the common shares is more volatile than that of a seasoned issuer. Changes in the market price of the common shares, for example, may have no connection with our operating results or prospects. No predictions or projections can be made as to what the prevailing market price for the common shares will be at any time, or as to what effect, if any, that the sale of shares or the availability of common shares for sale at any time will have on the prevailing market price.

You will be subject to the risks associated with penny stock classification which could affect the marketability of our equity securities and shareholders could find it difficult to sell their stock.

Our stock is subject to “penny stock” rules as defined in Securities and Exchange Act rule 3a51-1. The Commission has adopted rules that regulate broker-dealer practices in connection with transactions in penny stocks. Our common shares are subject to these penny stock rules. Transaction costs associated with purchases and sales of penny stocks are likely to be higher than those for other securities. Penny stocks generally are equity securities with a price of less than US $5.00 (other than securities registered on certain national securities exchanges or quoted on the NASDAQ system, provided that current price and volume information with respect to transactions in such securities is provided by the exchange or system).

The penny stock rules require a broker-dealer, prior to a transaction in a penny stock not otherwise exempt from the rules, to deliver a standardized risk disclosure document that provides information about penny stocks and the nature and level of risks in the penny stock market. The broker-dealer must also provide the

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customer with current bid and offer quotations for the penny stock, the compensation of the broker-dealer and its salesperson in the transaction, and monthly account statements showing the market value of each penny stock held in the customer’s account. The bid and offer quotations, and the broker-dealer and salesperson compensation information, must be given to the customer orally or in writing prior to effecting the transaction and must be given to the customer in writing before or with the customer’s confirmation.

In addition, the penny stock rules require that prior to a transaction in a penny stock not otherwise exempt from such rules, the broker-dealer must make a special written determination that the penny stock is a suitable investment for the purchaser and receive the purchaser’s written agreement to the transaction. These disclosure requirements may have the effect of reducing the level of trading activity in the secondary market for our equity securities in the United States and shareholders may find it more difficult to sell their shares.

A limited number of shareholders will collectively continue to own a majority of our common shares.

A limited number of shareholders will collectively continue to own a majority of our common shares after this offering and may act, or prevent corporate actions, to the detriment of other shareholders. Our principal shareholders, including entities affiliated with members of our management team, will own more than 21% of our outstanding common shares. Accordingly, these shareholders may, if they act together, exercise significant influence over all matters requiring shareholder approval, including the election of a majority of the directors and the determination of significant corporate actions after this offering. This concentration could also have the effect of delaying or preventing a change in control that could be otherwise beneficial to our shareholders.

You should not expect to receive dividends.

We have never paid any cash dividends on shares of our capital stock, and we do not anticipate that we will pay any dividends in the foreseeable future. Our current business plan is to retain any future earnings to finance the expansion of our business. Any future determination to pay cash dividends will be at the discretion of our board of directors, and will be dependent upon our consolidated financial condition, results of operations, capital requirements and other factors as our board of directors may deem relevant at that time.

Our right to issue additional capital stock at any time could have an adverse effect on your proportionate ownership and voting rights.

We are authorized under our Articles of Incorporation to issue 100,000,000 common shares. Subject to compliance with applicable corporate and securities laws, we may issue these shares under such circumstances and in such manner and at such times, prices, amounts and purposes as our board of directors may, in their discretion, determine to be necessary and appropriate. Your proportionate ownership and voting rights as a common shareholder could be adversely affected by the issuance of additional common shares, including a substantial dilution in your net tangible book value per share.

ITEM 4.        INFORMATION ON THE COMPANY

A.        HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE COMPANY

Teryl Resources Corp. (the “Issuer”) was incorporated on May 23, 1980, as Candy Mountain Gold Corporation under a perpetual charter pursuant to the Company Act (British Columbia) by the registration of its Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association. On January 20, 1984, a special resolution was passed changing its name to Teryl Resources Corp.

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On March 29, 2004, the new British Columbia Business Corporations Act (the "BCA") came into force in British Columbia and replaced the former Company Act (“Former Act”), which is the statute under which we were previously governed. Under the BCA, every company incorporated under the Company Act must complete a mandatory transition rollover under the BCA to substitute a Notice of Articles for its Memorandum within two years of March 29, 2004. The only information contained in the Notice of Articles is the authorized share structure of the company, the name of the company, the address of the registered and records office of the company, and the names and addresses of the directors of the company. We filed a transition application with the Registrar of Companies British Columbia to transition to the BCA and completed the Transition on September 13, 2004.

As a pre-existing Corporation under the Company Act, we were subject to provisions contained in the BCA known as the “Pre-Existing Company Provisions”. The Pre-Existing Company Provisions are statutory provisions intended to preserve certain provisions of the Company Act to companies incorporated under the Company Act. Under the BCA, we have the option to replace the Pre-Existing Company Provisions with a new form of Articles to take advantage of the benefits of the BCBCA, provided the shareholders approve the change.

Accordingly, at the annual meeting held on November 15, 2004, our shareholders approved a special resolution to alter the Notice of Articles to remove the application of the Pre-Existing Company Provisions.

In addition to deleting the Pre-Existing Company Provisions, the Board of Directors were also of the view that it would be in our best interest to adopt a new set of Articles to replace our Articles. The new Articles will reflect the flexibility and efficiency permitted under the BCA, while maintaining a significant portion of the existing governing provisions. As a result, most of the changes in the new Articles are minor in nature, and are not substantive changes. On November 15, 2004, the shareholders also approved a special resolution to replace the articles of the Company.

The Company’s corporate offices and its registered and records offices are located at Suite 240 - 11780 Hammersmith Way, Richmond, BC V7A 5E9, Canada. Our telephone number is 604-278-5996.

Since our inception and during the three fiscal years ending in May 2006, our principal business has been the acquisition, exploration and development of natural resource properties, and the acquisition, drilling and development of oil and gas property interests. We currently have mineral property interests in Alaska, and Arizona. All of our mineral properties are in the exploration stage.

We are currently in the exploration stage and equity financing is required to continue exploration work on our mineral claims and oil and gas interests. As a result of the uncertainty that is typical in an explorative company there is doubt about our ability to continue as going concern as ultimate success will be based on securing adequate equity financing and/or the determination of economically recoverable mineral reserves on its mineral property claims or recoveries on our oil and gas interests.

B.        BUSINESS OVERVIEW

Nature of the Company’s Operations

Cautionary Note to U.S. Investors concerning estimates of Inferred Resources

This section uses the term “inferred resources.” We advise U.S. investors that while this term is recognized and required by Canadian regulations, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission does not recognize it. “Inferred resources” have a great amount of uncertainty as to their existence, and great uncertainty as to their economic and legal feasibility. It cannot be assumed that all or any part of an Inferred Mineral Resource will ever be upgraded to a higher category. Under Canadian rules, estimates of Inferred Mineral Resources may not form the basis of feasibility or prefeasibility studies, except in rare cases. U.S. investors are cautioned not to assume that part or all of an inferred resource exists, or is economically or legally mineable.

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Mineral Properties

We are an exploration stage company and there is no assurance that a commercially viable mineral deposit exists on any of our properties. Further exploration will be required before a final evaluation as to the economic and legal feasibility is determined.

If we complete our current exploration programs and if we are successful in identifying a mineral deposit, we will have to spend substantial funds on further drilling and engineering studies before we will know if we have a commercially viable mineral deposit or reserve on any of our properties.

We will seek equity financing to provide working capital and to meet exploration commitments on all our properties. During the fiscal year ended May 31, 2006 we raised $666,996 through the sale of equity securities. We raised $ 926,213 through the sale of equity securities during the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005.

Gil Mineral Claims

The Gil Gold Project is located in the Fairbanks Mining District, Alaska. The Issuer owns a 20% interest in the Gil Mineral Claims with its joint venture partner, Kinross Gold Corporation (“Kinross”) with Kinross owning the other 80%. The Gil claims are adjacent to the producing Fort Knox mine which is owned by Kinross, approximately five miles east of Kinross’ Fort Knox deposit, Alaska’s largest producing open-pit gold mine with an average gold grade of just under 0.03 ounces of gold per ton (see Item 4.D. for complete details of exploration and development of this property).

West Ridge Claims

The West Ridge Prospect is north of Fairbanks, Alaska, a distance of 22 miles by road. It lies immediately north of the Fox Creek Property. The West Ridge property adjoins Kinross Gold Corp.’s True North gold deposit and lies approximately eight miles northwest of the producing Fort Knox gold mine. Fort Knox currently produces over 400,000 ounces of gold annually. The West Ridge property consists of 48 state of Alaska mining claims covering 1750.5 acres, 440 acres of leased Mental Health Trust (MHT) land and 75 acres of patented mining claims under lease purchase option in the Livengood quadrangle Township 2 North, Range 1 East (Figure 2). The state claims are registered with the Alaska Division of Mining, Land, and Water Management with Teryl Resources Corp. as the 100% owner.

Black Dome

In July, 2003 we announced we had successfully negotiated a lease of 440 acres in the Fairbanks Mining District, Alaska from the State of Alaska, Mental Health Trust Land Office (TLO). The trust land is adjacent to the western portion of the Company’s 100% owned West Ridge claims and 40 acres is strategically located within the West Ridge claims, which is on the edge of a geochemical gold anomaly. The gold anomaly may possibly be on trend with the 4000-foot western gold anomaly, which is geochemically similar to the gold mineralization at the True North deposit, according to AMAX Gold’s report completed in 1999. The True North gold deposit was purchased by Kinross Gold for CAD$94 million in shares and cash from La Teko Resources and Newmont Mining Corporation. An exploration work program will be submitted for approval immediately to the Trust Land Office to locate drill targets on the newly acquired lease.

In consideration for the State of Alaska lease, a production royalty on the lease land is granted to the State of Alaska, Trust Land Office (TLO) as follows:

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Price of Gold (per ounce) Production Royalty
Below $300.00 2.5%
$300.01 - $350.00 3.0%
$350.01 - $400.00 3.5%
$400.01 - $450.00 4.0%
$450.01 - $500.00 4.5%
Above $500.00 5.0%

Additionally, Teryl will grant a 1% Net Smelter Return (NSR) on its 100% owned West Ridge property with first refusal to purchase the 1% NSR in the event that TLO decides to sell.

An exploration program started in August 2003 and was conducted by the Company’s geological consultants, Avalon Development Corp., who are focused on finding another True North-type gold discovery on the Black Dome area of Teryl’s recently acquired trust land. The Eldorado Fault cuts through the Black Dome, the same fault that bounds Kinross Gold’s True North gold deposit, approximately three miles northeast.

Avalon field crews sampled a newly discovered old trench at Black Dome, which contains rubble composed of black carbonaceous schist cut by numerous quartz-carbonate veinlets. Most of the carbonate has been altered to a soft brown-red oxide, similar to oxide ore at the True North. The trench will be cleared of debris to sample bedrock and determine gold values to locate drill targets.

Fish Creek Claims

The Fish Creek gold claims lie adjacent to the Gil Claims.

On March 5, 2002, the Company and Linux Gold Corp. entered into an agreement whereby we may earn up to a 50% interest in the Fish Creek mineral claims located in the Fairbanks district of Alaska, USA, by expending $550,750 ($500,000 US) within three years and issuing 200,000 common shares (issued December 16, 2002 at $0.08 per share). Linux will have a 5% net royalty interest until we pay $2,203,000 ($2,000,000 US). The agreement was extended to expire on March 5, 2007, subject to TSX approval. The Company authorized 100,000 common shares for issuance to Linux as consideration for the extension. TSX approval of the extension is dependent upon receipt of approval of disinterested shareholders. Approval will be sought at the Annual General Meeting scheduled for November 14, 2006.

The Fish Creek project is located 25 miles north of Fairbanks in a road accessible mining district with excellent land status and infrastructure. The project is located within host rocks that contain commercially viable mineralization elsewhere in the Fairbanks Mining District and is located on streams that were mined extensively for alluvial gold in the past both upstream and downstream of the Fish Creek project. Limited exploration conducted between 1992 and 2003 did not reveal significant bedrock exposures of mineralization however a significant lode gold deposit has been outlined immediately adjacent to the Fish Creek property on the south (the Gil deposit) and the Fort Knox gold mine, a large-scale open pit gold mine 3 miles upstream from the Fish Creek property has been in operation since 1996. Wide-spaced placer gold drilling on a small area of the property conducted in 2003 did not encounter significant placer gold mineralization however, more extensive and closer spaced placer gold drilling conducted in 2004 indicated the presence of significant concentrations of placer gold on the claims.

Two independent technical consultants are utilized by the Company for work on the Fish Creek property. Evaluations for alluvial (placer) gold are managed by Jeff Keener of NordWand Enterprize, P.O. Box 82811, Fairbanks, Alaska, 99708, USA. Mr. Keener is a graduate of the University of Alaska, with a B.S. degree in Geology (1991). Mr. Keener is a member of the Alaska Miners Association and has applied for membership with the American Institute of Professional Geologists. From 1986 to the present he has been actively employed in various capacities in the mining industry in numerous locations in Alaska, Nevada, Arizona, and California.

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For lode gold exploration we utilize Avalon Development Corp. of Fairbanks, Alaska, to conduct any proposed exploration work on the Fish Creek Property. Mr. Curt Freeman is the President of Avalon Development Corporation, P.O. Box 80268, Fairbanks, Alaska, 99708, USA. Mr. Freeman is a graduate of the College of Wooster, Ohio, with a B.A. degree in Geology (1978), and a graduate of the University of Alaska with an M.S. degree in Economic Geology (1980). Mr. Freeman is a licensed geologist in Alaska (AA#159) and is a member of the American Institute of Professional Geologists (CPG#6901), the Society of Economic Geologists, the Geological Society of Nevada, the Alaska Miners Assoc. and the Prospectors and Developers Assoc. of Canada. From 1980 to the present, he has been actively employed in various capacities in the mining industry in numerous locations in North America, Central America, South America, New Zealand and Africa.

The following map shows the location of and access to our property.

A ground magnetic survey was completed on the Fish Creek property on November 20, 2003 on the right limit (southeast) side of Fish Creek Valley, approximately 600 – 700 feet down-valley from the toe of the Fort Knox mine fresh water supply dam. This program was an orientation survey to test the right limit bench of Fish Creek for a suspected buried placer gold-bearing channel. High grade gold placer accumulations were encountered in a narrow right-limit channel during excavation of the Fort Knox mine fresh water dam site but their extent and grade downstream on the Fish Creek property has never been explored. Magnetic surveys of this type have been successful in locating elevated magnetic field intensities associated with the heavy, magnetic mineral concentrations often associated with placer gold accumulations. The field survey consisted of two lines with 200-foot line spacing and 10-foot station spacing, which appears to provide sufficient detail to extrapolate magnetic data between lines. Total field and vertical gradient magnetic data have a good correlation, suggestive of adequate base station data. Signatures from the two traverses are interpreted to cross five features, of which three have the possibility of being associated with alluvial concentrations of various characteristics.

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The two anomalies recommended for physical testing are those indicative of alluvial heavy magnetic mineral concentration encountered on the west side of Lines 100N and 300N, just east of Fish Creek, and the strong anomaly on the eastern extent of Line 300N. Depth estimates for these targets, are generally 8 to 12 feet. A program of additional ground magnetics followed by trenching and/or large-diameter auger drilling to evaluate the two most promising alluvial gold targets was recommended for early 2004.

In March, 2003 our geologist consultant, Avalon Development Corp., completed the Fish Creek reverse circulation drilling program. A total of five holes were drilled to test several magnetic anomalies for potential placer and lode gold mineralization. However, assays on the first phase of drilling on the Fish Creek claims, Alaska, have not revealed economic values on four out of the five hole reverse drilling program. Hole number five, however, intercepted 5 feet of 2.33 PPM gold between 45 – 50 feet from surface. The five-hole reverse circulation drill program was completed to test several magnetic anomalies for placer and lode gold values.

A ground magnetic survey was completed on the Fish Creek property on November 20, 2003 on the right limit (east) side of Fish Creek Valley, approximately 600 – 700 feet down-valley from the toe of the Fort Knox mine fresh water supply dam. Extremely high grade gold placer accumulations were encountered in a narrow right-limit channel during excavation of the Fort Knox mine fresh water dam site but their extent and grade downstream on the Fish Creek property has never been explored. A two-person crew, consisting of James Munsell, from Avalon Development and equipment operator, Kerry Adler from On-Line Exploration Services, Inc. conducted the survey. This was an orientation survey to test the right limit bench for a suspected buried placer gold-bearing channel east of Fish Creek. Surveys of this type have been successful in locating elevated magnetic field intensities associated with the heavy, magnetic mineral concentrations often associated with placer gold accumulations.

The field survey consisted of two lines with 200-foot line spacing and 10-foot station spacing, which appears to provide sufficient detail to extrapolate magnetic data between lines. Total field and vertical gradient magnetic data have a good correlation, suggestive of adequate base station data. Signatures from the two traverses are interpreted to cross five features, of which three have the possibility of being associated with alluvial concentrations of various characteristics.

The two anomalies recommended for physical testing are those indicative of alluvial heavy magnetic mineral concentration encountered on the west side of Lines 100N and 300N, just east of Fish Creek, and the strong anomaly on the eastern extent of Line 300N. Depth estimates for these targets, are generally 8 to 12 feet.

In May 2003, we received reports that assays on the first phase of drilling on the Fish Creek claims, Alaska, have not revealed economic values on four out of the five hole reverse drilling program. Hole number five, however, intercepted 5 feet of 2.33 PPM gold between 45 – 50 feet from surface. The five-hole reverse circulation drill program was completed to test several magnetic anomalies for placer and lode gold values.

In July, 2004, the drilling permit was approved by the State of Alaska exploration division to drill up to 25 vertical eight inch diameter holes, on two lines, to explore the potential Fish Creek placer gold paystreak. Each line will be composed of 10 to 15 drill holes spaced 50 to 200 feet apart, and from 45 to 75 feet deep, to test two anomalies located last year by a magnetic survey. The survey located two anomalies indicative of a potential buried placer gold bearing channel, extremely high-grade placer gold was encountered during the excavation of the Fort Knox mine fresh water dam, immediately upstream of the Fish Creek property.

In May, 2004 we commenced a closely spaced magnetic survey over the previous magnetic targets that were discovered in 2003 . The magnetic survey located two anomalies indicative of a potential buried placer gold bearing channel.

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In July 2004 a total of 20 soil samples were collected near Odden Creek with a hand held power auger to depths from 2 to 7.5 feet. These holes were placed on a grid pattern with hole spacings of 200 feet to test for metal anomalies and to examine bedrock chips in proximity to intrusive colluvium found on the surface. Several groupings of holes were weakly anomalous in gold pathfinder elements and identified as prospective lode gold targets. Total cost of this program was $1,800.

In September and October 2004 a 22 hole (1,506 feet) reverse circulation drilling program was completed on the property. Twenty holes were drilled on two widely spaced lines to test the placer gold potential while two deeper holes were drilled to test an intrusive-related lode gold target (Keener, 2005b). Six of the twenty placer holes returned intervals with gold values in excess of 0.01 ounces of gold per cubic yard. Values ranged from 0.0108 to 0.0629 ounces per cubic yard over widths of 5 to 8 feet. These values suggest potential for commercially viable alluvial gold resources may exist on the Fish Creek project. Total cost of the combined placer and lode drilling program was approximately $54,000.

After completing the placer drilling, two lode gold exploration holes totaling 405 feet of drilling were completed on the south side of Odden Creek. Samples were collected every five feet, but did not result in any significant concentrations of metals or other pathfinder elements. The best values for gold were 0.038 ppm and 0.040 ppm, found in T04RC01 at 195 feet and 200 feet, respectively.

In December 2004, a total of twenty 8-inch diameter RC placer holes – from 40 to 70 feet deep -- were completed and two 5.5 -inch diameter RC lode holes 200 and 205 feet deep were drilled to test an intrusive target. Alluvial placer gravels were generally sampled on intervals of five feet and concentrated with a Denver Goldsaver. Drill cuttings were directed from the drill string through the swivel-head into the Goldsaver via slurry hose for immediate concentration. Placer concentrates were carefully panned and all visible gold particles were extracted, dried, weighed, and saved for further analysis. Other heavy minerals found in each sample interval were also dried, weighed and saved for later analysis. The drill-concentrator system employed in this program does not permit accurate measurements of the sample volumes, therefore, sample grades are derived by dividing the recovered mass of placer gold by the volume of an ideal cylinder. Sample grades also incorporate a purity of 900 fine, which is based on historical production documented at placer mines upstream from the 2004 drilling program.

Auger drilling near Odden Creek, conducted on July 13, 2004 to test “C” soil geochemistry, resulted in several weak metal anomalies. One hole (T04A001) which penetrated the intrusive target and several surrounding holes (T04A002, -003, &-004) were elevated in silver, lead, arsenic and bismuth. Another hole (T04A010) was anomalous in zinc, arsenic, copper, iron, sulphur and tungsten, suggesting a potential sulphide deposit.

For 2005, to elevate the upper part of the paystreak, the partners plan to drill four lines of closely spaced holes 50 to 100 feet apart on lines spaced 500 to 1,000 feet apart. The lower part of the paystreak can be developed to measured resource status by drilling two lines of closely spaced holes on lines spaced 2,000 feet apart. After the results of the proposed drilling are known a preliminary feasibility study may be performed to address economic and mining factors that will affect the economic extraction of placer gold.

Neither of the two lode holes drilled in 2004 on Odden Creek intercepted economic grades of gold. Hole T04RC01 terminated in mineralized, quartz-veined, graphitic schist assaying small amounts of gold.

In August 2005, we announced that an extensive auger drilling program has commenced on the All Gold Creek geophysical anomaly, on the Fish Creek property. The auger track rig can drill up to a depth of 80’, several auger drill holes are planned to test the aerial geophysical anomaly and the coincident gravity low target for future R/C drilling, based on positive results for the auger drilling program.

In October 2006, six new geophysical targets were located on the Fish Creek property. An interpretive report titled “Proposed Drill Sites, Fish Creek Gold Property, Fairbanks Mining District, Alaska.” Fugro Airborne Survey, Inc., under contract to Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc./Kinross Gold, initiated an HEM Airborne geophysical area and identified six main targets on the Fish Creek property.

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The following interpreted targets are based on linear resistivity features inferring regional structural trends. Conductive gradients at depth or along a structure suggest areas of higher fracture density. The high magnetic anomalies with good depth extent are interpreted as intrusives and the linear magnetic highs may be calc-silicates.

Proposed Drill Site 01: Interpreted Target – Conductive Shear / High Fracture Density
Proposed Drill Site 02: Interpreted Target – Conductive Shear / High Fracture Density
Proposed Drill Site 03: Interpreted Target – Calc-silicate / High Fracture Density
Proposed Drill Site 04: Interpreted Target – Calc-silicate / High Fracture Density
Proposed Drill Site 05: Interpreted Target – Intrusive Contact / High Fracture Density
Proposed Drill Site 06: Interpreted Target – Manto Type Magnetic Anomaly

Together with Linux Gold Corp., we plan to implement an exploration program this winter (2006) on the Fish Creek gold property. Linux Gold Corp. has received permits to conduct exploration drilling on the Fish Creek property.

There currently are no resources or reserves on the Fish Creek property that comply with the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy (CIM) Standards on Mineral Resources and Reserves Definitions and Guidelines adopted by CIM Council on August 20, 2000. While encouraging in its results, the drill hole density of the 2004 placer drilling campaign at Fish Creek was not sufficient to allow estimation of CIM compatible resources or reserves

Additional work on the Fish Creek property will be based on results from the previous drilling programs. Each successive phase of exploration is dependent on generation of encouraging results from the previous programs and the increasing potential for delineation of commercially viable resources on the project. A two phase program has been recommended as follows:

1.

       Infill Reverse Circulation Drilling: Infill drilling using large diameter reverse circulation methods is warranted on the property to better define the placer gold mineralization outlined in 2004. Previous experience by Keener and other operators within the Fish Creek drainage has shown that drilling is an effective method of sampling and valuating the placer deposit and provides predictable estimates of subsequent production. Previous work suggests that drilling to obtain samples with volumes of 0.05 cubic yards each are adequate to estimate the volume and value of the placer gold deposit. Sampling procedures similar to those utilized in 2004 should be followed except that the volume of each sample should be measured to provide a more accurate estimate of the gold grades and to evaluate the recovery of the drilling system. Additionally, all holes should be continued into bedrock for at least 25 feet to test for the presence of lode gold mineralization. The primary goal of this program would be to enable industry acceptable mineral resources to be calculated between the two lines of drilling completed in 2004. A secondary goal would be to determine if significant lode gold mineralization exists in the area drilled. Recommended future work on the Fish Creek property should include drilling 20 reverse circulation drill holes (8” diameter) for a total of 1,600 feet of drilling. Construction of an all-weather creek crossing for off-road vehicles, near the mouth of Odden Creek, will facilitate this work. The estimated cost of such work is $50,000. Fieldwork will take about one to two weeks, whereas sample analysis and reporting will take an additional two to four weeks.

   
2.

       Step-out Reverse Circulation Drilling: if results of the phase 1 infill drilling are encouraging, step-out drilling using large diameter reverse circulation methods is warranted on the property to expand on the placer gold mineralization outlined in 2004. Sampling procedures similar to those utilized in 2004 should be followed except that the volume of each sample should be measured to provide a more accurate estimate of the gold grades and to evaluate the

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recovery of the drilling system. Additionally, all holes should be continued into bedrock for at least 25 feet to test for the presence of lode gold mineralization. The primary goal of this program would be to enable industry compliant mineral resources to be calculated for areas of the property that lie up and downstream from the 2004 drill lines. A secondary goal would be to determine if significant lode gold mineralization exists in the area drilled. Recommended future work on the Fish Creek property should include drilling 55 reverse circulation drill holes (8” diameter) for a total of 4,400 feet of drilling. Construction of an all-weather creek crossing for off-road vehicles, near the mouth of Odden Creek, will facilitate this work. The estimated cost of such work is $150,000. Fieldwork will take about two to three weeks, whereas sample analysis and reporting will take an additional four to six weeks.

Fox Creek

On June 23, 2004, the Company entered into a mineral property lease to develop the property known as the Upper Fox Creek mining lease. The Fox Creek Claims consist of eight contiguous unpatented state of Alaska mining claims, which are located 3 miles north of Fox, Alaska. These claims are adjacent to the Company’s 100% owned West Ridge property to the northwest. Teryl Resources Corp. recently completed a drill program on the West Ridge Claims. Significant gold intervals were found in Hole #4, which returned 35 feet grading 1.68 grams of gold per tonne (0.049 opt) including a 20 foot section that returned 2.2 grams gold per tonne (0.064 opt).

Regarding the Fox Creek Claims, one reverse circulation drill hole was drilled by Cyprus-Amax in 1995 to a depth of 255 feet along the schist-granite contact. A 30 foot zone from 65 to 95 feet averaged 0.03 opt AU (gold) and was associated with elevated molybdenum and high arsenic values. The bedrock geology exposed in outcrop and placer mining cuts reveal a gold mineralization system that shares characteristics with other gold mines in the Fairbanks Mining District, according to a brief report from Arne Bakke, Geologist, located in Fairbanks, Alaska. Teryl Resources Corp. paid US$10,000 upon signing the agreement, and the same is due on each anniversary date. The owner retains a three percent net smelter return. Teryl Resources Corp. has an option to purchase the three percent net smelter return for US$1,000,000 prior to the date of production, or US$1,500,000 after the production date.

In October, 2004, two grab samples taken from the intrusive contact at the Fox Creek claims returned values of 197 and 1,360 ppb (1.36 grams per tonne) gold. These samples are only 450 feet south of the West Ridge property, and a quarter of a mile from the recently reported hot gold samples on the West Ridge. A $20,000 auger drilling program to sample the new gold zone commenced between the West Ridge property, and the potential Fox Creek intrusive discovery.

In June 2004 a significant drill intersection returned 35 feet grading 1.68 grams per ton gold (0.049 opt), including a 20 foot section that returned 2.2 grams gold per ton (0.064 opt). One reverse circulation drill hole was drilled by Cyprus-Amax in 1995 to a depth of 255 feet along the schist-granite contact. A 30 foot zone from 65 to 95 feet averaged 0.03 opt AU (gold) and was associated with elevated molybdenum and high arsenic values.

In December, 2004, we announced initial drill results from the 2004 exploration drilling at the Fox Creek prospect in the Fairbanks District, Alaska. Hole FC04-01 was terminated at 287 feet after passing through approximately 50 feet of sulfide-bearing granite from surface to 50 feet. Sulfides observed include pyrite and molybdenite. The hole then passed into oxidized quartzite and quartz mica schist from 50 feet to termination depth. Assays from this hole returned gold (values up to 5 feet grading 216 ppb) but did contain anomalous arsenic maximum value of 785 ppm and sporadic anomalous molybdenum (maximum value of 79 ppm) and tungsten (maximum value 2,840 ppm). The highest tungsten and molybdenum values came from the bottom 50 feet of the hole suggesting possible intrusive-related mineralization at depth nearby.

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Hole FC04-02 was collared 20 feet northwest of hole FC04-01 and was directed to the northwest to test for subsurface extensions of granitic rocks mapped at surface in this part of the claim block. The hole encountered variably oxidized quartzite and quartz mica schist from surface to approximately 230 feet and then passed into a mixed zone of hornfelsed sediments and granitic intrusives. The hole bottomed at 300 feet in hornfelsed sediments. Significant gold mineralization was encountered in two five-foot intervals: 1,300 ppb gold from 30 to 35 feet and 2,500 ppb gold from 180 to 185 feet. Both gold-bearing intervals were hosted in altered metasediments containing minor quartz veinlets. Elevated gold values were associated with anomalous arsenic (to 5,700 ppm), molybdenum (maximum value of 82 ppm) and tungsten (maximum value 40 ppm).

Combined with soil sampling results from the adjacent West Ridge property, the Phase 1 Fox Creek drilling results suggest the presence of intrusive related and/or intrusive hosted gold mineralization on the Fox Creek property. Additional soil auger sampling and possible ground geophysics are being planned prior to additional drilling in 2005.

All geochemical samples were analyzed by ALS Chemex for gold via fire assay techniques plus a multi-element suite via ICP methods with four-acid digestion. Blanks submitted with drill samples suggest no unusual or spurious geochemical results.

Further to the mineral property lease entered into in June 2004, the Company made the first US$10,000 payment but did not make the 2005 year payment and the lease was cancelled. During the November 2005 quarter $13,283 in property costs and $34,769 in exploration costs were written off.

Gold Hill Claims

On June 10, 2006, the Company and Frederic & John Rothermel (the Vendors) entered into an agreement whereby the Company would purchase a 100% interest in the Gold Hill Patented Claim Group consisting of seven patented claim blocks on 248 acres located in the Warren Mining District, Cochise County, Arizona, USA, subject to a 10% Net Profits Royalty to the vendors, for the following considerations:

a)

$5,508 ($5,000 US) to complete a due diligence within 90 days.

b)

$11,015 ($10,000 US) upon completion of the due diligence and $11,015 ($10,000 US) per year thereafter.

c)

complete a $55,075 ($50,000 US) first phase exploration program conducted by the Vendors.

d)

$275,375 ($250,000 US) per year upon commencement of production.

On August 1, 2006 the Company announced that six additional unpatented lode mining claims have been officially filed with the Arizona State office of the Bureau of Land Management on behalf of the Company.

On October 16, 2006, we announced that we had exercised our option and have a 10 year option to purchase up to a 10% net profit interest from the Vendors for US$1.5 million per 5% net profit interest, therefore, having an option on a 100% interest in the Bisbee, Arizona patented claims.

The Gold Hill Project is located approximately 4.5 miles southeast of Bisbee Arizona in the Warren Mining District of Cochise County (Township 23 South, Range 25 East sections 25 30, 31, and 32). The project area has a history of placer and lode mine production and is 4 miles from the Phelps Dodge Corporation’s Lavender Pit, which produced 8 billion pounds of copper and 2.7 million ounces of gold. The Gold Hill Project consists of fourteen patented claims comprising over 250 acres with an additional 7 claims being added.

The principle gold target in the exploration area is the Gold Hill Fault. This structure has been traced for two miles and has several adits and many test pits located along its course. The secondary target is the Glance Conglomerate located to the south of the Gold Hill Fault. In this area, the Glance Conglomerate is reported to have micron sized gold associated with copper in fine quartz-filled fractures. An initial examination of the property has been performed by Teryl Resources which consisted of a general reconnaissance of the area and the collection of 17 rock samples.

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Assay results showed trace amounts of gold in quartz veins located within the Morita Quartzite east of the Paris Mine. Higher gold assay results of 122 ppb Au and 4,590 ppb Au were generated from rocks taken from the Paris Mine dump. Gold values from quartz veins in outcrops and test pits between the Paris mine and the El Paso Mine ranged from 3 ppb Au to 635 ppb Au. Samples from the vicinity of the El Paso adit returned assay values of 2 ppb, 9 ppb and 149 ppb Au. All rock and soil samples were analyzed at Alaska Assay Labs.

Field work in the Emerald & Saint Elmo claims tested gold values within the conglomerate ranged from 19 ppb Au to 1,858 ppb Au while copper assays ranged from 520 ppm to 13,820 ppm. Additional work is needed to determine the extent of gold and copper mineralization in this area.

Oil and Gas Properties

Jancik, C-S and Herrmann Wells, Fayette County, Texas
The Company owns 6.5% working interest (4.680% net revenue interest) in the Peters No. 1 Well, in Fayette County, Texas, and a 7.5% working interest (5.79375% net revenue interest) in each of the C-S #1, Jancik #2 and Herrmann #4 wells, located in Burleson County, Texas.

Gas Wells, Knox County, Kentucky
On May 18, 2006, the Company entered into an agreement with IAS Communications, Inc. to purchase a 40% interest (subject to 40% net revenue interests to others) and drill up to 24 wells in the Ken Lee #1 natural gas well, located in Knox County, Kentucky, USA, for $103,045 ($92,500 US). The Company will earn a 40% interest in each well drilled by financing 50% of the total cost of drilling each well subject to a 12.5% revenue interest to the landowner and a 27.5% interest to Energy Source, Inc., the lessee and operator of the wells.

On June 6, 2006 the Company announced that the Ken Lee#1 well had been successfully completed as a commercial gas well. On July 6, 2006 the Company announced that drilling had commenced on the Elvis Farris #2 well and has been reported to be in production.

Description of the Markets in Which the Company Competes

This is no longer applicable due to the discontinuance of the business operations of our wholly-owned subsidiary.

Competition

Significant and increasing competition exists for the limited number of gold acquisition opportunities available in North, South and Central America and elsewhere in the world. As a result of this competition, some of which is with large established mining companies which have greater financial and technical resources than the Registrant, the Registrant may be unable to acquire additional attractive gold mining properties on terms it considers acceptable. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the Registrant’s exploration and acquisition programs will yield any new reserves or result in any commercial mining operation.

Oil and gas exploration and acquisition of undeveloped properties is a highly competitive and speculative business. We compete with a number of other companies, including major oil companies and other independent operators which are more experienced and which have greater financial resources. Such companies may be able to pay more for prospective oil and gas properties. Additionally, such companies may be able to evaluate, bid for and purchase a greater number of properties and prospects than our financial and human resources permit. We do not hold a significant competitive position in the oil and gas industry.

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Seasonality

We can only carry out exploration when weather is favourable. Typically, we cannot carry out any work during the months of November to March on our mineral properties.

Availability of Raw Materials

Not applicable.

Marketing Strategy

We do not have any plans for a marketing strategy at this time.

Dependency upon Patents/Licenses/Contracts/Processes

Not applicable. We do not have any material agreements upon which we are dependent.

Material Effects of Government Regulation

Exploration and development activities require permits from various foreign, federal, state and local governmental authorities. To the best of our knowledge, we are operating in compliance with all applicable environmental regulations.

Mineral Exploration

Exploration and development activities, require permits from various foreign, federal, state and local governmental authorities. To the best of our knowledge, we are operating in compliance with all applicable environmental regulations.

Our current and anticipated future operations, including further exploration activities, require permits from various state and other governmental. Such operations are subject to various laws governing land use, the protection of the environment, production, exports, taxes, labor standards, occupational health, waste disposal, toxic substances, well safety and other matters. Unfavorable amendments to current laws, regulations and permits governing operations and activities of oil and gas and resource exploration companies, or more stringent implementation thereof, could have a materially adverse impact on us and cause increases in capital expenditures which could result in our ceasing operations. We have had no material costs related to compliance and/or permits in recent years, and anticipate no material costs in the next year.

Oil and Gas Exploration

Our oil and gas operations are or will be subject to various types of regulation at the federal, state and local levels. Such regulation includes requiring permits for the drilling of wells; maintaining bonding requirements in order to drill or operate wells; implementing spill prevention plans; submitting notification and receiving permits relating to the presence, use and release of certain materials incidental to oil and gas operations; and regulating the location of wells, the method of drilling and casing wells, the use, transportation, storage and disposal of fluids and materials used in connection with drilling and production activities, surface usage and the restoration of properties upon which wells have been drilled, the plugging and abandoning of wells and the transporting of production. Our operations are or will be also subject to various conservation matters, including the regulation of the size of drilling and spacing units or pro-ration units, the number of wells which may be drilled in a unit, and the unitization or pooling of oil and gas properties.

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In this regard, some states allow the forced pooling or integration of tracts to facilitate exploration while other states rely on voluntary pooling of lands and leases, which may make it more difficult to develop oil and gas properties. In addition, state conservation laws establish maximum rates of production from oil and gas wells, generally limit the venting or flaring of gas, and impose certain requirements regarding the ratable purchase of production. The effect of these regulations is to limit the amounts of oil and gas we may be able to produce from our wells and to limit the number of wells or the locations at which we may be able to drill.

Our business is affected by numerous laws and regulations, including energy, environmental, conservation, tax and other laws and regulations relating to the oil and gas industry.

Failure to comply with any laws and regulations may result in the assessment of administrative, civil and criminal penalties, the imposition of injunctive relief or both. Moreover, changes in any of these laws and regulations could have a material adverse effect on business. In view of the many uncertainties with respect to current and future laws and regulations, including their applicability to us, we cannot predict the overall effect of such laws and regulations on our future operations.

We believe that our operations comply in all material respects with applicable laws and regulations and that the existence and enforcement of such laws and regulations have no more restrictive an effect on our operations than on other similar companies in the energy industry. We do not anticipate any material capital expenditures to comply with federal and state environmental requirements.

C.        ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

Teryl, Inc. was incorporated on November 17, 1988, in the State of Delaware and registered to do business in the USA, to hold and operate the Alaska mineral property interests and Texas oil and gas well interests. Teryl Resources Corp. owns 6,500,100 shares of Teryl, Inc., which is 100% of the issued shares at the date of filing this 20-F.

For a list of our significant subsidiaries, see “Item 10 – Additional Information – Subsidiary Information”.

D.        PROPERTY, PLANTS AND EQUIPMENT

Our properties are in the exploration stage and a substantial amount of capital will have to be spent on each property before we will know if they contain commercially viable mineral deposits. Our material properties are located in Alaska and Arizona. Our properties are without known reserves and the work being done by us is exploratory in nature.

Our executive offices are located in rented premises in a commercial business park located in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada, a suburb of Vancouver. The space is shared with several other companies which share common management. The monthly rent for its portion of this 2,200 square foot space is $1,014.00. We have occupied these facilities since November 1, 2006. These facilities are believed to be adequate for meeting our needs for the immediate future. If required in the future, we do not anticipate that we will have any difficulty in obtaining additional space at favorable rates. There are no current plans to purchase or otherwise acquire any properties in the near future.

Mineral Properties

GIL PROPERTY

Project Description and Location

The Issuer owns a 20% interest in the Gil Mineral Claims, which consist of 237 unpatented contiguous state mineral claims encompassing slightly less than 3,836.4 hectares located 32 kilometers northeast of Fairbanks, Alaska. Kinross Gold Corporation (“Kinross”) owns the other 80% of the claims and acts as operator of the project.

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Kinross and the Issuer each contribute to annual exploration costs on an 80:20 ratio with net profits distributed in that same proportion in the event of production. The Issuer may opt to reduce its interest in the Gil Mineral Claims by choosing not to contribute its portion of the annual exploration expenditure. Its interest would then be reduced on a pro-rata basis utilizing the following formula:

                        $150,000                        
($600,000 + expenditure for the year)

At its sole option, Kinross may choose to carry the Issuer’s portion of expenditures in the form of an interest-bearing demand note, principal and interest to be added in the event of application of the reduction formula. Should the Issuer fail to contribute its share of the exploration costs or fail to honour the demand note within 30 days of formal request for payment, it would be considered in default. In a default situation, the Issuer’s interest would be reduced by double the amount normally applied by the reduction formula. In the event its interest is reduced below 10%, the Issuer’s interest would be converted to a 5% net profits interest with no further financial contributions required.

State mining claims in Alaska require a minimum annual work expenditure of $100 per claim prior to the first of September of each year. Unused expenditures may be carried forward and subsequently utilized in successive years to a total of five years from the year in which they were incurred. The claims have been maintained annually by Kinross who have sufficient expenditure reserve to apply for the next five years. Prior to production, Kinross will likely convert the claims to a mining lease or apply for a millsite permit, a procedure involving public hearings and an environmental impact study. In anticipation, the Issuer has legally surveyed the claims and has completed a series of six water wells for ground water monitoring purposes, already underway.

Accessibility, Climate, Local Resources, Infrastructure and Physiography

The Gil Mineral Claims may be accessed via Fairbanks, Alaska, by a combination of paved highway, improved gravel roads and three seasons, four-wheel drive dirt road. Road distance is 16 kilometers north of Fairbanks to Fox along the Steese highway, east along the Steese highway and the Fort Knox access road to the mine site (another 19 kilometers), east through the mine property to the water retention dam (18 kilometers) and the start of the Gil access road. An additional 9.6 kilometers along the Gil access road brings one to the area of drill-indicated resources and the principal site of current exploration activity. A number of four-wheeler trails provide additional access to this portion of the property.

The claims lie along a moderate northwestern facing slope of a northeastern ridge rising from the broad Fish Creek valley trending in the same direction. Vegetation consists of black spruce, birch, poplar, alder and tussock grass. The slope is broken by a number of short, northwestern flowing streams which form a series of gullies. Elevations range from 300 to 600 metres.

Snow generally falls on the property in late September or early October, remaining on the ground until mid to late May. The month of April is particular productive for drilling and moving heavy equipment over normally soft or swampy areas which remain frozen. Exploration work involving heavy equipment is generally suspended during the break up period extending from mid-April through the end of May and the freeze up interval through mid-October to early November.

Fairbanks is the main population and service centre in the area. The hamlet of Fox twenty kilometers west is residence to several dozen locals and provides a few facilities for food and gas. While the claim area is void of any buildings or other infrastructure, it does lie adjacent to the Kinross’ Fort Knox open pit gold mine, a 40,000 ton per day operation with 250 permanent employees.

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History

In 1989, the Issuer acquired an option on the Gil Mineral Claims from Nerco Exploration Company whose exploration work on the property had consisted largely of surface magnetometer surveys. In 1991, the Issuer signed a joint venture and option agreement respecting the property with Fairbanks Gold Corp., which eventually became Kinross. Kinross earned an 80% interest in the Gil Mineral Claims from the Issuer by incurring exploration expenditures on the property of $600,000. During the past ten years, Kinross and its predecessors have conducted an integrated exploration program on the claims incurring total expenditures of between US$3,500,000 and US$4,000,000.

Geological Setting

Regional Geology

In regional terms, the Gil Mineral Claims are located within the Yukon-Tanana terrane, popularly labelled the Tintina Gold Belt. The lithologies are polymetamorphic and are approximately Precambrian to Upper Paleozoic in age. The protoliths are believed to have been primarily sedimentary, with lessor volcanic and plutonic origins. The rocks have undergone dynamothermal metamorphism; an early prograde amphibolite facies event and a later greenschist facies retrograde event. Using detailed fabric studies, four phases of penetrative deformation have been described. Radiometric ages of the Yukon-Tanana terrane indicated that a widespread regional metamorphic event occurred both in early Jurassic (about 180 Ma) and most recently during mid-Cretaceous time (105-125 Ma).

The Yukon-Tanana terrane is bound to the north by the Tintina fault and to the south by the Denali fault. Both faults are large scale right lateral strike-slip fault systems with numerous sympathetic northeast-southeast faults. The northeast trending faults display both left lateral strike-slip and dip-slip movements.

Intrusive rocks in the area are intermediate to felsic in composition. The Gilmore Dome intrusive rocks and related calc-silicate mineralization are dated at 86+/-3 Ma to 95+/-5 Ma. It is assumed that the other intrusive rocks of similar composition in the district have similar age. Tertiary tholeittic basaltic rocks are present in several localities in the district. These basalts tend to occur along north-easterly faults.

The Fairbanks district has produced approximately 7,500,000 ounces of placer gold since 1902. Prior to exploitation of the Fort Knox deposit, district lode production totalled only a few hundred thousand ounces, primarily from vein deposits within metamorphosed strata. This huge disparity between placer and lode production in terms of quantity suggests that sizeable source lode deposits remain to be found. Alternatively, the placer lode sources may have been largely eroded over the last 100 million years. Lode deposit types in the area include volcanogenic stratabound sulphides, intrusive hosted gold and silver, tungsten skarn, metamorphic-hosted gold-quartz-sulphide veins and stibnite veins.

Local Geology

The Gil property lies within the Tintina Gold Belts or Yukon-Tanana terrain, a region situated between Denali and Tintina faults, extending through Central Alaska into the Yukon. Extensive exploration within the belt over the past decade has increased gold resources by at least 23 million ounces from over ten different new deposits. In the Alaskan portion, an additional eight million ounces of placer gold has been taken since 1902, primarily from the Fairbanks district.

While Tintina gold deposits occur within a variety of rock hosts, form, alteration types, depth and temperature ranges, they feature many common characteristics as well as several unique differences. Though a plutonic association is common, deposits may be hosted within the plutons, within or exterior to the contact aureoles or within adjacent schists and sediments. Associated plutons fall within the 8 to 105 million-year range. They are granitic to granodioritic in composition, Associated plutons fall within the 85 to 105 million-year range.

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They are granitic to granodioritic in composition, I-type intrusives, with lithophile affinities and low magnetic signatures (absence of magnetite, minor ilmenite). The magnetic fluids emanating from the plutons are seen to be responsible for the gold mineralization. Prospective intrusives are small in size, generally less than four square kilometres in surface area. Termed the Tombstone-Tungsten Magmatic Belt within the Yukon, this same suite of prospective plutonics extends for a distance of over 700 km across the Yukon, Alaska and into British Columbia.

Significant deposits within the Tintina Gold Belt include the Fort Knox (4 million ounces in sheeted veins within granodiorite), Brewery Creet (970,000 ounce disseminations and veins within monzonite dykes and metasiliciclastics), Dublin Gulch (1.5 million ounces in sheeted veins within granodiorite), Pogo (5.6 million ounces in high temperature/low level ductile sub-horizontal quartz veins within gneisses), Donlin Creek (13 million ounces in high level hypabyssal sedimentary hosted dyke swarms), True North (1.3 million ounces in a medasediment host, disseminated shear/replacement) and Shotgun (979,000 ounces in rhyolite porphyry and adjacent sediments).

Property Geology

The Gil Mineral Claims are primarily underlain by the Fairbanks Schist, a Proterozoic to Lower Cambrian formation derived largely from sedimentary rocks that have been converted into muscovite-quartz schist and macaceous quartzite. In certain areas the Fairbanks Schist contains a metamorphic sub-unit of volcanic provenance called the Cleary Sequence. The Cleary Sequence is present within the central portion of the claims trending north-easterly in a narrow band to the Slippery Creek area where it becomes the host formation for the Main Gil as well as the North Gil zones.

The south-western portion of the Gil Mineral Claims, about three kilometres south of the Fort Knox pit, in underlain by part of the Gilmore Dome, a quart monzonitic to granitic pluton which is probably the mother intrusive to the small stock hosting gold mineralization within the production pit. The location of additional intrusive rock has become a significant sub-goal of the Fairbanks Gold exploration programme. Indications of a possible intrusive rock in the headwater area of Slippery Creek are suggested by the presence of a gravity high outlined in a previous survey as well as petrographic studies indicating a causative heat source in that direction.

Within the area of the Gil zones, the Fairbanks Gold geological staff have subdivided the mixed metamorphic, sedimentary and volcanic package into at least ten separate units which is not an easy task given the scarcity of outcrop and the highly faulted, segmented complex nature of the property.

Strata strikes N65E dipping to the northwest variably from 35 to 70 degrees. Faults and shears in the Gil claim block strike predominantly northwest or northeast, as indicated by trenching, drilling, ground based magnetometer surveys, and ground based radiometric surveys. A ground based gravity survey in 1999 exposed east to west and northeast trending structures that were previously unknown. Faults are often coincident with gold mineralization and commonly contain duly clay gouge, crushed quartz, calcite veining and/or quartz veining, and can be intensely limonitically stained.

Exploration and Development during the past 3 years

During fiscal 2004, 2005 and 2006, Fort Knox Venture through its operator Kinross Gold USA, Inc., completed exploration and development work on this property. This has resulted in Teryl, Inc. being required to pay its 20% share of expenses, which amounted to $ 98,916US in 2006, $104,824US in 2005, and $226,916US in the May 2004 year.

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The first phase of the 2003 drill program served two purposes. Firstly it increased the geologic understanding of the Main Gil gold deposit to provide a more accurate gold distribution deposit model, and secondly, it has extended the strike length of the Main Gil zone to almost 3,000 feet.

Following is a summary of the 2003 Phase 2 Exploration Program for the Gil Project including estimated costs:

  • Additional core and reverse circulation drilling to more fully define the limits and magnitude of gold mineralization at the Main Gils deposit and other targets. This phase including assaying, geologic services, access road and drill pad construction, and reclamation of surface disturbance, is estimated at US750,000;

  • A cultural resources survey to determine the presence (or absence) of historical artifacts in the project area. This phase of work is estimated to cost US$81,000;

  • Wetlands delineation and a Threatened and Endangered Species surveys are estimated to cost US$26,000;

  • Costs under a State of Alaska Reimbursable Services Agreement for project-related activities are estimated to be US$23,000;

  • Detailed digital topography, suitable for engineering studies and design, for the area of the mineral deposits are estimated to be US$20,000;

  • Access and haul road design activities and construction cost estimates, US$75,000;

  • Preliminary hydrologic studies and construction of a piezometer network are estimated to cost US$50,000; and

  • Drilling of a production (water) well to characterize the nature and volume of ground water in the vicinity of the Main Gil deposit, US$50,000.

Phase 2 drilling was completed bringing 2003 drilling totals to 27,590 feet of reverse circulation drilling in 127 holes and 8,917 feet of diamond core drilling in 31 holes. The best gold results were on Hole # GVR03-398, which intersected 135 feet of 0.087 opt gold including 85 feet of 0.121 opt gold.

In January 2005, we received a preliminary exploration summary for the Kinross/Teryl Gil Joint Venture program. The Gil Joint Venture exploration program consisted of geologic mapping, the excavating of four trenches totaling 1,020 feet, the drilling of 18 reverse circulation drill holes totaling 4,175 feet, and collecting of over 1,000 rock and soil samples for assays.

In April 2005, we received the Gil joint venture progress report for the 2004 exploration program. The goal of the 2004 Gil Exploration Program was to identify gold targets that could significantly increase the potential resource of the claim block. Field work began on June 21, 2004 and took place in the central and eastern portions of the claim area. This included the Main Gil Area, Sourdough Ridge, Intrusive Ridge, All Gold Ridge and Too Much Gold Ridge. Exploration activities consisted of geologic mapping, 1,020 feet of trenching, 18 reverse circulation drill holes totaling 4,175 feet, and the collection of over 1000 rock and soil samples for gold assay. Initial fieldwork outlined eight gold targets that warranted further exploration. Drilling in the final portion of the exploration season tested five of the eight targets.

Also in April, 2005, a program and budget was approved by Kinross Gold Corp. to move the Gil Joint Venture from the exploration to the development stage. The approved budget is US$793,800.

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Budget Summary -Estimated Cost $USD Permitting 520,000, Engineering 160,000, Data Folio 75,000, Airborne Geophysics 28,800, Reclamation 10,000, Total 793,800.

Permitting - The Joint Venture plans to initiate the process of permitting the Gil deposit once sufficient baseline data has been collected. Several state permits and approvals are required which will likely include a Plan of Operations, Solid Waste Disposal Permit, Storm Water Discharge Multi-Sector General Permit for Industrial Activities or a NPDES Discharge Permit, 404 Wetlands Permit, a Reclamation and Closure Plan and a Monitoring Plan. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will complete an Environmental Assessment as required by NEPA. Baseline studies needed include fugitive emissions, geochemistry, surface and groundwater hydrology, aquatic biota, wetlands delineation, cultural resource survey, socioeconomic analysis, and noise and visual impact studies. The cultural resources survey and wetland delineation were completed in 2004. Surface and ground water hydrology was initiated in 2000. The Environmental Assessment required under NEPA will drive the timeline, but permitting could be completed in 2006 provided there is no significant public opposition.

Engineering - Engineering projects include deposit model, pit design, mine plan, access road design, geotechnical review for pit slope angles, and dewatering review of related test work.

Data Folio - Baseline studies for permitting Gil have been initiated in 2005 and will continue in 2006 as will the development of mine plans for the Gil property. Permitting and engineering activities are significant budgetary items this year. A properly cleaned, compiled, and interpreted digital database will be used to identify new targets and develop new target concepts, and will also have obvious value as Gil transitions from exploration to development.

Airborne Geophysics - A high resolution aeromagnetic and EM resistivity survey, the draped helicopter survey will be flown along 100 m spaced lines and at a 30 m ground clearance. Approximately 300 line kms of the 2,310 kms survey will be flown over the Gil Venture property. The purpose of the survey is to provide resolution of subtle magnetic texture like that associated with the Fort Knox deposit and to add resistivity as a complimentary data set. The objective is to produce a more detailed structural and lithologic base map of the Fort Knox Trend. This base will help focus other targeting activities and may identify targets for an immediate drill test on the Gil Joint Venture.

In October 2005, we completed a reverse drilling program. The Gil/Sourdough drilling consisted of 1,560 feet of RC drilling for a total of 9 holes. Additional drilling is planned following seasonal freeze-up to extend the Sourdough mineralized zone.

On January 26, 2006, an exploration update for the Gil Joint Venture was released. Two target areas were identified and recommended for further geologic and geophysical investigation within the Gil Joint Venture area.

The objective of the 2005 Gil Venture exploration program was to generate new gold targets by integrating geologic and geochemical information with newly acquired geophysical data. Work by Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc./Kinross Gold consisted of an update of the geologic database and a high-resolution electromagnetic (HEM) airborne geophysical survey.

The database update began in January and continued intermittently throughout the year. Work focused on revising soil sample locations using updated GPS coordinates, compiling data for geologic map production and revising the resource model. Additional database work is planned for the first quarter of 2006.

In July, Fugro Airborne Surveys Inc., under contract to Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc./Kinross Gold, initiated an HEM airborne geophysical survey of the area. HydroGeophysics Inc. interpreted the geophysical data and identified several targets within the Gil Joint Venture claim block. Additional geophysical analysis is scheduled for 2006.

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In July of 2005, Hydrogeophysics Inc. (HGI) delivered an interpretation map with recommendations for geological and geophysical follow-up based on the low resolution geophysical data. Two target areas were identified and recommended for further geologic and geophysical investigation within the Gil Joint Venture area. These targets are as follows:

1) Last Chance Creek
This target occurs on a shear zone approximately 3.1 miles east and 1.2 miles south of the Fort Knox Mine in close proximity to the south end of an interpreted intrusive. The claims in this area are part of the Gil Joint Venture or are held by Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc.

2) Too Much Gold Creek
The Too Much Gold Creek target lies on a shear located on the west edge of an intrusive approximately 6.2 miles east and 1.8 miles north of the Fort Knox Mine. This target is largely located within the Gil Joint Venture, although a portion lies in the Fish Creek Claims. The Fish Creek claims are 50% owned by Linux Gold Corp. and optioned to Teryl Resources Corp., but are not part of the Joint Venture.

The final interpretation was completed on December 16th, 2005 and outlined six areas of interest within or partially within the Gil Joint Venture. Drill holes for three of these target areas were proposed within the Gil Joint Venture.

The goal of the 2006 Gil Joint Venture exploration program should initially focus on completing an overall update of the database. This would include the production of new geologic and geochemical maps. Fieldwork should consist of mapping and sampling across interpreted geophysical and geochemical anomalies. This updated information could then be integrated with the geophysical data to further define existing exploration targets or generate new targets in the Gil Joint Venture claim block.

On July 10, 2006 the Company announced that drilling is to commence this summer on a new gold target on the Gil joint venture. A total of three drill holes is initially planned to test the most favorable geophysical target on the Gil Joint Venture. Drilling has commences as of September 12, 2006.

In September, 2006, the necessary permits were approved, and drilling commenced on the new gold target on the Gil joint venture. The initial drill program will consist of three drill holes, and approximately 2000’ of drilling, with a potential for additional drilling pending the results of the first phase.

The new gold target was located by integrating geologic and geochemical information with the recent geophysical data. Drilling initially is planned to test the most favorable geophysical target on the Gil joint venture. As of the date of this 20-F, we have not received data from the drilling program.

Mineralization

Gold mineralization is contained within two distinct zones designated the Main Gil and the North Gil, the latter situated 366 metres north of the former. A third zone showing potential, the Sourdough Ridge zone, occurs some 790 metres further east and is in the early stages of exploration.

To date, the Main Gil zone has been extensively drill tested over a minimal strike distance of 1,006 metres to 152 metre depths. Gold values occurs within a calc-silicate horizon approximately 21 metres thick striking N60E, dipping between 45 and 70 degrees NW. Indicated resource is calculated to be 10,700,000 tons at 0.04 opt gold.

The host calc-silicate horizon is described as a biotite-pyroxenite-actinolite-quartz-calcite schist derived from finely laminated mafic volcanic tuff or impure marl of amphibolite metamorphic grade. While favourable as a gold-bearing host, the presence of secondary quartz stockworking, veining and/or faulting/fracturing is vital for elevated gold values.

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Veining varies in character but falls into two broad gold bearing categories: a) discrete white quartz veins up to 1 inch in width; and b) later discrete thinner quartz-carbonate veins with or without actinolite/pyroxenite. Both sets dip steeply and both are preceded by apparently barren quartz-feldspar veins and are cut by later calcite veins.

The presence of abundant pyroxenite and secondary iron rich actinolite are necessary for high gold values. The latter minerals form as dark green fibrous mats sub-parallel to foliation and are seen as retrograde replacement products of hornblende and pyroxene. Fine-grained biotite is also found in close association. The characteristic dark green colour of the assemblage is frequently used as an exploration guide for elevated gold values. Gold deposition is not only caused by system cooling of the aqueous siliceous solutions but also the replacement of pyroxene by Fe-rich ilmenite and ilmenite by rutile. This process liberates ferrous iron, the oxidation of which destabilized the Au(HS)2 complex. The released iron is then free to form pyrite or pyrrhotite, thus lowering the fugacity of sulphur in the fluid, which also destabilizes the gold complex. Sulphides include pyrrhotite and pyrite while oxides are ilmenite and rutile. Magnetic, molybdenite and chalcopyrite are rarely seen.

The North Gil zone exhibits a slightly different character in that elevated gold values are entirely associated with quartz veining. A lesser preference is seen for host units as the veins occur within quartz-mica schists, the felsic schists (slightly favoured) and/or calcareous biotite-chlorite-quartz schist. Sulphide contents of less than 1% consist of pyrite and/or calcite veins. Veins are generally less than two inches wide, dip from 45 degrees to vertically and consist primarily of white quartz or quartz-calcite with or without actinolite/pyroxenite. Overall zone dimensions are in order of 1,000 by 500 feet and have been tested to 1,000-foot depths where grades remain strong. The zone remains open along strike, both to the east and the west.

More persistent gold values are found a) when quartz veining occurs within the felsic schist or the interlayered felsic schist; b) when quartz veins occur in or near contacts between lithologies; c) in and around the margins of shear zones; and d) among areas of increased carbonate rock (calcite veins and/or marble).

A third area receiving increased exploration attention is the Sourdough Ridge Zone. Four reverse circulation drill holes have returned values of potentially mineable grade material while an additional two contain significant values. Two types of gold bearing veins occur within the calc-silicate units and mica schists, namely quartz-carbonate-amphibole and quartz veins. They tend to be narrow, striking in an east-westerly direction with near vertical dips. Positive exploration results in this zone imply a doubling of the previously known mineralized strike length.

Drilling

Kinross had initially utilized an auger drill in its exploration on the Gil Mineral Claims. Auger drill depths generally range from two to 60 feet with the average in the eight to 20 foot range. Cuttings are assayed using a one assay ton fire assay and a 34 element ICP package.

The core from diamond drilling is generally HQ sized with occasional NQ where reduction is dictated by faulted ground. The core is logged, photographed and a sample taken for reference approximately every ten feet. The remaining core is submitted in five-foot intervals for gold assay using a one assay ton fire assay with AA finish.

As reverse circulation drilling is used for grade evaluation in a low-grade gold environment, great care is employed in the sampling procedure. Holes are sampled on continuous intervals of five feet with a quarter split retained as a sample. A Jones splitter mounted directly below the cyclone is used when drilling dry while a rotary wet splitter is used when drilling wet.

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Sampling, Analysis and Security of Samples

Samples are analysed by one assay ton with an AA finish. Duplicates of each 10th, 30th, 50th, 70th, 90th sample, and so on, are sent to the primary lab under different numbers while duplicates of each 20th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th, etc., sample are sent to another lab. On every 40th sample, the primary lab does a recheck at their own facility while every 80th is sent to an outside lab. A duplicate sample at the end of every logging page, every 100 feet, is taken at the drill and sent to the primary lab. Chemex Labs, and more recently Bondar-Klegg, have carried out the bulk of Issuer’s analyses over the decade.

In addition, an experienced gold panner employed at the rig takes a gold pan full of cuttings at each five foot interval. The cuttings are panned and the concentrate examined for gold colours, the presence and type of sulphides and, should suspected tungsten minerals occur, these are placed under an ultraviolet light for examination. Everything is recorded along with the details of the lithology. Samplers and loggers are discouraged from wearing jewellery during work.

Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserve Estimates

Kinross has cited a drill indicated resource figure for the Gil Mineral Claims of 10,700,000 short tons averaging 0.04 opt, containing 433,000 ounces of gold. This was calculated by polygonal methods utilizing cross sections and includes only the Main Gil zone.

Metallurgical testing on the Main Gil zone has proven positive. Preliminary tests indicate that material from the Main Gil is easier to beneficiate than the Fort Knox ore. Indicated recoveries are in excess of 90% for the Main Gil and 79% for the North Gil. The positive recovery aspects of the Gil resource further enhance its eventual placement into the “ore” category. In a negative sense, the geometry of the Main Gil zone suggests a fairly high stripping ratio, possibly in the order of 6:1, overall to a 500-foot depth.

Drilling at the Main Gil has indicated consistent, somewhat strataform mineralization over a strike length of 2,500 feet. At present, the numbers indicated would not be viewed as hard mineable reserves. A typical section is characterised by thin higher grade zones up to 0.6 opt gold interspersed with relatively wide, low grade or barren intervals. The zone has been drilled to depths of 500 feet. Thickness is an average of 75 feet. At an average dip of 65 degrees and a specific gravity of 2.5, such a zone would contain a resource of 10,795,500 short tons.

The North Gil is characterised by narrow, relatively high grades zones with intervening zones of low grade to barren rock. The lacking of any obvious stratigraphic control adds to the difficulty of a resource calculation, however, the presence of the Main Gil pit one thousand feet to the south, means that the cost to exploit the adjoining North Gil zone would be minimal.

The presence of the currently producing Fort Knox mine facility six miles to the south-west vastly enhances the economics of any deposit within trucking distance. The experience of the Fort Knox/Kinross/Fairbanks Gold management group in successfully procuring mining or millsite permits, as well as dealing with the mining related environmental issues and public hearings in the Fairbanks area, suggests that any application tendered by the organization will receive preferential and expedient treatment.

Mining Operations

Currently, there are no mining operations conducted on the Gil Mineral Claims.

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Exploration and Development-Annual Program Goals

2004 Gil Exploration Area

The goal of the 2004 Gil Exploration Program was to identify gold targets that could significantly increase the potential resource of the claim block. Field work began on June 21, 2004 and took place in the central and eastern portions of the claim area. This included the Main Gil Area, Sourdough Ridge, Intrusive Ridge, All Gold Ridge and Too Much Gold Ridge. Exploration activities consisted of geologic mapping, 1,020 feet of trenching, 18 reverse circulation drill holes totaling 4,175 feet, and the collection of over 1000 rock and soil samples for gold assay. Initial fieldwork outlined eight gold targets that warranted further exploration. Drilling in the final portion of the exploration season tested five of the eight targets.

The 2004 Gil Exploration Area begins in the Last Chance Creek drainage and extends for five miles in a northeast direction to soil anomalies in the Lohr Creek drainage. Most exploration activities have focused in the Main Gil area, leaving a large portion under-explored.

During the 2004 first half of the exploration program, the Company’s JV partner, Kinross Gold, constructed approximately 40,000 feet of soil line and collected approximately 488 soil samples using auger drills. This work generated several new exploration targets in the Main Gil Area and along Sourdough Ridge. Field work focused on testing these targets through the use of trenching and reverse circulation drilling. Nine reverse circulation drill holes totaling 2,075 feet and three trenches totaling 1,500 feet were completed testing these targets.

In January 2005, we received a preliminary exploration summary for the Kinross/Teryl Gil Joint Venture program. The Gil Joint Venture exploration program consisted of geologic mapping, the excavating of four trenches totaling 1,020 feet, the drilling of 18 reverse circulation drill holes totaling 4,175 feet, and collecting of over 1,000 rock and soil samples for assays.

In April 2005, a Program and Budget was approved by Kinross Gold Corp. to move the Gil Joint Venture from the exploration to the development stage. The approved budget is US$793,800.

The budget summary estimated the following costs, in $USD: Permitting $520,000, Engineering $160,000, Data Folio $75,000, Airborne Geophysics $28,800, Reclamation $10,000.

The Joint Venture plans to initiate the process of permitting the Gil deposit once sufficient baseline data has been collected. Several state permits and approvals are required which will likely include a Plan of Operations, Solid Waste Disposal Permit, Storm Water Discharge Multi-Sector General Permit for Industrial Activities or a NPDES Discharge Permit, 404 Wetlands Permit, a Reclamation and Closure Plan and a Monitoring Plan. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will complete an Environmental Assessment as required by NEPA.

Baseline studies needed include fugitive emissions, geochemistry, surface and groundwater hydrology, aquatic biota, wetlands delineation, cultural resource survey, socioeconomic analysis, and noise and visual impact studies. The cultural resources survey and wetland delineation were completed in 2004. Surface and ground water hydrology was initiated in 2000. The Environmental Assessment required under NEPA will drive the timeline, but permitting could be completed in 2006 provided there is no significant public opposition.

Engineering projects include deposit model, pit design, mine plan, access road design, geotechnical review for pit slope angles, and dewatering review of related test work.

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2005 Gil Exploration Area

In April 2005, a Program and Budget was approved by Kinross Gold Corp. to move the Gil Joint Venture from the exploration to the development stage. The approved budget is US$793,800. The budget summary estimated the following costs, in $USD: Permitting $520,000, Engineering $160,000, Data Folio $75,000, Airborne Geophysics $28,800, Reclamation $10,000.

The objective of the 2005 Gil Venture exploration program was to generate new gold targets by integrating geologic and geochemical information with newly acquired geophysical data. Work by Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc./Kinross Gold consisted of an update of the geologic database and a high-resolution electromagnetic (HEM) airborne geophysical survey.

Baseline studies for permitting Gil have been initiated in 2005 and will continue in 2006 as will the development of mine plans for the Gil property. Permitting and engineering activities are significant budgetary items this year. A properly cleaned, compiled, and interpreted digital database will be used to identify new targets and develop new target concepts, and will also have obvious value as Gil transitions from exploration to development.

A high resolution aeromagnetic and EM resistivity survey, the draped helicopter survey will be flown along 100 m spaced lines and at a 30 m ground clearance. Approximately 300 line kms of the 2,310 kms survey will be flown over the Gil Venture property. The purpose of the survey is to provide resolution of subtle magnetic texture like that associated with the Fort Knox deposit and to add resistivity as a complimentary data set. The objective is to produce a more detailed structural and lithologic base map of the Fort Knox Trend. This base will help focus other targeting activities and may identify targets for an immediate drill test on the Gil Joint Venture.

On September 6, 2005, a reverse drilling contract between the Company and GF Back Drilling was announced. The completion of this drilling program was announced on October 31, 2005. The Gil/Sourdough drilling consisted of 1,560 feet of RD drilling for a total of 9 holes. Additional drilling is planned following the seasonal freeze-up to extend the Sourdough mineralized zone. Teryl has agreed to supervise the exploration program and cover 100% of the costs. Kinross has agreed to credit their 80% share of the costs n the next approved budget of the Gil Joint Venture.

The objective of the 2005 Gil Venture exploration program was to generate new gold targets by integrating geologic and geochemical information with newly acquired geophysical data. Work by Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc./Kinross Gold consisted of an update of the geologic database and a high-resolution electromagnetic (HEM) airborne geophysical survey.

In preparation of the 2006 exploration program, the database update began in January and continued intermittently throughout the year. Work focused on revising soil sample locations using updated GPS coordinates, compiling data for geologic map production and revising the resource model. Additional database work is planned for the first quarter of 2006.

In July, Fugro Airborne Surveys Inc., under contract to Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc./Kinross Gold, initiated an HEM airborne geophysical survey of the area. HydroGeophysics Inc. interpreted the geophysical data and identified several targets within the Gil Joint Venture claim block. Additional geophysical analysis is scheduled for 2006.

In July of 2005, Hydrogeophysics Inc. (HGI) delivered an interpretation map with recommendations for geological and geophysical follow-up based on the low resolution geophysical data. Two target areas were identified and recommended for further geologic and geophysical investigation within the Gil Joint Venture area. These targets are as follows:

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1) Last Chance Creek
This target occurs on a shear zone approximately 3.1 miles east and 1.2 miles south of the Fort Knox Mine in close proximity to the south end of an interpreted intrusive. The claims in this area are part of the Gil Joint Venture or are held by Fairbanks Gold Mining Inc.

2) Too Much Gold Creek
The Too Much Gold Creek target lies on a shear located on the west edge of an intrusive approximately 6.2 miles east and 1.8 miles north of the Fort Knox Mine. This target is largely located within the Gil Joint Venture, although a portion lies in the Fish Creek Claims. The Fish Creek claims are 50% owned by Linux Gold Corp. and optioned to Teryl Resources Corp., but are not part of the Joint Venture.

The final interpretation was completed on December 16th, 2005 and outlined six areas of interest within or partially within the Gil Joint Venture. Drill holes for three of these target areas were proposed within the Gil Joint Venture.

2006 Gil Joint Venture Recommendations

The goal of the 2006 Gil Joint Venture exploration program should initially focus on completing an overall update of the database. This would include the production of new geologic and geochemical maps. Fieldwork should consist of mapping and sampling across interpreted geophysical and geochemical anomalies. This updated information could then be integrated with the geophysical data to further define existing exploration targets or generate new targets in the Gil Joint Venture claim block.

WEST RIDGE PROPERTY

Description and Location

The West Ridge Au property is located approximately 15 miles north of Fairbanks, Alaska, in the Livengood A-2 1:63,360 quadrangle. The property’s western margin is crossed by the Elliott Highway, a major paved artery connecting Fairbanks to the North Slope oil and gas production facilities at Prudhoe Bay (Figure 1). The West Ridge property consists of 48 state of Alaska mining claims covering 1750.5 acres, 440 acres of leased Mental Health Trust (MHT) land and 75 acres of patented mining claims under lease purchase option in the Livengood quadrangle Township 2 North, Range 1 East (Figure 2). The state claims are registered with the Alaska Division of Mining, Land, and Water Management with Teryl Resources Corp. as the 100% owner.

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In mid-2003 Teryl acquired and exploration option on a 440 acre parcel of fee-simple land owned 100% by the Alaska Mental Health Trust (Figure 2). These lands lie within and adjacent to the northern boundary of

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the West Ridge claims and can be converted to a development lease at the option of Teryl. In consideration for the State of Alaska lease, a variable net smelter returns (NSR) production royalty on the lease land is granted to the State of Alaska, Trust Land Office (TLO). The NSR royalty ranges from 2.5% for gold prices below $300 to 5% for gold prices above $500. Additionally, Teryl will grant a 1% Net Smelter Return (NSR) on its 100% owned West Ridge property with first refusal to purchase the 1% NSR in the event that TLO decides to sell. Annual rental charges on the Mental Health Trust lease total $2,200 per year for 2003 through 2005 with work commitments of $4,400 per year for the same period. The Mental Health Trust lease is in good standing.

In mid-August 2003 Teryl acquired an option to purchase 70.785 acres of patented land from Fairbanks mine operator Michael Roberts (Figure 2). The claim, known as Anderson Group 2nd Tier Right Limit of Dome Creek was patented as Mineral Survey No. 1740 and is situated on the north side of Dome Creek in a physically separate block from the other Teryl holdings at West Ridge. Under terms of the agreement Teryl has the option to purchase 100% interest in the claim, subject to a 5% net profits interest retained by Roberts, by making stages cash payment totaling $147,500 before August 31, 2006. The agreement currently is in good standing.

Mineral rights in this part of Alaska are administered by the State of Alaska (for both State mining claims and Mental Health Trust lands). Annual mining claim rents vary according to claim size and age and are due and payable by November 30 of each year for State mining claims. Claim rentals are paid in addition to annual work commitment on State mining claims total ($2.50 per acre per year). Amounts spent in excess of these levels are bankable on State mining claims for up to four years into the future. All claims on the West Ridge project currently are in good standing. There currently are no unusual social, political or environmental encumbrances to mining on the project. Two open pit gold mines currently operate within 10 miles of the West Ridge project, Fort Knox and True North, both operated by Kinross Gold. None of the claims or Mental Health Trust lands controlled by the West Ridge project have been surveyed by a registered land or mineral surveyor and there are no State or federal laws or regulations requiring such surveying. Teryl currently holds a valid 3-year Hardrock Exploration Permit on the project. Additional permits for future work will be acquired from the Alaska Department of Natural Resources on an as-needed basis.

Accessibility, Climate and Infrastructure

The West Ridge property is approximately 15 road miles north of Fairbanks via the paved Elliott Highway. The south side of the property is accessible via seasonal dirt roads and the Old Murphy Dome Road while the north side of the property is accessible via the Dome Creek Road and seasonal dirt roads connecting to it. Land telephone lines and a high voltage electrical power line service Kinross Gold’s True North mine, less than 2 miles from the property. A cellular phone network already covers the West Ridge property. The greater Fairbanks area supports a population of approximately 75,000 and has excellent labor and services infrastructure, including rail and international airport access. Exploration and development costs in the Fairbanks area are at or below those common in the western United States.

Snow generally falls on the property in late September or early October, remaining on the ground until mid to late May. The month of April is particular productive for drilling and moving heavy equipment over normally soft or swampy areas which remain frozen. Exploration work involving heavy equipment is generally suspended during the break up period extending from mid-April through the end of May and the freeze up interval through mid-October to early November.

Elevations on the property range from 800 feet to over 1900 feet (Figure 2). Topography in the area is dominated by low rounded hills dissected by relatively steep walled valleys. Outcrops are scarce except in man-made exposures. Vegetation consists of a tundra mat that supports subarctic vegetation. A variably thick layer of aeolian silt covers valley bottoms on the property. Permafrost is limited to small discontinuous lenses on steep, poorly drained north-facing slopes and has posed no hindrance to past exploration. Average annual precipitation is 13 inches, mostly as snowfall. Mining operations can be conducted on a year-round basis and heap leach technology has been profitably employed at two locations in the Fairbanks district since 1985.

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History

The Dome Creek basin has been one of the most productive placer gold drainages in the Fairbanks District with the portion of the drainage from Seattle Creek (draining the central West Ridge project area) downstream to the townsite of Olnes producing approximately 114,000 ounces of placer gold between 1903 and 1973. The United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company (USSR&M) conducted dredging in Dome Creek from Seattle Creek to Moose Creek from 1955 – 1959. A small scale undergound drift mine was operated by Roberts Mining started from 1989 to 1993 below the lower limit of U.S.S.R. & M. dredging. This ground currently is controlled under purchase option by Teryl. During the summer of 1989 Roberts Mining processed about 14,000 cubic yards of gravel mined the previous winter that averaged 0.04 ounces per cubic yard. In 1991, Robert's Mining mined 11,470 cubic meters (15,000 cubic yards) of placer pay at the drift mine, reworking old drifts and removing side pay left by the early 20th century hand miners. Although limited evidence exists of small scale surface placer prospecting exists in Seattle Creek, Moose Creek No. 1 and Moose Creek No. 2, no information is available to the author regarding these activities or possible production from them.

Several small lode gold and tungsten occurrences occur with and adjacent to the West Ridge project. Prior to 1943 a small occurrence of scheelite was discovered at the Old Glory prospect on the ridge between Seattle Creek and Moose Creek No. 2 (Figure 2). A 3-foot zone of weathered schist containing disseminated scheelite was found which strikes N44oE and dips 45oSE. The average tungsten tri-oxide content was estimated at 0.5 to 1%. Channel samples across 4.5 feet of the disseminated scheelite zone contained 0.48% tungsten tri-oxide. A fine-grained quartz diorite dike was found 8 feet below the surface in the bottom of a small pit sunk in the same trench where the scheelite was encountered. No record of production or other exploration is available on this prospect. Vegetation observed in 2003 that had grown up in the trench suggests this prospect had not been explored of at least 30 years.

In October and November 1996 Placer Dome U.S. (PDUS) conducted limited diamond drilling on the MHT lands now controlled by Teryl. PDUS completed core holes FR96-27, FR96-28, FR96-30 with a total footage of 2,420 feet. The cost of this work was approximately $124,000. Following completion of this drilling it became apparent that holes FR96-28 and FR96-30 were drilled north of the MHT property line on lands then owned by USSR&M predecessor Alaska Gold. Data from these two holes was transmitted to MHT but is not available to Teryl or the author since these data are not owned by MHT.

In early 1997 seven diamond drill core holes (3,271 feet) were drilled along the basin floor of Moose Creek No. 1 on what is now MHT lands. At the time these holes were drilled this land consisted of two state mining claims owned by local prospector John Hannah and leased to PDUS. Shortly afterwards PDUS terminated its interest in the lease and in 2002 Hannah failed to pay annual state claim rents thereby terminating the claims. The land formerly covered by the Hannah claims automatically became fee simple lands owned by MHT and are now part of the MHT – Teryl lease agreement. Data from the 1997 drilling is not owned by MHT since the drilling was done prior to their ownership so the results of the drilling are not available to the author.

Teryl Resources acquired the property in the early 1990’s and conducted limited ground magnetics surveys and power auger soil sampling on 400 foot spaced north-south lines. This work outlined two broadly defined gold in soil anomalies, the East anomaly lies on the divide between Seattle and Steamboat Creeks on the eastern margin of the property. The Western anomaly is located on the divide between Moose Creek No. 2 and small unnamed tributaries of Dome Creek in the central portion of the West Ridge property. Follow-up work on these anomalies was conducted by Kinross in 1998 and 1999 when Kinross completed widely spaced Bombardier auger soil sampling and followed up by drilling 4 reverse circulation drill holes (1,650 feet) along the old powerline right or way within the Western anomaly. Kinross terminated its option on the property in early 2000.

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No further work was conducted on the West Ridge prospect until July 2003 when Teryl retained the author to review past work and make recommendations for future work on the property. Initial efforts focused on the Old Glory and the newly discovered Black Dome prospects. During the period July 2003 through January 2004 Teryl funded hand trenching, rock sampling, power soil auger sampling, trenching and ground magnetics and VLF surveys over the Old Glory prospect and limited power soil auger sampling, rock sampling and prospecting on the Black Dome prospect

In September 2004, we discovered a new zone of gold mineralization. Rock and soil sampling was conducted in August approximately 1,600 meters west of the Old Glory prospect where the Company discovered significant gold mineralization in 2003. Exploration in the newly discovered area was prompted by past soil sampling conducted by Amax Gold that indicated anomalous gold and arsenic in soils on the ridgeline between Moose Creek #1 and Moose Creek #2. Initial sampling consisted of 14 soil samples and 20 rock samples collected from hand-dug pits.

As reported by Curt Freeman, of Avalon Development Corp., of the 175 soil samples collected, 29 returned values greater than 100 parts per billion gold with the maximum value being 981 parts per billion. An additional 32 returned anomalous gold values ranging between 50 and 100 parts per billion. Anomalous gold was associated with elevated arsenic, antimony, lead, bismuth and tungsten. The presence of anomalous bismuth (to 15 ppm) and tungsten (to 370 ppm) in soils suggests that gold mineralization within the sample grid may be intrusive related, a similarity shared by several other intrusive-related gold systems the Fairbanks District.

Anomalous gold and pathfinder elements in the 2004 soil grid occur in four discrete areas of the grid and all four areas are open to expansion into lands owned and leased by Teryl.

No field work was conducted on the West Ridge property during 2005 or 2006.

Geological Setting

Bedrock geology of the Fairbanks Mining District is dominated by a N60-80E trending lithologic and structural trend covering a 30-mile by 15-mile area . The southern two-thirds of the West Ridge project is situated primarily in lower to middle Paleozoic metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks of the Cleary Sequence and Fairbanks Schist (Figure 3). These rocks are in fault contact along the northeast trending Eldorado Fault which separates Fairbanks Schist on the south from eclogite and amphibolite facies rocks of the Chatanika Terrane on the north. Rocks of the Cleary Sequence and Fairbanks Schist are exposed in the Cleary antiform, the northern of two northeast trending antiformal belts present in the district.

Lithologies in the Fairbanks Schist include quartz muscovite schist, micaceous quartzite and biotite quartz mica schist. These lithologies have been metamorphosed to the lower amphibolite facies. Lithologies within the Cleary Sequence include quartzite, massive to finely laminated mafic to intermediate flows and tuffs, calc-schist, black chloritic quartzite, quartz-sericite schist of hydrothermal origin and impure marble.

Most investigators believe rocks of the Cleary Sequence and Fairbanks Schist have been over thrust from the northeast by eclogite to amphibolite facies rocks of the Chatanika terrane ( Figure 3). The Chatanika terrane consists of quartz muscovite schist, carbonaceous quartzite, impure marble, garnet feldspar muscovite schist, and garnet-pyroxene eclogite that have yielded Ordovician Ar40/Ar39 age dates. Motion on the Chatanika thrust fault has been dated at approximately 130 million years, Metamorphic histories of the Chatanika eclogite and Fairbanks Schist within the Yukon Tanana Terrane, Alaska, as revealed by electron microprobe geothermometry and 40AR/39AR single grain dating and resulted in structural preparation of favorable host units in the Chatanika terrane and adjacent lower plate rocks. Evidence from the district and from other parts of Interior Alaska with similar geologic histories suggest rocks classified as part of the Cleary Sequence may in fact be both Fairbanks Schist and Chatanika terrane rocks separated by multiple low angle structures that could be either thrust or gravity faults or both.

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Intrusives in the Fairbanks district have yielded Ar40/Ar39 and K-Ar dates of 85-95 million years. These intrusives range in composition from diorite to granite and possess elevated Rb/Sr ratios indicative of significant crustal contribution to subduction generated magmas. Several granodiorite to aplite intrusive bodies are present in the West Ridge project area. The presence of hypabyssal intrusives and sporadic Au and Au-W mineralization in the West Ridge project area suggests the area may be underlain by more extensive intrusive bodies similar to those on Pedro Dome and Gilmore Dome. This conclusion is supported by airborne geophysical surveys. Mineralization within the Pedro Dome, Gilmore Dome and Dolphin intrusive complexes suggests plutonic rocks pre-date or are contemporaneous with mineralization.

Rocks on the West Ridge project are folded about earlier northwest and northeast trending isoclinal recumbent fold axes followed by an open folded N60-80E trending system. Upper plate rocks of the Chatanika terrane have been affected by more intense northwest and northeast trending isoclinal and recumbent folding followed by folding along the same N60-80E trending axis which affected lower plate rocks. Lithologic packages in both the upper and lower plates are cut by steeply dipping, high angle northwest and northeast trending shear zones, some of which are mineralized (Figure 3). Airborne magnetic data in this part of the Fairbanks District indicate the presence of district scale east-west and northeast trending structures which appear to pre-date N60-80E folding. Although little empirical evidence exists from the West Ridge property itself, gold mineralization on the West Ridge project probably post-dates regional and district scale folding and probably is contemporaneous with or slightly younger than district-scale northeast trending structures and plutonic activity.

Deposit Types

Recent discoveries in the Fairbanks District have outlined a series of distinctive mineral occurrences which appear to be genetically related to mid-Cretaceous plutonic activity which affected a large area of northwestern British Columbia, Yukon, Alaska and the Russian Far East.

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This work, based on extensive geologic and structural mapping and analytical studies (major and trace element analysis, fluid inclusion microthermometry, Ar40/Ar39 geochronology, and isotope analysis) has provided new information regarding gold metallogenesis in the Fairbanks district. A synthesis of this information suggests an ore deposit model in which gold and high CO2 bearing fluids fractionate from ilmenite series, I-type mid-Cretaceous intrusions during the late phases of differentiation. The gold is deposited in anastomosing pegmatite and/or feldspar selvage quartz veins. Brittle fracturing and continued fluid convection and concentration lead to concentration of gold bearing fluids in intrusions and schist-hosted brittle quartz-sericite shear zones. Carbonate and/or calcareous metamafic horizons host W-Au skarns and replacement deposits. Structurally prepared calcareous and/or carbonaceous horizons may host bulk-mineable replacement deposits. These occur most distal to the intrusions within favorable host rock in the Fairbanks Schist and Chatanika Terrane.

Seven different potentially economic gold deposit types have been identified in Interior Alaska and the Fairbanks district. They are:

  1.

Gneiss or high-grade schist-hosted quartz veins or metasomatic replacement zones proximal to or within causative intrusives. Metals associated include Au, Bi, and As and possibly Cu and W. Pogo (5.6 Moz) and Gil (433,000 oz) are examples of such mineralization. There is a strong genetic relationship between the causative intrusion and gold mineralization but no obvious spatial relationship.

  2.

Stockwork-shear style mineralization hosted in porphyritic intermediate to felsic intrusives. Mineralization contains Au with anomalous Bi, Te, W and trace Mo. Examples include Fort Knox (7.2 Moz) and Dublin Gulch (+1 Moz). There is a strong genetic and spatial relationship between host intrusion and gold mineralization.

  3.

Porphyritic stockwork with intrusion/schist shear hosted Au-As-Sb (Ryan Lode, 2.4 Moz) with a strong genetic and spatial relationship between host intrusion and gold mineralization,

  4.

Base metal ± Au, Ag and W intrusion hosted mineralization with both spatial and genetic relationship between precious metal mineralization and intrusion. Examples include Dolphin (0.6 Moz) and Silver Fox prospects.

  5.

Structurally controlled mineralization hosted by schist-only high angle shear zones and veins. Associated metals include Au, As, Sb, Ag, Pb and W in low sulfide quartz-carbonate veins. Alteration adjacent to veins is pervasive quartz-sericite-sulfide alteration that can extend for up to one mile from the source structure. Deposits were mined heavily prior to World War II and are noteworthy because of their exceptional grades (+1 to +5,000 opt Au). Examples include Cleary Hill (280,000 oz production), Christina, Hi Yu (110,000 oz production) and Tolovana (500 oz production) veins. There is a strong genetic relationship between the causative intrusion and gold mineralization but no obvious spatial relationship.

  6.

Low angle, disseminated, carbonate-hosted Au-As-Sb mineralization associated with brittle thrust or detachment zones distal to generative intrusives. The True North deposit (1.3 Moz) is an example of this type of mineralization. There is a strong genetic relationship between causative intrusions and gold mineralization but no obvious spatial relationship.

  7.

Shear-hosted monominerallic massive stibnite pods and lenses. Trace As, Au, Ag and Pb but these prospects are noteworthy because they appear to represent the most distal end members of the intrusive gold hydrothermal systems. Examples include Scrafford and Stampede mines. There is a strong genetic relationship between causative intrusions and gold mineralization but no obvious spatial relationship.

Mineralization

Little is know of the controls for mineralization on the West Ridge project however gold mineralization in the Fairbanks District is well documented and reasonably well understood. The majority of the mineralized structures in the district trend either N60-80W and dip steeply to the southwest or N40-60E and dip steeply to the northwest. These shear zone geometries and their distribution may represent sympathetic structures generated by regional scale shear couples related to Tertiary (post 55 Ma) motion of the Tintina and Denali faults.

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Examination of the spatial arrangement of gold occurrences in the Fairbanks District suggests clusters or swarms of gold-bearing veins, stockworks and shear zones are controlled by a series of district-scale northeast-trending structures regularly spaced approximately 8,000 feet (2.4 km) apart across the district. These structures were first identified as district scale features evident on public airborne geophysical surveys conducted in the mid-1990’s. Their periodicity with respect to clusters of known gold occurrences was unrecognized prior to that time. The Eldorado fault, which cuts through the West Ridge property (Figure 3), is the best documented of these district scale northeast structures and appears to control mineralization at both the Ryan Lode (2.4 million ounces) and the True North (1.3 million ounces) deposits. This 8,000-foot periodicity extends to the east where it is associated with the 600,000 ounce Dolphin deposit and several of the district’s largest past-producing lode gold mines (Freeman, 2004). Gold mineralization to the west of the Eldorado Creek fault in the Treasure Creek area and the Sheep Creek area of Ester Dome may also be controlled by regularly spaced northeast trending structures.

The other recently recognized feature of gold mineralization in the West Ridge area is related to the structural relationship between “lower plate” rocks of the Fairbanks Schist – Cleary Sequence and “upper plate” rocks of the Chatanika Terrane. Published maps of the district indicate that the contact between the overlying Chatanika Terrane and rocks of the lower plate are marked by a single north-dipping thrust plane that strikes northeast. This thrust event was dated at 130 Ma based on data derived from a single core hole drilled by Placer Dome on Marshall Dome several miles east of the West Ridge project. The actual contact between upper and lower plate rocks is not exposed at surface anywhere along its mapped trace so the inferred motion direction (thrust versus low-angle gravity fault) is unknown. With the exception of gold and antimony mineralization in the vicinity of the True North deposit, published geologic maps of the district indicate that all of the historic lode gold, tungsten and antimony occurrences in the district are hosted in lower plate rocks. However, geological and geochemical data from the West Ridge property suggest that lode gold mineralization on the Old Glory prospect on the West Ridge project is hosted in a zone containing mixed lithologies derived from both upper and lower plate rocks. This mixed zone appears to may be the result of multiple en-echelon low angle structures separating upper and lower plate rocks. If this interpretation is correct, the grade and geometry of gold mineralization in the West Ridge project area may be controlled in part by district-scale northeast trending “master” structures and favorable physio-chemical conditions in host rocks separated by en-echelon low-angle faults related to emplacement of the Chatanika Terrane.

Drilling and Exploration and Development

Prior to the work conducted by Teryl in 2003 the only significant exploration work conducted on the West Ridge project was that conducted by Teryl (1992-96) and Kinross (1998 and 1999, See History). Teryl’s efforts consisted of ground magnetics and soil auger sampling which identified the East and West anomalies (see History). Except for gold values, details of these surveys are not available to the author. A total of 718 soil auger samples were collected by Teryl with gold values ranging from 2 to 990 ppb (Teryl, 1996). Anomalous gold was clustered in two locations in the central part of the property on the ridge between Moose Creek and Seattle Creek and on the divide between upper Dome Creek and Steamboat Creek. A single anomalous soil sample containing 215 ppb gold was detected near the Old Glory prospect but was not associated with other anomalous soil samples.

In 1998 Kinross Gold, then operating the Fort Knox project and conducting district-scale work on a number of other projects acquired the West Ridge property and completed due diligence sampling that confirmed the presence of anomalous gold, arsenic and antimony on the East and West Anomalies. Additional widely spaced Bombardier soil auger sampling was completed in 1999 and reverse circulation drilling was conducted on the West anomaly. This work identified two large gold in soil anomalies, the East and West anomalies. The West anomaly measures 4,000 feet NW-SE by 3,000 feet NE-SW and contained numerous

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samples with +100 ppb gold and +200 ppm arsenic. Limited surface rubble crop returned anomalous gold in felsic intrusive and quartzite with the values ranging from <5 ppb to 16.45 ppm. The East anomaly, while containing lower overall geochemical values, is over 7,000 feet long NE-SW and extends off the West Ridge property to the northeast. Gold in soils on the East anomaly reached a high of 1.64 ppm. A single sample anomaly containing 960 ppb gold was identified 2,000 feet west of the Old Glory prospect but the Old Glory prospect was not covered by the Kinross soil sampling grid.

Kinross conducted follow-up reverse circulation drilling in 5 holes (1,650 feet) on the West anomaly. This drilling failed to intersect significant mineralization except for a 20 foot interval in hole WR1 with returned 0.033 opt gold from 115 to 135 feet and a 10 foot interval in hole WR4 with returned 0.040 opt gold from 340 to 350 feet. Gold-bearing intrusive rocks that were mapped and sampled at the surface were not found to be extensive in drilling. Anomalous gold in drill cuttings was associated with elevated arsenic and antimony similar to other gold-bearing systems in the central Fairbanks Mining District. Kinross terminated its interest in the property prior to the 2000 exploration season.

In July of 2003 Teryl retained Avalon Development to evaluate the West Ridge project and make recommendations for future exploration. This evaluation revealed a number of significant gold and pathfinder anomalies where no follow-up work had been completed. Initial field exploration efforts in 2003 focused on the Black Dome area of the property where prospecting revealed the presence of a previously undocumented abandoned adit/trench on the north facing ridge above the Dome Creek (Figure 2). Chatanika terrain eclogite, black carbonaceous schist and quartzite are exposed in the walls of the excavation which appears to date back to the 1950’s. Samples of the carbon rich, Fe-oxide stained carbonaceous schist returned a high of 105 ppb gold. Due to the low gold concentrations and lack of quartz stockwork veining characteristic of upper plate mineralization, exploration emphasis was shifted to the south to the Old Glory prospect.

Initial efforts at the Old Glory prospect included hand-trenching in the vicinity of the historic tungsten-bearing trench. Grab rock sampling conducted in and around this old slit trench produced several significant gold values with associated with highly anomalous arsenic and sporadic anomalous lead, bismuth, antimony and tungsten (Table 2). The presences of gold-bearing calc-silicate alteration in some rock samples and sporadic anomalous bismuth (<2 to 144 ppm) suggests the presence of a gold-favorable intrusive system similar to that being drilled currently by Kinross Gold at their Gil project in the eastern Fairbanks District.

The extent of this type of mineralization and the possible presence of the causative intrusive were unknown so a small closely spaced (10 meter spacing) soil auger grid was placed over the Old Glory discovery area. This work revealed a 100 square meter + 50 ppb gold anomaly within which 56 out of 121 samples contained over 100 ppb Au with a high of 1,155 ppb Au. An expanded soil sampling program was conducted August-October and consisted of an additional 405 soil auger samples on 25 meter centers.

Geochemical data from the two integrated grids delineated at least two prominent structural trends associated with gold mineralization at Old Glory. The dominant trend for gold in soils is N30E. This trend lies along a mapped district-scale northeast trending linear defined from airborne geophysical surveys. A less apparent N45W trending gold anomaly can also be interpreted from the soil geochemistry however the northwest trending anomalies are less continuous and of lower magnitude than the northeast trending anomalies. There is a strong correlation in soil geochemistry between Au, As and Sb and to a lesser degree with Bi and W. Gold, arsenic and antimony are elevated within a northeast trending corridor measuring 650 meters in length by 375 meters in width. The anomaly remains open to expansion beyond the limits of the soil auger grid. Gold, arsenic and antimony also display less obvious northwest trending soil anomalies suggesting the northwest trending mineralization pre-dates the district-scale northeast shear system.

Soil geochemistry also delineates a remarkably clear boundary between schists of the Chatanika Terrane, Fairbanks Schist and Cleary Sequence on the south and hornblende granodiorite to the north. This intrusive is thought to be the western limit of the Pedro Dome intrusive. Limited rubble crop of the Pedro Dome

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intrusive exists along the old powerline access road on the north end of the soil grid. These rubble crops are unaltered and unmineralized as are most of the soil chips collected from soil samples in the northern 1/3 of the soil grid area. However, more felsic derivatives of the Pedro Dome intrusive are concentrated along the intrusive – schist contact and intruding into the schist units south of the main contact. These contact units are strongly sericite altered and contain variable amounts of gold and pathfinder elements. Soil geochemistry suggests potassic alteration and Au-As-Sb mineralization are associated with these marginal phase intrusives. In addition elevated bismuth values in soils, while generally low (3-5 ppm), are generally located within or proximal to sericite-altered granodiorite. These findings suggest gold mineralization may be related to late-stage intrusives which are in turn controlled by the district scale northeast trending structures. Similar genetic conclusions have been drawn for two other deposits in the district: the 1.3 million ounce True North deposit mineralization, located along the Eldorado fault, a district-scale northeast trending structure that is parallel to and approximately one mile northwest of the Old Glory area, and the 0.6 million ounce Dolphin deposit located along a similar northeast trending linear that is parallel to and approximately one-half mile southeast of the Old Glory area.

The preliminary rock sampling and soil auger sampling results prompted Teryl to approved backhoe trenching over the central portion of the Old Glory soil anomaly. Three trenches (342 meters total) were excavated, mapped and sampled in October 2003. In addition, ground based magnetics and VLF-EM surveys that parallel trenches were completed in late November and a follow-up magnetic survey was completed in mid January 2004 to expand geophysical coverage to the south of the trenches.

Two of the three trenches were oriented west-northwest to cross the main trend of soil anomalies and the predominant structural grain through the Old Glory area. The other was oriented N30E parallel to and within the heart of the Old Glory soil anomaly. Overburden thickness ranges from about 3 to 8 feet and consisted of thawed aeolian silt on heavily weathered bedrock. Trench WR-1 is a total of 155 meters in length, trench WR-2 was 72 meters in length and trench WR-3 was 115 meters in length. Each trench was mapped and chip channel samples collected from the floor of the trench. Geochemical sampling was conducted on 1 meter centers for altered and/or mineralized intervals and 2 meter centers for unaltered rocks. Samples collected for trenches WR-1, WR-2, and WR-3 totaled 119, 35, and 93, respectively. An additional 34 samples were collected as high-grade material from selected locations.

The dominant lithologies present in the WR trenches include massive to thinly bedded gray quartzite, massive to fissile brown and buff micaceous quartzite, and fissile brown to gray quartz mica schist. Less common lithologies observed include dark gray aphanitic quartz porphyry dikes, eclogite and biotite diorite to granodiorite. Barren metamorphic “sweat” quartz lenses from 1 to 3 centimeters in width are common and normally parallel metamorphic foliation. Unaltered rocks generally weather rusty brown-orange to rusty orange-brown.

Folding, faulting and shearing of varying degrees and orientations were observed in the West Ridge trenches. In general, foliation (S1) and original bedding (S0) are parallel and dip variably to the south. Small folds are common with a predominant fold axis orientation of 070o with axes plunging 14oE. There is no preferred orientation for faults. Dominant trends are NE, NW, and E-W +/- 20o. with variable but generally steep (+60o) dips. Faulting and shearing appear to be polyphase and some evidence was observed for foliation plane or low angle displacement. Shears are characterized by variable sericite alteration and occasional quartz veins/lenses. Several orientations of vertical to steeply dipping joints also are present, the most prominent being N20-25oE, N80oW, N80oE, and N40oW.

Sericite alteration is pervasive in rocks containing significant anomalous gold and/or pathfinder elements and varies from weak and patchy in less altered rocks to pervasive and strong in highly altered rocks, most commonly where host rocks are cut by shear zones or at contacts with altered granitic rocks. Secondary oxidation products consists of As, Sb, Fe, and Mn oxides. Relative trace element concentrations help in identification between and among the various rock types at the nearby True North mine and proved useful in helping distinguish between oxidized, hydrothermally altered and fresh units within the Chatanika terrane, Cleary Sequence and Fairbanks Schist.

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Quartz of hydrothermal origin was observed in all trenches, most commonly as 1 to 15 cm veins or stockwork veins in shear zones. Although surface oxidation is nearly complete, small amounts of unoxidized vein material remains in some of these shears and contain 1-3% sulfide/sulfosalts including arsenopyrite, pyrite, stibnite and/or boulangerite-jamesonite. The best exposures of mineralized shear zone was about the 70-meter mark of trench WR-1. The shear zone at this location is controlled by a steeply south dipping fault trending 290o. The immediate 10 meters in the hanging wall (south side) of this mineralized structure contained abundant slickensides. The shear itself consists of 30 cm of mineralized milky quartz vein and sericite altered schist fragments. A one-meter chip channel rock sample from this shear returned 595 ppb gold and 2,430 ppm arsenic. Grab samples from this same zone returned 2,120 ppb gold and 5,280 ppm arsenic.

Trench 2 intercepted variably mineralized rock but failed to return plus-1 gram per tonne gold values from channel or grab samples. The best interval in trench 2 was a six-meter zone from 18 to 24 meters that returned three consecutive 2-meter samples which returned 189, 705 and 136 ppb gold, respectively. The first of these three samples contained a small dike of dark greenish gray siliceous sericite-altered intrusive suggesting a genetic relationship between anomalous gold and intrusive rocks on the prospect.

Trench WRTR0303 was oriented northeast – southwest and extended from trench WRTR0302 on the north through and beyond trench WRTR0301 on the south. The southern 15 meters of trench 3 intercepted a diorite to granodiorite intrusive which had been noted in soil chips. This intrusive was highly oxidized but was strongly sericite altered where fresh rock was present. Oxidized sulfide cast suggest the fresh rock contained 1%-5% total sulfides. This intrusion is also cut by two white aplite dikes. Geochemistry from channel samples collected in trench 3 show a dramatic increase in gold and arsenic content within the intrusive. The 14-meter section of the trench which intercepted the intrusive averages 660 ppb gold and 1,022 ppm arsenic with the highest grade portion of this interval being a two-meter zone nearest the country rock contact which averaged 2,052 ppb gold and 2,527 ppm arsenic. The intrusive mineralization remains open to expansion beyond the end of trench WRTR0303.

Following return of geochemical results from the 2003 trenching program, two ground geophysical surveys were conducted over the Old Glory prospect. The initial survey consisted of magnetics and very low frequency electromagnetics (VLF-EM) lines which were coincident with the three trenches. These surveys revealed the presence of several coincident magnetic and VLF-EM anomalies. Coincident magnetic and VLF-EM anomalies outlined in trenches 1 and 2 suggested that alteration and mineralization are likely controlled by a northeast striking structural zone which has an apparent dip of 55 degrees to the west. This interpretation is in agreement with soil geochemistry collected earlier in the season. In addition, the magnetic response from last 15 meters of trench WRTR0303 was markedly lower that the surrounding traverses within the metamorphic country rocks suggesting magnetic surveys could be a useful tool in tracing the extent of the mineralized intrusive encountered in trench 3. Magnetic lows are known to be associated with gold-bearing intrusives elsewhere in the Tintina Gold Belt.

A follow-up magnetic survey was completed over the Old Glory prospect in January 2004 in an attempt to determine the extent of the intrusive rocks encountered in trench WRTR0303. This survey consisted of three lines ranging from 500 to 700 feet in length which extended from the south end of trench 3 in a fan pattern to the southwest, south and southeast. All three lines showed a marked decrease in magnetic response to the south suggesting a possible schist – intrusive contact in that area. Additional exploration will be required to determine if significant gold mineralization is associated with this probably contact zone.

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Drilling

Past drilling on the West Ridge property was conducted by Kinrsoss Gold in 1999. (see History). This work consisted of 4 reverse circulation drill holes (1,650 feet).

A magnetic survey was conducted January 26th, 2004. The survey was a southern extension to the earlier work based on prior trenching and soil sampling, and is an attempt to define the southern limits of the intrusive - hosted schist.

In September 2004, we announced the discovery of a new zone of gold mineralization. Rock and soil sampling was conducted in August approximately 1,600 meters west of the Old Glory prospect where the Company discovered significant gold mineralization in 2003. Exploration in the newly discovered area was prompted by past soil sampling conducted by Amax Gold that indicated anomalous gold and arsenic in soils on the ridgeline between Moose Creek #1 and Moose Creek #2. Initial sampling consisted of 14 soil samples and 20 rock samples collected from hand-dug pits.

One of two areas selected for this work returned soil samples containing gold values ranging up to 848 ppb with elevated arsenic and antimony values. Gold, arsenic and antimony values were consistently higher in soil samples collected over granodiorite intrusive host rocks suggesting a possible genetic association between the intrusive rocks and gold mineralization. Rock samples collected from the same hand-dug pits where soil samples were collected returned gold values ranging up to 4,350 ppb (4.3 gpt or 0.127 opt). Gold was associated with anomalous arsenic and antimony and was hosted by iron oxide stained quartz-bearing intrusives and quartz-mica schist of the Fairbanks Schist. The extent of the mineralization is open to expansion beyond the areas sampled to date in 2004.

In November 2004, a total of 161 power auger soil samples were collected on a small grid over the southern part of the West Ridge claims adjacent to and within the ¼ mile square block of State Trust land leased to Teryl. In addition to the 161 auger samples, 14 shovel soil samples were collected in the same area as previous rock sampling which returned gold values ranging up to 4,350 ppb (4.3 gpt or 0.127 opt). The grid was extended to the south onto the northwestern edge of the Fox Creek claims in an attempt to see if mineralization on the two properties could be linked via soil samples.

Of the 175 soil samples collected, 29 returned values greater than 100 parts per billion gold with the maximum value being 981 parts per billion. An additional 32 returned anomalous gold values ranging between 50 and 100 parts per billion. Anomalous gold was associated with elevated arsenic, antimony, lead, bismuth and tungsten. The presence of anomalous bismuth (to 15 ppm) and tungsten (to 370 ppm) in soils suggests that gold mineralization within the sample grid may be intrusive related, a similarity shared by several other intrusive-related gold systems the Fairbanks District.

Anomalous gold and pathfinder elements in the 2004 soil grid occur in four discrete areas of the grid and all four areas are open to expansion into lands owned and leased by Teryl.

In December 2004, we received initial drill results from the 2004 exploration drilling at its Fox Creek prospect in the Fairbanks District, Alaska.

The two Fox Creek reverse circulation drill holes were completed in October to test surface sample results that returned 1.36 gpt gold during initial due diligence sampling and a 1995 hole drilled by AMAX Gold that returned 35 feet grading 1.68 grams of gold per tonne (0.049 opt) including a 20 foot section that returned 2.2 grams gold per tonne (0.064 opt).

Hole FC04-01 was terminated at 287 feet after passing through approximately 50 feet of sulfide-bearing granite from surface to 50 feet. Sulfides observed include pyrite and molybdenite. The hole then passed into

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oxidized quartzite and quartz mica schist from 50 feet to termination depth. Assays from this hole returned gold (values up to 5 feet grading 216 ppb) but did contain anomalous arsenic maximum value of 785 ppm and sporadic anomalous molybdenum (maximum value of 79 ppm) and tungsten (maximum value 2,840 ppm). The highest tungsten and molybdenum values came from the bottom 50 feet of the hole suggesting possible intrusive-related mineralization at depth nearby.

Hole FC04-02 was collared 20 feet northwest of hole FC04-01 and was directed to the northwest to test for subsurface extensions of granitic rocks mapped at surface in this part of the claim block. The hole encountered variably oxidized quartzite and quartz mica schist from surface to approximately 230 feet and then passed into a mixed zone of hornfelsed sediments and granitic intrusives. The hole bottomed at 300 feet in hornfelsed sediments. Significant gold mineralization was encountered in two five-foot intervals: 1,300 ppb gold from 30 to 35 feet and 2,500 ppb gold from 180 to 185 feet. Both gold-bearing intervals were hosted in altered metasediments containing minor quartz veinlets. Elevated gold values were associated with anomalous arsenic (to 5,700 ppm), molybdenum (maximum value of 82 ppm) and tungsten (maximum value 40 ppm).

Combined with soil sampling results from the adjacent West Ridge property, the Phase 1 Fox Creek drilling results suggest the presence of intrusive related and/or intrusive hosted gold mineralization on the Fox Creek property. Additional soil auger sampling and possible ground geophysics are being planned prior to additional drilling.

Trenching

Geochemical results from the three West Ridge trenches indicate the presence of widespread elevated gold, arsenic and antimony with sporadic but lower level anomalous lead, molybdenum, bismuth and tungsten . Host rocks consist of quartz mica schist, quartzite, felsic intrusives and breccia zones containing one or more of these rock types and clearly show a strong shear zone at about 70 meters in Trench 1 which separates quartzite and quartz mica schists of the Fairbanks Schist with low level gold and pathfinder levels on the west from more elevated gold and pathfinder levels to the east. Host rocks east of this structure contain elevated levels of Mg, K, Ba, Ca, Ba, Sr, and V and appear to be composed of host rocks with compositions similar to eclogitic rocks of the Chatanika Terrane, an allochthonous terrane which hosts the True North deposit to the northwest but which has never been identified as being present on the West Ridge claims. The shear at the 70 meter mark returned grab samples with values up to 2.12 grams per tonne gold and 5,280 ppm arsenic and strikes to the northeast. This shear probably is responsible for the northeast-trending gold-in-soil anomaly outlined previously by auger sampling. The extension of this shear into Trench 2 did not yield significant gold mineralization but did correspond to a 10-meter section of the trench with anomalous gold, arsenic and antimony mineralization.

The most significant intervals encountered in trenching came from the last 15 meters of trench 3 which averaged 596 ppb gold and intersected a highly oxidized sericite altered diorite to granodiorite intrusive containing up to 2.98 grams per tonne gold with 3,140 ppm arsenic (Table 1). This intrusive did not contain anomalous Pd, Ag, Sb, Bi or W. Alteration associated with the intrusive included strong sericitic alteration and a marked increase in aluminum and sodium values. This sort of silicate alteration is normally associated with albitization in and adjacent to gold-bearing intrusives in the Tintina Gold Belt of Alaska and the Yukon. This intrusive mass remains open to expansion to the west and south into an area of the previously completed soil auger grid where gold soil values are consistently anomalous (+50 ppb) and reach up to 1,000 ppb. This portion of the soil grid, measuring at least 100 meters north-south by 150 meters east-west, is defined by an amorphous gold-in-soil pattern similar to that seen in intrusive hosted gold occurrences elsewhere in the district. This portion of the grid also grab rock samples which returned up to 10 grams per tonne gold from quartz-vein float, the highest grades recovered from the property to date.

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Sampling Method and Approach

All rock samples collected during the 2003 field programs were marked in the field using Garmin 48XL and Garmin Etrex hand-held GPS units. Each grab rock sample collected for geochemical analysis was accompanied by a separate hand sample retained by Avalon for reference purposes. Each soil sample collected for analysis was accompanied by a separate lithology sample that was washed, logged and added to the digital database by Avalon. Samples collected were placed in double nylon shipping sacks and picked up at Avalon’s secured warehouse by representatives of ALS Chemex of Fairbanks.

Soil sampling completed in 2003 consisted of power auger soil sampling using 3-inch wide auger flights powered by man-portable gas powerheads. Sampling protocols in place for the program dictated that only top of bedrock soil samples would be collected. Samples were not collected at sample stations where overburden was deeper than the 12 feet of auger flight on hand or where discontinuous permafrost prevented sampling at the soil – bedrock interface. Trench channel sampling conducted in October was conducted with geologic pick and chisel.

Sample Preparation, Analyses and Security

All samples collected in 2003 were prepared by ALS Chemex at their Fairbanks preparation facility and analyzed by ALS Chemex at their North Vancouver laboratory. The entirety of each grab and channel rock sample was crushed to 85% passing 75 microns (200 mesh). The entirety of each soil sample collected in 2003 was dried, sieved through a 180 micron (80 mesh) screen and pulverized to +85% passing 75 microns (200 mesh). All soil and rock samples were analyzed for Au by 30 gram lead collection fire assay techniques with an atomic emission spectrographic finish. In addition each sample was analyzed for a suite of 27 trace elements using a four acid digestion procedure followed by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) finish. Pulps and rejects from the 2003 program were returned to Avalon Development’s Fairbanks warehouse for permanent storage.

Data Verification

Sample blanks composed of Browns Hill Quarry basalt from the Fairbanks Mining District, Alaska were inserted as the first sample in a submittal and thereafter in the same submittal on a minimum 1 for 25 basis. A total of 82 sample blanks were inserted into the sampling sequence for the 2003 program. Extensive previous analysis of this same blank rock type has given Avalon a large geochemical database for use on a comparative basis. Analyses performed by ALS Chemex on the blanks from the West Ridge project indicate no unusual or spurious sample results in the blanks submitted. No standards were included in analytical sample shipments.

Mineral Processing and Metallurgical Testing

There has been no mineral processing or metallurgical testing on mineralized material from the West Ridge property.

Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserve Estimates

There are currently no mineral resources or mineral reserve estimates on the West Ridge property.

Mining Operations

Currently, there are no mining operations conducted on the West Ridge Mineral Claims.

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OIL AND GAS WELL INTERESTS

The Company owns 6.5% working interest (4.680% net revenue interest) in the Peters No. 1 Well, in Fayette County, Texas, and a 7.5% working interest (5.79375% net revenue interest) in each of the C-S #1, Jancik #2 and Herrmann #4 wells, located in Burleson County, Texas.

On May 18, 2006, the Company entered into an agreement with IAS Communications, Inc. to purchase a 40% interest (subject to 40% net revenue interests to others) in the Ken Lee #1 natural gas well, located in Knox County, Kentucky, USA, for $103,045 ($92,500 US). As the well was still being drilled at the date of the balance sheet, no depletion has been allowed for. The Company has first refusal rights to participate in up to 23 future wells.

Plan of Operations

Source of Funds for Fiscal 2005/2006

Our primary source of funds since incorporation has been through the issuance of equity securities.

We have been successful in the past in acquiring capital through the issuance of shares of our common stock, sales of options on mineral properties and through advances from related parties. Although we intend to continue utilizing these sources, there has been no assurance in the past that these sources and methods would continue to be available in the future.

On February 14, 2000, John G. Robertson, our President, issued a "Commitment to Provide Financing to Teryl Resources Corp. as Required for Ongoing Operations". The substance of the Commitment states that, if the Company is not able to obtain funds required for maintaining its ongoing operations and status as a publicly traded company, from other sources, Mr. Robertson agrees and commits to provide, and/or arrange for any such funds for the Company on either a loan, equity, or combination basis, on mutually agreeable terms, and which comply with any regulatory rules and regulations applicable to such transactions. Mr. Robertson further states that such maintenance funding requirements are estimated at approximately C$100,000 per year and that he is capable of and willing to provide and/or arrange for such funding until the Company is able to obtain adequate funding from other sources, and/or is able to generate net earnings from revenues which will sustain its ongoing operations.

In the event that Mr. Robertson were not able to meet his commitments, and no other sources of capital were available to the Company in the future, on a reasonable financial basis, it would face the same obstacles as many small, undercapitalized companies do, and, in the worst case, could be forced to reorganize or liquidate, either of which consequence would likely have an adverse financial effect upon the Company's shareholders.

At the present time, and in its present circumstances, there exists substantial doubt as to the ability of the Company to continue as a going concern, since there is no ongoing source of revenues and profits capable of sustaining the Company's operating overhead, although Mr. Robertson has committed to ensuring that the Company is able to survive on an interim basis, over the longer term, the Company will need to either begin to derive revenues from its existing resource-based assets, or find and enter into a business which holds the prospects of ensuring that it can continue as a going concern. Management is aware of such need and is both researching new business opportunities and assessing potential financing possibilities for funding its existing resource property obligations and also any new business which may be entered into or acquired.

We had a working capital surplus of $ 207,994 on May 31, 2006. Subsequent to May 31, 2006, we have raised an additional $ 5,878 from Oil & Gas operations and $Nil through the sale of common shares.

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Use of Funds for Fiscal 2006/2007

During Fiscal 2006/2007, we estimate that we will expend approximately $350,000 on general and administrative expenses. During Fiscal 2006/2007 we estimate that we will expend approximately $198,000 on property exploration and development expenses.

Anticipated Changes to Facilities/Employees

We anticipate there will not be any changes to either facilities or employees in the near future.

United States vs. Foreign Sales/Assets

We have had no revenue during the past five fiscal years from the sale of assets.

As of May 31, 2006, we had assets valued at $ 240,586 located in Canada; and assets valued at $ 3,261,017 located in the United States.

ITEM 4A.     UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

This section is not applicable as we are not an accelerated filer or a large accelerated filer, as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act, or a well-known seasoned issuer as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.

ITEM 5.        OPERATING AND FINANCIAL REVIEW AND PROSPECTS

The following contains forward-looking statements relating to revenues, expenditures and sufficiency of capital resources. Actual results may differ from those projected in the forward-looking statements for a number of reasons, including those described in this Annual Report.

Our financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Canadian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and Canadian/USA Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (GAAS). All material numerical differences between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP, are described in footnotes to the financial statements. We are a Canadian company and therefore our financial statements have been prepared in Canadian dollars.

Audited financial statements for the fiscal years ended May 31, 2006, May 31, 2005 and May 31, 2004 respectively are included in this Registration Statement.

Overview

We are an oil, gas, and mineral exploration company engaged in the acquisition and exploration of oil and gas, and mineral properties. Our expenditures are made acquiring mineral properties and carrying out exploration work. We do not have any producing mineral properties at this time. We also acquire oil and gas property interests and participate in drilling wells. The recoverability of amounts shown for investments, mineral properties, interests in oil and gas properties and the related deferred expenditures is dependent upon the existence of economically recoverable reserves, the ability to obtain the necessary financing to complete the exploration, the profitability of future production or our ability to dispose of those assets on a profitable basis. Our ongoing operation is dependent upon cash flow from successful operations and equity financing. We have incurred a loss of $ 430,646 in the year ended May 31, 2006 (2005 - $ 515,740; 2004 - $ 791,776).

A.        OPERATING RESULTS

This review of the results of operations should be read in conjunction with our audited financial statements for the years ended May 31, 2006, May 31, 2005 and May 31, 2004.

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Fiscal Year Ended May 31, 2006 compared to Fiscal year Ended May 31, 2005

Results of Operations

During fiscal 2006, revenue from oil and gas operations was $ 27,154 as compared to $ 28,307 for fiscal 2005. The Company also received advances from related parties of $26,956 during fiscal 2006.

Administrative expenses in fiscal 2006 totaled $378,474 as compared to $528,086 in 2005. The expenses decreased from the prior year mainly due to the decreased activity in investor relations, which was $110,076 in fiscal 2006 (2005 - $229,678). Office, rent and telephone totaled $11,944 compared to $13,786 in 2005. Professional fees totaled $46,228 compared to $50,718 in 2005. Management and directors fees decreased to $74,262 in 2006 from $84,899 in 2005. The Company paid $163,320 for mining exploration work in 2006 as compared to $253,967 in 2005. Keltic Bryce Enterprises was paid $ 161,749 regarding their outstanding debenture and accrued interest.

Fiscal Year Ended May 31, 2005 compared to Fiscal year Ended May 31, 2004

Results of Operations

During fiscal 2005, revenue from oil and gas operations was $ 28,307 as compared to $ 21,037 for fiscal 2004.

Administrative expenses in fiscal 2005 totaled $528,086 as compared to $769,158 in 2004. The expenses decreased from the prior year mainly due to the decreased activity in investor relations, which was $229,678 in fiscal 2005 (2004 - $327,302) and management and directors fees which decreased to $84,899 from $224,877 in fiscal 2004. Office, rent and telephone totaled $13,786 compared to $18,393 in 2004. Professional fees totaled $50,718 compared to $29,435 in 2004. The Company paid $253,967 for mining exploration work in 2005 as compared to $654,642 in 2004. The Company paid $22,602 for mining acquisitions in 2005 as compared to $20,645 in 2004. Related parties were repaid $142,203 in advances from prior years.

Results of Operations for the three months ended August 31, 2006 compared to August 31, 2005

Financial Results

During the period ended August 31, 2006, revenue from oil and gas operations was $6,661 as compared to $6,362 for 2005. The Company also received advances from related parties of $7,548 during the period

For the three months ended August 31, 2006, the Company incurred a net loss of $69,002 (loss per share - $0.002) compared to a net loss of $84,138 (loss per share - $0.002) for the period ended August 31, 2005. The loss is comprised of the general and administrative expenses of $74,880 (2005 – $73,326) and oil and gas operating expenses of $783 (2005 - $1,296). In the August 31, 2005 period the Company wrote off $15,878 in mineral property acquisition costs as the Fox Creek option was cancelled.

In the three-month period ended August 31, 2006 compared to the same period in prior year, the Company decreased its mineral exploration expenses to $2,664 from $34,509 and its investor relations to $23,672 from $30,403. Since the Keltic Bryce debenture was repaid in fiscal 2006, the interest payments are no longer a factor in administration costs. Most of the other expenses for the Company remain relatively constant between the two comparative periods.

B.        LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

Liquidity and Capital Resources

In the past, we have derived most of our development and operating capital primarily from the issuance of capital stock. Minor amounts were derived from interest.

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We have been successful in the past in acquiring capital through the issuance of shares of our Common Stock, and through advances from related parties. Although we intend to continue utilizing these sources, there has been no assurance in the past that these sources and methods would continue to be available in the future.

In the event that no other sources of capital were available to us in the future, on a reasonable financial basis, it would face the same obstacles as many small, undercapitalized companies do, and, in the worst case, we could be forced to reorganize or liquidate, either of which consequence would likely have an adverse financial effect upon our shareholders.

Liquidity

Fiscal Year Ended May 31, 2006 compared to Fiscal year Ended May 31, 2005

During 2006, we financed our operations by the issue of 2,690,500 common shares for cash proceeds of $671,250, which consisted of the issuance of 2,648,000 common shares pursuant to private placement offerings completed during the year to raise cash proceeds of $657,746 after issue costs, the issuance of 37,500 common shares pursuant to the exercise of stock options for cash proceeds of $7,500, and the issuance of 5,000 shares pursuant to the exercise of share purchase warrants for cash proceeds of $1,750.

During 2006, we spent $390,492 of these funds on operating activities as discussed above under Results of Operation for the year ended May 31, 2006 as compared to $529,428 the year ended May 31, 2005.

Our cash position decreased by $108,651 to $209,636 and our working capital as at May 31, 2006 was $207,994.

Fiscal Year Ended May 31, 2005 compared to Fiscal year Ended May 31, 2004

During 2005, we financed our operations by the issue of 3,597,000 common shares for cash proceeds of $926,213, which consisted of the issuance of 2,000,000 common shares pursuant to private placement offerings completed during the year to raise cash proceeds of $593,363 after issue costs and the issue of 1,597,000 shares pursuant to the exercise of share purchase warrants for cash proceeds of $332,850.

During 2005, we spent $529,428 of these funds on operating activities as discussed above under Results of Operation for the year ended May 31, 2005 as compared to $1,167,809 the year ended May 31, 2004.

Our cash position decreased by $52,271 to $318,287 and our working capital at May 31, 2005 was $138,460.

Fiscal Year Ended May 31, 2004 compared to Fiscal year Ended May 31, 2003

During 2004, we financed our operations by the issue of 7,741,000 common shares for cash proceeds of $2,650,187, which consisted of the issuance of 7,000,000 common shares pursuant to private placement offerings completed during the year to raise cash proceeds of $2,505,012 after issue costs, the issuance of 297,500 common shares pursuant to the exercise of stock options for cash proceeds of $57,125, and the issue of 443,500 shares pursuant to the exercise of share purchase warrants for cash proceeds of $88,050.

During 2004, we spent $1,201,934 of these funds on operating activities as discussed above under Results of Operation for the year ended May 31, 2004 as compared to $342,517 the year ended May 31, 2003.

Our cash position increased by $420,939 to $370,558 and our working capital at May 31, 2004 was $20,032.

Capital Resources

Our authorized capital consists of 100,000,000 common shares without par value and 5,000,000 Preferred Shares (non-voting) with a par value of $1.00. At May 31, 2006 we had 39,468,188 issued and outstanding

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common shares (May 31, 2005 – 36,777,688) issued and outstanding common shares), and at November 8, 2006 we had 39,468,188 issued and outstanding common shares. No Preferred Shares have been issued to date. The directors of the Company adopted the Teryl Resources Corp. 2002 Stock Option Plan (the “Plan” or the “2002 Plan”), and received shareholder approval of same on January 22, 2003. The Company has adopted a type of plan under which options may be granted for a number of shares up to 10% of the issued and outstanding shares of the Company from time to time. As the number of shares reserved for issuance under the Plan increases with the issue of additional shares by the Company, the Plan is considered to be a “rolling” stock option plan. This “rolling” plan requires Shareholder approval annually.

During the year ended May 31, 2006, 37,500 stock options were exercised, 375,000 stock options expired or were cancelled and no stock options were granted. As at May 31, 2006 we had 2,177,500 stock options outstanding at exercise prices ranging from $0.15 per share to $0.45 per share with expiry dates ranging from October 7, 2006 to March 5, 2009. These stock options vest over a two-year period from the date of grant. Subsequent to May 31, 2006, no stock options have been exercised and 250,000 options at an exercise price of $0.285 per share and 50,000 at an exercise price of $0.30 were issued. If exercised, the remaining 2,177,500 stock options would increase our available cash by $463,500.

As at May 31, 2006 we had 1,324,000 warrants outstanding exercisable at a price of $0.30 per share before May 17, 2007 and $0.35 per share before May 17, 2008. If exercised, the outstanding 1,324,000 warrants would increase our available cash by $430,300 at an average price of $0.325.

Contributed surplus was $169,401 as at May 31, 2006 (2005 - $175,935). The decrease of $ 6,534 represents the difference between the fair value of 37,500 stock options exercised in the fiscal year ended May 31, 2006, which had already been recorded in the Company’s books and the fair market value at the date of exercise. The fair value of the outstanding options, compensation options and broker’s warrants granted was calculated using the Black-Scholes method of valuation.

As at May 31, 2005 we had 2,590,000 stock options outstanding ranging from an exercise price of $0.15 per share to $0.45 per share with expiry dates ranging from February 19, 2006 to October 19, 2009. These stock options vest over a two year period from the date of grant.

As at May 31, 2005 we had 3,184,500 warrants outstanding ranging from an exercise price of $0.35 per share to $0.60 per share with expiry dates ranging from August 26, 2005 to May 18, 2006.

During fiscal 2005, no stock options were exercised, 622,000 warrants were exercised at $0.30 per share for proceeds of $186,600 and 975,000 warrants were exercised at $0.15 per share for proceeds of $146,250. We do not have any long-term debt or other obligations.

Financings

We have financed our operations through funds raised in loans, private placements of equity securities, shares issued for property, shares issued in debt settlements, and shares issued upon exercise of stock options and share purchase warrants.

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        Amount
Fiscal Year Nature of Share Issuance   Number of Shares (Cdn $)
Fiscal 2005 Private placement warrants exercised A 622,000 186,600
  Private placement warrants exercised B 975,000 146,250
  Private placement C 2,000,000 593,363
         
Fiscal 2006 Stock option exercised D 37,500 7,500
    E    
  Private placement   2,648,000 662,000
    F    
  Stock option exercised   5,000 1,750

  A.

During the August 31, 2004 quarter, 10 individuals exercised private placement warrants totalling 622,000 shares at a price of $ 0.30 per share to net the treasury $ 186,600.

  B.

During the November 30, 2004 quarter, 3 individuals exercised private placement warrants totalling 975,000 shares at a price of $ 0.15 per share to net the treasury $ 146,250.

  C.

On May 18, 2005, the Company issued 2,000,000 units of capital stock pursuant to a Private Placement with 42 placees at a price of $ 0.30 per unit ($ 600,000 less issue costs of $ 6,637) to net the treasury $ 593,363. Each unit consists of one share and one-half share purchase warrant exercisable within one year for $ 0.35 per share.

  D.

On February 23, 2006, a consultant exercised a portion of his stock option for 37,500 common shares at a price of $ 0.20 to net the treasury $ 7,500.

  E.

On May 17, 2006, the Company issued 2,648,000 units of capital stock pursuant to a Private Placement with 3 placees at a price of $0.25 per unit. Each unit consists of one share and one- half share purchase warrant exercisable within one year for $0.30 per share (or for $0.35 within the second year).

  F.

On May 18, 2006, one individual exercised warrants for 5,000 shares at a price of $0.35 per share.

Capital Expenditures

Fiscal Year  
   
Fiscal 2005 $ 39,686 (1)
   
Fiscal 2006 $ 103,045 (2)

(1) This expenditure related to the purchase of mineral properties for $ 22,602 and automotive and office equipment for $17,084

(2) This expenditure related to the purchase gas well interests. For US GAAP this amount is expensed.

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Accumulated expenditures for the Mineral properties to May 31, 2006:

    Westridge Black Dome (1) Fish Creek Fox Creek (2)
Expense ($) Gil Property Property      
Geology 1,299,592 244,902 Nil 53,113 nil
Drilling and 769,090 Nil Nil 48,785 nil
Trenching          
Geophysics Nil 351,113 Nil Nil Nil
Admin. Nil 25,832 Nil Nil Nil
Tech. Anal. 7,383 6,789 Nil 20,884 Nil
Acquisition 31,127 116,189 Nil 33,538 Nil
Costs          

(1) All expenses for this claim included in Westridge property figures.
(2) The lease was cancelled in the May 31, 2006 year and accordingly, property costs and exploration costs were written off.

US GAAP Reconciliation

Under Canadian GAAP, it is acceptable to defer mineral property acquisition and exploration costs until a decision to abandon the property is made, it is determined that the property does not have economically recoverable reserves or that a company is unlikely to pursue exploration activities on the property. Under U.S. GAAP, mineral exploration costs are expensed until it can be proven that economically viable reserves are present on the property and a company has the ability and intention to pursue exploitation of these reserves.

Under Canadian GAAP, cash flows relating to mineral property exploration costs are reported as investing activities. For U.S. GAAP, these costs would be characterized as operating activities.

Under Canadian GAAP, future income taxes are calculated based on enacted or substantially enacted tax rates applicable to future years. Under U.S. GAAP, only enacted rates are used in the calculation of future income taxes. This GAAP difference did not result in a difference in our financial position, results of operations or cash flows for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004.

We have adopted the fair value based approach to Stock Based Compensation under the provisions of CICA 3870 and SFAS No. 148. The method of adoption applied by us is permissible under both Canadian and US standards.

C.        RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, PATENTS AND LICENSES, ETC.

There were no expenditures on research and development over the past three years ended May 31, 2004, May 31, 2005 and May 31, 2006. We do not hold any patents, trademarks or copyrights.

D.        TREND INFORMATION

We currently have no active business operations that would be effected by recent trends in productions, sales, etc. We have no material net sales or revenues that would be affected by recent trends other than the general effect of mineral and oil and gas prices on our ability to raise capital and those other general economic items.

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E.        OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS

There are no known off-balance sheet arrangements other than those disclosed in this Form 20-F and in our audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended May 31, 2006.

F.        TABULAR DISCLOSURE OF CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS

The following table provides information as of the latest fiscal year end balance sheet date with respect to the Company’s known contractual obligations specified below.


Payments due by period
Contractual Obligations

Total

Less than
1 year
1-3 years

3-5
years
More
than 5
years
Mineral Property Obligations 447,500 447,500 Nil Nil Nil
Long-term debt obligations Nil     - -
Capital (Finance) Lease obligations Nil     - -
Operating lease obligations Nil     - -
Purchase Obligations Nil     - -
Other Long-term liabilities reflected
on the Company’s Balance sheet under
US GAAP
Nil





-

-

Total 447,500 447,500 Nil Nil Nil

As we explore our properties, we decide which ones to proceed with and which ones to abandon. To fully exercise the options under various agreements for the acquisition of interests in properties located in Alaska and Arizona, we must incur exploration expenditures on the properties and make payments to the optionors as follows:


Property
Calendar
Year
Option/Advance
Royalty Payment
Expenditure
Commitment

Number of Shares
         
Gil Property, Alaska 2006 $ - $ - -
  2007 $ - $ - -
Westridge Property, Alaska 2006 $ - $ - -
  2007 $ - $ - -
Fish Creek, Alaska 2006 $ - $ 193,750 100,000
  2007 $ - $ 193,750 -
Black Dome, Alaska 2006 $ - $ - -
  2007 $ - $ - -
Gold Hill, Arizona 2006 $ - $ - -
  2007 $ 10,000 $ 50,000 -

These amounts may be reduced in the future as we determine which properties are of merit and abandon those with which we do not intend to proceed.

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Oil and Gas Wells:

The Company has no commitment to participate in the drilling of gas wells in Knox & Laurel Counties located in Kentucky, USA, however it has first right of refusal to participate in up to 23 future wells to be drilled.

G.        Safe Harbor

Not applicable.

ITEM 6.        DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT AND EMPLOYEES

A.        DIRECTORS AND SENIOR MANAGEMENT

As of May 31, 2006, our Board of Directors consisted of four Directors, two of whom are independent (or “outside”) non-executive Directors. The following table provides certain information about the members of our Board of Directors as of January 2, 2007.

Name Position with the Company Age Date of First Election or Appointment
John G. Robertson (2)(3) President, Director 66 October 25 , 1982
Jennifer Lorette (1)(3) Director 34 February 20, 2004
Susanne Robertson (1)(2)(3) Director 60 September 12 , 1990
Monique van Oord (1)(3) Chief Financial Officer, Secretary, Director 45 October 17, 2002

  (1)

Indicates member of the Issuer's audit committee.

     
  (2)

The Senior Management serves at the pleasure of the Board of Directors.

     
  (3)

Each director of the Issuer holds office until the next Annual General Meeting unless his or her office is earlier vacated in accordance with the Articles of the Company and the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia), or unless he or she becomes disqualified to act as a director.

John Robertson. Mr. Robertson is the President and a founder of the Company since 1982; Mr. Robertson has been the Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of REGI U.S., Inc., an Oregon corporation traded on the OTC bulletin board, since July 1992, a U.S. public company engaged in the development of a rotary engine/compressor (“Rand Cam Engine”) and hydrogen separator technology. Since October 1984 Mr. Robertson has been President and a Director of Reg Technologies Inc., a British Columbia corporation listed on the TSX Venture Exchange that has financed the research on the Rand Cam Engine since 1986. REGI U.S. is ultimately controlled by Reg Technologies Inc. Mr. Robertson has been the President and Principal Executive Officer and a Director of IAS Communications, Inc. since its formation in December 1994, a U.S. public company which is developing and marketing proprietary antenna technology. Since June 1997 Mr. Robertson has been President, Principal Executive Officer and a Director of Information Highway.com, Inc., an inactive reporting Florida corporation. Since May 1977 Mr. Robertson has been President and a member of the Board of Directors of SMR Investments Ltd., a private British Columbia corporation engaged in management of public companies. Mr. Robertson is also the President and Director of the following private companies: JGR Petroleum, Inc., BlueCrow Internet Co. Ltd., 394754 B.C. Ltd., dba SOVO Computer Centre, Pavlik Travel Services Ltd., World Tel-Internet (Toronto) Ltd., International Diamond Syndicate Ltd., Argon Investment Corporation, and Airstream Communications, Inc. Mr. Robertson is a citizen and resident of Canada.

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Jennifer Lorette. Ms. Lorette has been a director since June 2001. Since June 1994 Ms. Lorette, has been Vice President of REGI U.S., Inc., an Oregon corporation traded on the OTC bulletin board. Since April 1994 she has also been Vice President of Administration for Reg Technologies, Inc., a British Columbia corporation listed on the TSX Venture Exchange. REGI U.S. is ultimately controlled by Reg Technologies Inc. Since June 1997 Ms. Lorette has been Secretary/Treasurer, and a Director of Information Highway.com, Inc., a Florida corporation. Ms. Lorette is a founder, and has been Secretary/Treasurer of IAS Communications, Inc. since February 1995. Ms. Lorette is a citizen and resident of Canada.

Susanne Robertson. Director of the Company since 1990; Principal of SMR Investments, Ltd., a private business and financial consulting company, since 1979; Director of Linux Gold Corp, a BC company reporting in the US and Canada involved in the development of computer software, since 1984. Ms. Robertson is a citizen and resident of Canada

Monique van Oord. Director of the Company and Chief Financial Officer since January 2003. Director of Linux Gold Corp. since February 2004, Administrator for several public and private companies from 2002 to date; Counsellor with Magdeline Society between 2001 and 2002. Ms. van Oord is a citizen and resident of Canada.

The Directors have served in their respective capacities since their election and/or appointment and will serve until the next Annual General Meeting or until a successor is duly elected, unless the office is vacated in accordance with our Articles.

The Board of Directors appoints Senior Management who serve at the discretion of the Board of Directors.

No Director and/or Senior Management had been the subject of any order, judgement, or decree of any governmental agency or administrator or of any court or competent jurisdiction, revoking or suspending for cause any license, permit or other authority of such person or of any corporation of which he is a Director and/or Senior Management, to engage in the securities business or in the sale of a particular security or temporarily or permanently restraining or enjoining any such person or any corporation of which he is an officer or director from engaging in or continuing any conduct/practice/employment in connection with the purchase or sale of securities, or convicting such person of any felony or misdemeanour involving a security or any aspect of the securities business or of theft or of any felony.

There is a family relationship between two of the Directors or Senior Management. John Robertson and Susanne Robertson are husband wife.

There are no arrangements or understandings with major shareholders, customers, suppliers or others, pursuant to which any person referred to above was selected as a Director or member of senior management.

B.        COMPENSATION

The following table sets out the compensation information for the fiscal years ended May 31, 2006, May 31, 2005 and May 31, 2004 for our directors and members of our administrative, supervisory or management bodies.

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Name and
Principal
Position
Year Annual Compensation Long-Term Compensation
      Awards Payouts
Salary
($)
Bonus
($)
Other Annual
Compensation
($)
Securities
Granted under
Options(2) /
SARS (3)
Granted
#
Restricted
Shares or
Restricted
Share
Units
($)
LTIP (4)
Payouts
($)
All Other
Compensation
($)
John G.
Robertson,
President
2006
2005
2004
12,000(1)
12,000(1)
12,000(1)
Nil
Nil
Nil
30,000.00(5)
30,000.00(5)
17,500.00(5)
990,000 / Nil
990,000 / Nil
990,000 / Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Jennifer
Lorette,
Director
2006
2005
2004
19,000(6)
25,750(6)
24,375 (6)
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
100,000 / Nil
100,000 / Nil
100,000 / Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Susanne
Robertson,
Director
2006
2005
2004
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
500,000 / Nil
500,000 / Nil
500,000 / Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Monique van
Oord, Chief
Financial Officer,
Secretary, Director
2006
2005
2004
19,550
23,500
20,874
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
50,000 / Nil
50,000 / Nil
25.000 / Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil

(1)

John Robertson received $12,000 in Director’s Fees.

   
(2)

During fiscal 2006, Mr. Robertson held 990,000 options exercisable at $0.15, none of which have been exercised to record date.. Jennifer Lorette, a Vice President, held 100,000 options exercisable at $0.15 per share, Jennifer Lorette has not exercised any options to record date. Susanne Robertson, a Director, held 500,000 options exercisable at $0.15, none of which have been exercised to record date. Yale Hirsch, a Vice President, was granted 200,000 options exercisable at $0.15 during fiscal 2002. Yale Hirsch exercised all his options during fiscal 2004. In February, 2004, Monique van Oord, an Officer and Director, exercised 25,000 options granted previously at $0.40 and was issued 50,000 options exercisable at $0.35 in March 2004, none of which have been exercised to record date.

   
(3)

"SARS" or "stock appreciation right" means a right granted by the Company, as compensation for services rendered, to receive a payment of cash or an issue or transfer of securities based wholly or in part on changes in the trading price of publicly traded securities of the Company.

   
(4)

"LTIP" or "long term incentive plan" means any plan which provides compensation intended to serve as incentive for performance to occur over a period longer than one financial year, but does not include option or stock appreciation right plans or plans for compensation through restricted shares or restricted share units.

   
(5)

Management fees paid to SMR Investments Ltd., a company for which John Robertson acts as a director.

   
(6)

Jennifer Lorette, a Vice President, received consulting fees directly and wages were paid through KLR Petroleum Ltd. which administer the payroll for the Company and related parties.

There are no other management contracts in existence at this time which the Company is a party to.

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Option/SAR Grants

Name Number
of
Options
Granted
% of Total
Options
Granted as of
May 31,
2006
Exercise or
Base Price
($/Security) (1)
Date of
Grant
Mkt. Value of
Securities Underlying
Options on Date of
Grant ($)
Expiry
Date
Directors who
are not Named
Executive
Officers



Nil



nil% (2)



$0(1)






$0




  (1)

During the fiscal year ended May 31, 2006 no stock options were granted. During the three month period ended August 31, 2006 275,000 were granted to consultants.

The Company entered into a Management Agreement with SMR Investments Ltd. for the provision of management and administrative services. Pursuant to the Management Agreement, SMR Investments Ltd. provides management and administrative services to the Company, and is in a unique position to service the promotion, marketing, investment and business management needs of the Company, for which the Company pays up to $2,500 per month. The Management Agreement also provides that the manager will be reimbursed for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. Susanne Robertson, a director of the Company, is the sole shareholder of SMR Investments Ltd. and John Robertson, President and a director of the Company is a director of SMR Investments Ltd. During the last fiscal year of the Company, the sum of $30,000 was paid as a management fee to SMR Investments Ltd.

No cash or non-cash compensation was paid or distributed to the executive officers of the Company under any pension or other plans nor is there any plan for such payments or distributions during the following fiscal year contributed to the directors and officers.

During the fiscal year ended May 31, 2006 no stock options were granted pursuant to stock option plans. 37,500 employee options were exercised and 375,000 options were cancelled or expired (see Note 12 to our Financial Statements).

Total options currently exercisable at the date of this 20-F are 2,452,500. All exercise prices are CDN dollars as listed in the following tables. See Note 12 to the financial statements.

The following table gives certain information concerning stock option exercises during the year ended May 31, 2006 by our Senior Management and Directors. It also gives information concerning stock option values.

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Aggregated Stock Options Exercises in Fiscal 2006
Fiscal Year End Unexercised Stock Options
Fiscal Year End Stock Option Values
Senior Management/Directors





Name


Number of
Shares Acquired
on Exercise



Aggregate Value
Realized


Number of Unexercised
Options at Fiscal Year-End
Exercisable/Unexercisable
Value of Unexercised In-
the-Money Options at
Fiscal Year-End
Exercisable/
Unexercisable
         
John G. Robertson,
President and Director
N/A
N/A
990,000 / Nil
$0.15 / N/A
         
Jennifer Lorette, Director N/A N/A 100,000 / Nil $0.15 / N/A
         
Susanne Robertson, Director N/A N/A 500,000 / Nil $0.15 / N/A
         
Monique van Oord, Director, Chief Financial Officer N/A N/A 50,000 / Nil $0.35 / $N/A

Options to Purchase Registrant's Common Shares Held by Officers and Directors of Registrant

NAME OF OPTIONEE
NUMBER OF OPTIONS
EXERCISE PRICE
(CDN $)
EXPIRY DATE
John G. Robertson 990,000 $0.15 April 22, 2007
Jennifer Lorette 100,000 $0.15 April 22, 2007
Monique van Oord 50,000 $0.35 March 5, 2009
Susanne Robertson 500,000 $0.15 April 22, 2007
       
TOTAL HELD AS A GROUP: 1,640,000    

Options to Purchase Registrant’s Common Shares Held by Persons Other than Officers and Directors of the Registrant

Name of Optionee No. of Optioned Shares Exercise Price Per Share Expiry Date
Arnie Winrob 50,000 $0.40 December 16, 2007
James Kerr 75,000 $040 March 4, 2008
Peter Zihlmann 112,500 $0.20 October 20,2008
George Duggan 300,000 $0.45 November 13, 2008
Agoracom Investor Relations Corp. 250,000 $0.285 June 1, 2009
Barbara West 25,000 $0.30 June 11, 2011
       
TOTAL HELD AS A GROUP: 812,500    

INDEBTEDNESS OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

None of the directors and senior officers of the Company, proposed nominees for election or associates of such persons is or has been indebted to the Company or its subsidiaries, other than routine indebtedness, at any time since the beginning of the last completed financial year of the Company.

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C.        BOARD PRACTICES

Under section 224 of the Business Corporations Act, S.B.C. 2002, c. 57, the directors of a company must, at their first meeting on or after each annual reference date, elect an audit committee, to hold office until the next annual reference date. The audit committee must be composed of at least 3 directors, and a majority of the members of the committee must not be officers or employees of the company or of an affiliate of the company. The members must elect a chair from among their number and determine their own procedures. The auditor of a company must be given reasonable notice of, and has the right to appear before and to be heard at each meeting of the company’s audit committee and must appear before the audit committee when request to do so by the committee and after being given reasonable notice to do so. Our Board of Directors established an Audit Committee which members consist of Monique van Oord, Susanne Robertson and Jennifer Lorette.

The Directors are elected by the shareholders to hold office for a term of one year or until re-elected at the next annual general meeting.

D.        EMPLOYEES

We employed no employees during any of the years ended May 31, 2006, May 31, 2005 and May 31, 2004. Our legal, accounting, marketing and administrative functions are, and have been during the last three fiscal years, contracted out to consultants.

We have no employees; as such, no directors or officers belong to any labor unions. We have not been subject to any strikes or other labor disturbances that have interfered with our operations.

E.        SHARE OWNERSHIP

The following table sets forth the ownership of our common shares by our Directors and Officers as at May 31, 2006:

Shareholder Number of shares issued and outstanding Percentage ownership (1)
John G. Robertson 3,185,996 (2) 8.1%
Jennifer Lorette 162,800 (3) 0%
Monique van Oord 80,000 (4) 0%
Susanne Robertson 6,529,983 (5) 16.5%

  (1)

as at May 31, 2006, there were 39,468,188 issued and outstanding common shares.

  (2)

includes 395,450 shares registered in the name of Access Information Services, a corporation controlled by the Robertson Family Trust, and 990,000 options registered in the name of Mr. Robertson that are currently exercisable. [Mr. Robertson is one of three trustees of the Robertson Family Trust, which acts by the majority vote of the three trustees. Mr. Robertson disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares owned or controlled by the Robertson Family Trust], 50,000 shares registered in the name of KLR Petroleum (a company controlled by Mr. Robertson). Mr. Robertson's address is the same as our address].

  (3)

Includes 100,000 options that are currently exercisable. Ms. Lorette's address is the same as our address.

  (4)

Includes 50,000 options that are currently exercisable. Ms. van Oord’s address is the same as the Company’s.

  (5)

includes 5,338,883 shares registered in the name of SMR Investments Ltd., and 500,000 options that are currently exercisable, . Ms. Robertson's address is the same as the Company’s.

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* Beneficially owns less than one percent of our common shares.

For information regarding the ownership of stock options to acquire our common shares which are held by our Directors and Officers, and also by our employees, please refer to Item 6.B above “ Stock Options Granted to Employees, Directors and Senior Managers”.

ITEM 7.        MAJOR SHAREHOLDERS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

A.        MAJOR SHAREHOLDERS.

To the best of our knowledge, we are not indirectly owned or controlled by any other corporation, foreign government or by any other natural or legal person, except as set out below.

At May 31, 2006, we are aware of one shareholder who owns 5% or greater of the voting shares of the Company. Sue Robertson, our director, owns 5,949,983 of our issued and outstanding common shares. Of these, 691,100 common shares are held directly and the balance of 5,258,883 common shares are held by SMR Investments Ltd., a private company wholly-owned by Susanne M. Robertson. Mrs. Robertson does not have any different voting rights.

Over the past three years, there has not been a significant change in the percentage ownership held by any major shareholder.

Canadian Share Ownership.

On November 30, 2006, our shareholders list showed 39,468,188 common shares outstanding with 220 registered shareholders. The indirect holding by depository institutions and other financial institutions is estimated as 71 holders of record resident in Canada, holding an aggregate of 31,089,285 common shares; 144 holders of record resident in the United States, holding an aggregate of 6,943,653 common shares; and 5 holders of record resident elsewhere holding an aggregate of 1,435,250 common shares.

Control of the Company

We are a publicly owned Canadian corporation, with shareholders in Canada, the United States and other foreign jurisdictions. We are not controlled by any foreign government or other person.

We do not know of any arrangements which could result in a change in control of the Company.

B.        RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS.

The Company entered into a Management Agreement with SMR Investments Ltd. for the provision of management and administrative services. Pursuant to the Management Agreement, SMR Investments Ltd. provides management and administrative services to the Company, and is in a unique position to service the promotion, marketing, investment and business management needs of the Company, for which the Company pays up to $2,500 per month. The Management Agreement also provides that the manager will be reimbursed for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. Susanne Robertson, a director of the Company, is the sole shareholder of SMR Investments Ltd. and John Robertson, President and a director of the Company is a director of SMR Investments Ltd. During the last fiscal year of the Company, the sum of $30,000 was paid as a management fee to SMR Investments Ltd.

We paid a director's fee of $12,000 to John G. Robertson, our President, during each of fiscal years 2006, 2005 and 2004.

We had related party advances outstanding of $ 83,255 at the May 31, 2006 year-end, compared to $ 75,058

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at the end of our previous fiscal year. These were unsecured, non-interest bearing and with no fixed terms of repayment. These transactions with related parties during the year ended May 31, 2006 are as follows:

  • SMR Investments Ltd. is a private company controlled by an officer of the Company. Under a management contract with SMR Investments Ltd., the Company agreed to pay up to $2,500 per month for management services. The Company was charged management fees of $30,000 (2005 - $30,000; 2004 - $17,500) by SMR during the current year.

  • The Company holds 15,880 shares of Linux Gold, Inc., a BC public company with common directors.

  • Directors fees of $12,000 (2005 - $12,000; 2004 - $12,000) were paid to J. Robertson, President of the Company; administration consulting fees of $19,000 (2005 - $25,750; 2004 - $24,375) were paid to J. Lorette, a director of the Company and secretarial fees of $19,550 (2005 - $23,500; 2004 - $20,874) were paid to M. van Oord, a director of the Company.

  • Fees of $6,770 (2005 - $9,019; 2004 - $1,646) were paid to KLR Petroleum Ltd. (which is controlled by an officer of the Company) for administration of the Company payroll and benefit plan.

  • Office rent amounted to $17,040 (2005 - $16,680; 2004 - $15,600) for the year ended May 31, 2006 of which $11,360 (2005 - $11,120; 2004 - $10,400) has been shared with Reg Technologies Inc. and REGI US, Inc.

We believe that the terms of these transactions were incurred in the normal course of operations and are equivalent or more favorable than terms we would be able to negotiate in arms-length transactions with unaffiliated parties.

C.        INTERESTS OF EXPERTS AND COUNSEL.

Not applicable.

ITEM 8.        FINANCIAL INFORMATION

A.        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS AND OTHER FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Our financial statements are stated in Canadian Dollars (CDN$) and are prepared in accordance with Canadian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), the application of which conforms in all material respects for the periods presented with United States GAAP, except as discussed in footnotes to the financial statements.

See our audited consolidated financial statements for the fiscal years ended May 31, 2006, May 31, 2005 and May 31, 2004 and our interim financial statements for the three months ended August 31, 2006, attached hereto.

Legal Proceedings

We are not a party to any material legal proceedings.

Dividend Distribution Policy

We have not paid any cash dividends to date and we do not intend to pay cash dividends in the foreseeable future.

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B.        SIGNIFICANT CHANGES

None.

ITEM 9.        THE OFFER AND LISTING

A.        OFFER AND LISTING DETAILS

Our shares trade solely on the TSX Venture Exchange (the "TSXV") under the symbol TRC-V. There are currently no restrictions on the transferability of these shares under Canadian securities laws. There has been no U.S. market in our shares.

We believe that our common stock falls under the classification of a “penny stock”, as that term is defined by Rule 3a51-1 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Transaction costs associated with purchases and sales of penny stocks are likely to be higher than those for other securities. Penny stocks generally are equity securities with a price of less than US $5.00 (other than securities registered on certain national securities exchanges or quoted on the NASDAQ system, provided that current price and volume information with respect to transactions in such securities is provided by the exchange or system).

The penny stock rules require a broker-dealer, prior to a transaction in a penny stock not otherwise exempt from the rules, to deliver a standardized risk disclosure document that provides information about penny stocks and the nature and level of risks in the penny stock market. The broker-dealer must also provide the customer with current bid and offer quotations for the penny stock, the compensation of the broker-dealer and its salesperson in the transaction, and monthly account statements showing the market value of each penny stock held in the customer’s account. The bid and offer quotations, and the broker-dealer and salesperson compensation information, must be given to the customer orally or in writing prior to effecting the transaction and must be given to the customer in writing before or with the customer’s confirmation. In addition, the penny stock rules require that prior to a transaction in a penny stock not otherwise exempt from such rules, the broker-dealer must make a special written determination that the penny stock is a suitable investment for the purchaser and receive the purchaser’s written agreement to the transaction.

The following table shows the annual high and low closing prices of our stock traded on the TSXV during the last five fiscal years as follows:

Year High ($CDN) Low ($CDN) Close ($ CDN)
2006                                      0.41 0.185 0.275
2005                                      0.56 0.265 0.27
2004                                      0.85 0.24 0.37
2003                                      0.53 0.08 0.35
2002                                      0.27 0.05 0.22

The following table shows the quarterly high and low closing prices of our stock traded on the TSXV during the last two fiscal years, for each quarter as follows:

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Period High Low Close Volume
2006
Q4 5/31/06

0.41

0.255

0.275

2,370,397
Q3 2/28/06 0.39 0.20 0.355 2,176,794
Q2 11/30/05 0.28 0.185 0.235 1,250,975
Q1 8/31/05 0.33 0.23 0.235 739,925
         
2005
Q4 5/31/05

0.375

0.265

0.27

1,449,964
Q3 2/28/05 0.45 0.30 0.35 2,078,611
Q2 11/30/04 0.56 0.34 0.415 1,400,497
Q1 8/31/04 0.48 0.30 0.385 847,615

(Information provided by the TSX Venture Exchange. The quotations reflect inter-dealer prices, without retail mark-up, markdown, or commission and may not represent actual transactions.)

As a foreign private issuer, our officers, directors and ten percent beneficial owners we will not be subject to the reporting obligations of the proxy rules of the Section 14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or the insider short-swing profit rules of Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Common Share Description

Our authorized share capital consists of 100,000,000 common shares without par value and 5,000,000 preferred shares with a par value of $1.00. All of our authorized common shares are of the same class and, once issued, rank equally as to dividends, voting powers, and participation in assets. The Preferred Shares have attached thereto a right to receive dividends as determined by the Directors. The Preferred Shares may be issued in series, with special rights and restrictions therefor being determined by the Directors, subject to regulatory approval. No Preferred Shares have been issued to the date of this 20-F.

Holders of common shares are entitled to one vote for each share held of record on all matters to be acted upon by the shareholders. Holders of common shares are entitled to receive such dividends as may be declared from time to time by the Board of Directors, in its discretion, out of funds legally available therefore.

Upon our liquidation, dissolution or winding up, holders of common shares are entitled to receive pro rata our assets, if any, remaining after payments of all debts and liabilities.

No shares have been issued subject to call or assessment. There are no pre-emptive or conversion rights and no provisions for redemption or purchase for cancellation, surrender, or sinking or purchase funds. Provisions as to the modification, amendment or variation of such shareholder rights or provisions are contained in the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia). Unless the Act or our Articles otherwise provide, any action to be taken by a resolution of the shareholders may be taken by an ordinary resolution, being approved by a vote of a majority of the votes cast in respect of the matter at the shareholders’ meeting. There are no restrictions on the repurchase or redemption of our common shares while there is any arrearage in the payment of dividends or sinking fund installments.

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Convertible Securities / Warrants

The following table lists, as of May 31, 2006, the share purchase warrants outstanding. As of May 31, 2006, we were aware of 3 holders of our 1,324,000 share purchase warrants, 2 of whom were resident in Canada, 1 holder was offshore and no holders were resident in the United States. These warrants were issued in conjunction with one private placement for the purchase of a total of 2,648,000 common shares.

Effective Date Number of Number of Year 1 Year 2 Expiration Date of Share
of Issuance Share Purchase Share Purchase     Purchase Warrants
  Warrants Warrants Still      
  Originally Outstanding      
  Issued        
May 17, 2006 1,324,000 1,324,000 0.30 0.35 May 17, 2008

B.        PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

Not applicable.

C.        MARKETS

Our shares trade solely on the TSX Venture Exchange (the "TSXV") under the symbol TRC-V. There are currently no restrictions on the transferability of these shares under Canadian securities laws.

D.        SELLING SHAREHOLDERS

Not applicable.

E.        DILUTION

Not applicable.

F.        EXPENSES OF THE ISSUE

Not applicable.

ITEM 10.        ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

A.        SHARE CAPITAL

Not applicable.

B.        MEMORANDUM AND ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION

We were incorporated on May 23, 1980, as Candy Mountain Gold Corporation under a perpetual charter pursuant to the Company Act (British Columbia) by the registration of its Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association. On January 20, 1984, a special resolution was passed changing its name to Teryl Resources Corp.

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On March 29, 2004, the new British Columbia Business Corporations Act (the "BCA") came into force in British Columbia and replaced the former Company Act (“Former Act”), which is the statute under which we were previously governed. Under the BCA, we have two years within which to transition ("Transition") under the new statute. In accordance with the BCA, we cannot amend our Articles or Notice of Articles until the Transition to the BCA is completed. We filed a transition application with the Registrar of Companies British Columbia to transition to the BCA and completed the Transition on September 13, 2004.

On November 15, 2004, at the Annual General Meeting of shareholders, our shareholders passed a special resolution to delete and replace our Articles as they applied to the Former Act in their entirety for new articles under the BCA. Under the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) we are permitted to conduct any lawful business that we are not restricted from conducting by our memorandum and articles, neither of which contain any restriction on the business we may conduct. Our Incorporation Number is BC0187279.

A director who, in any way, directly or indirectly, is interested in a proposed contract or transaction with us must disclose in writing the nature and extent of the director's interest at a meeting of directors and abstain from voting on approval of the matter. Our Articles permit an interested director to be counted in the quorum and the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) provides that a director of a company is not deemed to be interested in a proposed contract or transaction merely because the proposed contract or transaction relates, among other things, to an indemnity, liability insurance or the remuneration of a director in that capacity. Hence, directors can vote compensation to themselves or any of their members. The board of directors has an unlimited power to borrow, issue debt obligations and to charge our assets, provided only that such power is exercised bona fide and in our best interests. There is no mandatory retirement age for directors. A director is not required to have any share qualification.

We have two classes of shares. We have 100,000,000 authorized common shares, voting, without par value; and authorized 5,000,000 non-voting preferred shares with a par value of $1.00. Our common shares are without any special rights or restrictions.

The Preferred Shares have attached thereto a right to receive dividends as determined by the Directors. The Preferred Shares may be issued in series, with special rights and restrictions therefor being determined by the Directors, subject to regulatory approval. No Preferred Shares have been issued to the date of this 20-F.

The dividend entitlement of a common shareholder of record is fixed at the time of declaration by the board of directors. A vested dividend entitlement does not lapse, but unclaimed dividends are subject to a statutory six year contract debts limitation. Each common share is entitled to one vote on the election of each director. There are no cumulative voting rights, in consequence of which a simple majority of votes at the annual meeting can elect all of our directors. Each common share carries with it the right to share equally with every other common share in dividends declared and in any distribution of our surplus assets after payment to creditors on any winding up, liquidation or dissolution. There are no sinking fund provisions. All common shares must be fully paid prior to issue and are thereafter subject to no further capital calls by us. There exists no discriminatory provision affecting any existing or prospective holder of common shares as a result of such shareholder owning a substantial number of shares.

Under the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia), the rights of shareholders may be changed only by the shareholders passing a special resolution approved by 2/3 of the votes cast at a general meeting of shareholders, the notice of which is accompanied by an information circular describing the proposed action and its effect on the shareholders. Shareholders representing 10% of our common shares who vote against such a resolution may apply to the Court to set aside the resolution and the Court may set aside, affirm or affirm and order us to purchase the shares of any shareholder at a price determined by the Court.

The Board of Directors must call an annual general meeting once in each calendar year and not later than 15 months after the last such meeting. The Board may call an extraordinary general meeting at any time. Notice of such meetings must be accompanied by an information circular describing the proposed business to be dealt with and making disclosures as prescribed by statute.

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A shareholder or shareholders having in the aggregate 5% of our issued shares may requisition a meeting and the Board is required to hold such meeting within four months of such requisition. Admission to such meetings is open to registered shareholders and their duly appointed proxies. Others may be admitted subject to the pleasure of the meeting.

Our memorandum and articles contain no limitations on the rights of non-resident or foreign shareholders to hold or exercise rights on our shares. There is no limitation at law upon the right of a non-resident to hold shares in a Canadian company.

There are no provisions in our memorandum and articles that would have an effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control and that would operate only with respect to a merger, acquisition or corporate restructuring involving us or any of our subsidiaries.

There is no provision in our articles setting a threshold or requiring or governing disclosure of shareholder ownership above any level. Securities Acts, regulations and the policies and rules thereunder in the Provinces of Alberta and British Columbia, where we are a reporting company, require any person holding or having control of more than 10% of our issued shares to file insider returns disclosing such share holdings.

C.        MATERIAL CONTRACTS

During the years ended May 31, 2006 and May 31, 2005, we entered into the following material contracts.

Fish Creek Joint Venture Agreement

On March 5, 2002 we announced that a joint venture has been completed for a 50% interest in 30 Fish Creek claims in Alaska based on the following terms and conditions. The Company would issue 200,000 treasury shares of its common shares, which shares were issued on December 16, 2002, and will give to Linux Gold Corp. a 5% royalty interest until $2,000,000 U.S. has been received from the royalty payments. We may purchase the 5% net royalty for $500,000 U.S. within 1 year after production. We also agree to expend a minimum of $500,000 U.S. after three years from the date of the agreement.

On November 4, 2002, we amended the March 5, 2002 agreement with Linux Gold Corp. We agreed that in consideration for receiving a mining license which was not disclosed to us at the time of the March 5, 2002 agreement, both parties agreed to grant Linux a back in working interest for a 25% interest in the mining lease after Teryl completes the US$500,000 expenditures.

In March 2005, the joint venture agreement was extended until March 5, 2007, subject to TSX approval. Other than the extension, all other terms remain the same. The Company authorized 100,000 common shares for issuance to Linux as consideration for the extension. TSX approval of the extension is dependent upon receipt of approval of disinterested shareholders. Approval was obtained at the Annual General Meeting on November 14, 2006. As of the date of this 20-F, the shares have not been issued pending TSX approval.

D.        EXCHANGE CONTROLS.

There are no governmental laws, decrees or regulations in Canada relating to restrictions on the export of capital affecting the remittance of interest, dividends or other payments to nonresident holders of the Registrant's shares. Any such remittances, however, are subject to withholding tax. See Item 10.E, "Taxation".

There are no limitations under the laws of Canada, the Province of British Columbia or in the charter or any other constituent documents of the Company on the right of foreigners to hold or vote the shares of the Company. However, under the provisions of the Investment Canada Act, when control of a Canadian

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business is acquired by a non- Canadian, the transaction may be reviewable in certain circumstances by Investment Canada, an agency of the federal government of Canada. Reviewable transactions are those in which a non-Canadian acquires the assets of a Canadian business or the voting shares of a Canadian corporation the value of which assets or shares exceeds $5 million (Canadian). Also, certain transactions are specifically exempted from review.

E.        TAXATION.

Certain Canadian Federal Income Tax Consequences

The discussion under this heading summarizes the principal Canadian federal income tax consequences of acquiring, holding and disposing of shares of our common stock for a shareholder of ours who is not a resident of Canada but is a resident of the U.S. and who will acquire and hold our common shares as capital property for the purposes of the Income Tax Act (Canada) (the “Canadian Tax Act”). This summary does not apply to a shareholder who carries on business in Canada through a “permanent establishment” situated in Canada or performs independent personal services in Canada through a fixed base in Canada if the shareholder’s holding in Teryl Resources Corp. is effectively connected with such permanent establishment or fixed base. This summary is based on the provisions of the Canadian Tax Act and the regulations thereunder and on an understanding of the administrative practices of Canada Customs & Revenue Agency, and takes into account all specific proposals to amend the Canadian Tax Act or regulations made by the Minister of Finance of Canada as of the date hereof. It has been assumed that there will be no other relevant amendment of any governing law although no assurance can be given in this respect. This discussion is general only and is not, nor is it intended to provide a detailed analysis of the income tax implications of any particular shareholder’s interest. Investors are advised to obtain independent advice from a shareholder’s own Canadian and U.S. tax advisors with respect to income tax implications pertinent to their particular circumstances.

The provisions of the Canadian Tax Act are subject to income tax treaties to which Canada is a party, including the Canada-United States Income Tax Convention (1980), as amended (the “Convention”).

Dividends on Common Shares and Other Income

Under the Canadian Tax Act, a non-resident of Canada is generally subject to Canadian withholding tax at the rate of 25 percent on dividends paid or deemed to have been paid to him or her by a corporation resident in Canada. We are responsible for withholding of tax at the source. The Convention limits the rate to 15 percent if the shareholder is a resident of the U.S. and the dividends are beneficially owned by and paid to such shareholder, and to 5 percent if the shareholder is also a corporation that beneficially owns at least 10 percent of the voting stock of the payor corporation.

The amount of a stock dividend (for tax purposes) would generally be equal to the amount by which the paid up or our stated capital had increased by reason of the payment of such dividend. We will furnish additional tax information to our shareholders in the event of such a dividend. Interest paid or deemed to be paid on our debt securities held by non-Canadian residents may also be subject to Canadian withholding tax, depending upon the terms and provisions of such securities and any applicable tax treaty.

The Convention generally exempts from Canadian income tax dividends paid to a religious, scientific, literary, educational or charitable organization or to an organization constituted and operated exclusively to administer a pension, retirement or employee benefit fund or plan, if the organization is a resident of the U.S. and is exempt from income tax under the laws of the U.S.

Dispositions of Common Shares

Under the Canadian Tax Act, a taxpayer’s capital gain or capital loss from a disposition of a share of our common stock is the amount, if any, by which his or her proceeds of disposition exceed (or are exceeded by, respectively) the aggregate of his or her adjusted cost base of the share and reasonable expenses of disposition.

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The capital gain or loss must be computed in Canadian currency using a weighted average adjusted cost base for identical properties. The capital gains net of losses included in income are as follows. For gains net of losses realized before February 28, 2000, as to 75%. For gains net of losses realized after February 27, 2000 and before October 18, 2000, as to 66 2/3%. For gains net of losses realized after October 17, 2000, as to 50%. There are special transitional rules to apply capital losses against capital gains that arose in different periods. The amount by which a shareholder’s capital loss exceeds the capital gain in a year may be deducted from a capital gain realized by the shareholder in the three previous years or any subsequent year, subject to certain restrictions in the case of a corporate shareholder.

Under the Canadian Tax Act, a non-resident of Canada is subject to Canadian tax on taxable capital gains, and may deduct allowable capital losses, realized on a disposition of “taxable Canadian property.” Shares of our common stock will constitute taxable Canadian property of a shareholder at a particular time if the shareholder used the shares in carrying on business in Canada, or if at any time in the five years immediately preceding the disposition 25% or more of the issued shares of any class or series in our capital stock belonged to one or more persons in a group comprising the shareholder and persons with whom the shareholder and persons with whom the shareholder did not deal at arm’s length and in certain other circumstances.

The Convention relieves U.S. residents from liability for Canadian tax on capital gains derived on a disposition of shares unless:

(a) the value of the shares is derived principally from “real property” in Canada, including the right to explore for or exploit natural resources and rights to amounts computed by reference to production;

(b) the shareholder was resident in Canada for 120 months during any period of 20 consecutive years preceding, and at any time during the 10 years immediately preceding, the disposition and the shares were owned by him when he or she ceased to be resident in Canada; or

(c) the shares formed part of the business property of a “permanent establishment” that the holder has or had in Canada within the 12 months preceding the disposition.

F.        DIVIDENDS AND PAYING AGENTS

Not applicable.

G.        STATEMENT BY EXPERTS.

Our financial statements included in this Registration Statement for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004 were audited by Morgan and Company, Chartered Accountant as stated in their reports appearing herein (which reports express an unqualified opinion), and are included in reliance upon the reports of such firm given upon their authority as experts in accounting and auditing.

H.        DOCUMENTS ON DISPLAY.

Material contracts and publicly available corporate records may be viewed at our registered and records office located at Suite 240, 11780 Hammersmith Way, Richmond, British Columbia.

Our registration statement may be inspected and copied, including exhibits and schedules, and the reports and other information as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in accordance with the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 at the public reference facilities maintained by the Securities and Exchange Commission at Judiciary Plaza, 450 Fifth Street, Room 1024, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549. Copies of such material may also be obtained from the Public Reference Section of the Securities and Exchange Commission at 100F Street, NE, Room 1580, Washington, D.C. 20549, at prescribed rates. Information may be obtained regarding the Washington D.C. Public Reference Room by calling the Securities and Exchange Commission at 1-800-SEC-0330 or by contacting the Securities and Exchange Commission over the Internet at its website at http://www.sec.gov.

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I.        SUBSIDIARY INFORMATION.

We hold a 100% interest Teryl, Inc., a private Delaware corporation which is currently inactive.

ITEM 11.        QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued FASB Interpretation No. 48, “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes, an interpretation of FASB Statements No. 109”. FIN 48 clarifies the accounting for uncertainty in income taxes by prescribing a two-step method of first evaluating whether a tax position has met a more likely than not recognition threshold and second, measuring that tax position to determine the amount of benefit to be recognized in the financial statements. FIN 48 provides guidance on the presentation of such positions within a classified statement of financial position as well as on derecognition, interest and penalties, accounting in interim periods, disclosure, and transition. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006. The adoption of this statement is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's future reported financial position or results of operations.

In February 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 155, "Accounting for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments-an amendment of FASB Statements No. 133 and 140", to simplify and make more consistent the accounting for certain financial instruments. SFAS No. 155 amends SFAS No. 133, "Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities", to permit fair value re-measurement for any hybrid financial instrument with an embedded derivative that otherwise would require bifurcation, provided that the whole instrument is accounted for on a fair value basis. SFAS No. 155 amends SFAS No. 140, "Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets", to allow a qualifying special-purpose entity to hold a derivative financial instrument that pertains to a beneficial interest other than another derivative financial instrument. SFAS No. 155 applies to all financial instruments acquired or issued after the beginning of an entity's first fiscal year that begins after September 15, 2006, with earlier application allowed. The adoption of this statement is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's future reported financial position or results of operations.

In March 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 156, "Accounting for Servicing of Financial Assets, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 140, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities". This statement requires all separately recognized servicing assets and servicing liabilities be initially measured at fair value, if practicable, and permits for subsequent measurement using either fair value measurement with changes in fair value reflected in earnings or the amortization and impairment requirements of Statement No. 140. The subsequent measurement of separately recognized servicing assets and servicing liabilities at fair value eliminates the necessity for entities that manage the risks inherent in servicing assets and servicing liabilities with derivatives to qualify for hedge accounting treatment and eliminates the characterization of declines in fair value as impairments or direct write-downs. SFAS No. 156 is effective for an entity's first fiscal year beginning after September 15, 2006. The adoption of this statement is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's future reported financial position or results of operations.

In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements”. The objective of SFAS 157 is to increase consistency and comparability in fair value measurements and to expand disclosures about fair value measurements. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value in generally accepted accounting principles, and expands disclosures about fair value measurements. SFAS 157 applies under other accounting pronouncements that require or permit fair value measurements and does not require any new fair value measurements. The provisions of SFAS No. 157 are effective for fair value measurements made in fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. The adoption of this statement is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's future reported financial position or results of operations.

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In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 158, “Employers’ Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans – an amendment of FASB Statements No. 87, 88, 106, and 132(R)”. This statement requires employers to recognize the overfunded or underfunded status of a defined benefit postretirement plan (other than a multiemployer plan) as an asset or liability in its statement of financial position and to recognize changes in that funded status in the year in which the changes occur through comprehensive income of a business entity or changes in unrestricted net assets of a not-for-profit organization. This statement also requires an employer to measure the funded status of a plan as of the date of its year-end statement of financial position, with limited exceptions. The provisions of SFAS No. 158 are effective for employers with publicly traded equity securities as of the end of the fiscal year ending after December 15, 2006. The adoption of this statement is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's future reported financial position or results of operations.

We are a small business issuer as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933, and Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and therefore need not provide the information requested by this item.

ITEM 12.        DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES OTHER THAN EQUITY SECURITIES

Not applicable.

PART II

ITEM 13.        DEFAULTS, DIVIDEND ARREARAGES AND DELINQUENCIES

None.

ITEM 14.        MATERIAL MODIFICATIONS TO THE RIGHTS OF SECURITY HOLDERS AND USE OF PROCEEDS.

A.        MATERIAL MODIFICATIONS TO THE RIGHTS OF SECURITY HOLDERS

None.

B.        USE OF PROCEEDS.

Not applicable.

- 77 -


ITEM 15.        CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

Based upon the evaluation of the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this registration statement, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that, as of such date, the disclosure controls and procedures were effective to ensure that material information relating to the Company was made known to others within the company particularly during the period in which this registration statement and accounts were being prepared, and such controls and procedures were effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files or submits under regulatory rules and securities laws is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified. Management recognizes that any controls and procedures can only provide reasonable assurance, and not absolute assurance, of achieving the desired control objectives, and management necessarily was required to apply its judgment in evaluating the cost-benefit relationship of possible controls and procedures.

Changes in Internal Controls over Financial Reporting.

There were no changes in our internal controls over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by the registration statement that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect our internal control over financial reporting.

ITEM 16.        [Reserved]

ITEM 16A.     Audit Committee Financial Expert

We do not currently have a financial expert in our audit committee due to our relatively small size. In 2006, we had no employees and we relied upon the services of a chartered accounting firm in Vancouver, BC, Canada, to prepare our interim unaudited quarterly consolidated financial statements. Also, we retained the audit services of Morgan and Company, Chartered Accountants to perform the audit on our year-end consolidated financial statements.

Moreover, the audit committee is comprised of seasoned business professionals, whereby the members have over 25 years of experience in the investment business and are board members of several corporations.

On these bases, we believe that the audit committee has adequate resources available to it when financial expertise and advice are necessary.

ITEM 16B.     Code of Ethics

We have not adopted a formal written code of ethics given our relatively small size, whereby we had no employees in 2006.

Directors are subject to the laws of the Province of British Columbia, Canada, whereby they are required to act honestly, in good faith and in the best interests of the Company.

ITEM 16C.     Principal Accountant Fees and Services

The following table discloses accounting fees and services of the Registrant:

- 78 -


(Stated in terms of Canadian dollars)

  2006 2005
Type of Services Rendered Fiscal Year Fiscal Year

     
(a) Audit Fees $22,620 $19,500
     
(b) Audit-Related Fees $8,075 $16,725
     
(c) Tax Fees $1,320 $l,800
     
(d) All Other Fees $750 $2,025

ITEM 16D.     Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit Committees

Not applicable.

ITEM 16E.     Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers

Not applicable.

PART III

ITEM 17.        FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Our financial statements are stated in Canadian Dollars and are prepared in accordance with Canadian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), the application of which, in our case, conforms in all material respects for the periods presented with United States GAAP, except as discussed in footnotes to the financial statements.

Independent Auditors’ Report dated July 28, 2006
 
Consolidated Balance Sheets at May 31, 2006 and 2005
 
Consolidated Statement of Income and Expenses for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004
 
Consolidated Statements of Operations and Deficit for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004
 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004
 
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004

- 79 -


 

TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

 

CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

 

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT

To the Shareholders of
Teryl Resources Corp.

We have audited the consolidated balance sheets of Teryl Resources Corp. as at May 31, 2006 and 2005, and the consolidated statements of operations, deficit, and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended May 31, 2006. These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with Canadian generally accepted auditing standards and the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform an audit to obtain reasonable assurance whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.

In our opinion, these consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as at May 31, 2006 and 2005, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended May 31, 2006 in accordance with Canadian generally accepted accounting principles.

Vancouver, Canada “Morgan & Company”
July 28, 2006 Chartered Accountants

COMMENTS BY AUDITORS FOR U.S. READERS ON CANADA-U.S. REPORTING DIFFERENCES

The reporting standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) for auditors require the addition of an explanatory paragraph (following the opinion paragraph) when the financial statements are affected by conditions and events that cast substantial doubt on the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern, such as those described in Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements. Our report to the shareholders, dated July 28, 2006, is expressed in accordance with Canadian reporting standards which do not permit a reference to such events and conditions in the auditor’s report when these are adequately disclosed in the consolidated financial statements.

Vancouver, Canada “Morgan & Company”
July 28, 2006 Chartered Accountants



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)

    MAY 31  
    2006     2005  
             
ASSETS            
Current            
         Cash $  209,636   $  318,287  
         Amounts receivable   95,869     19,589  
         Prepaid expenses   8,067     56,860  
    313,572     394,736  
Advances To Related Companies (Note 3)   6,840     25,599  
Investments (Note 4)   4,026     4,026  
Equipment (Note 5)   16,043     22,890  
Natural Gas Well (Note 6)   103,045     -  
Mineral Property Interests (Note 7)   190,236     219,397  
Deferred Exploration Expenditures (Note 7)   2,867,841     2,743,061  
             
  $  3,501,603   $  3,409,709  
             
LIABILITIES            
Current            
         Accounts payable and accrued liabilities $  21,719   $  30,530  
         Income taxes payable   604     688  
         Debenture payable (Note 9)   -     150,000  
         Advances from related companies (Note 10)   83,255     75,058  
    105,578     256,276  
Subscriptions Received (Note 15)   69,972     69,972  
    175,550     326,248  
             
SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY            
             
Share Capital (Note 12)            
         Authorized:            
                   100,000,000 common shares, voting, no par value            
                         5,000,000 preferred shares, non-voting, $1 par value            
         Issued and outstanding:            
                       39,468,188 (2005 – 36,777,688) common shares   10,624,107     9,944,335  
             
Contributed Surplus   169,401     175,935  
             
Deficit   (7,467,455 )   (7,036,809 )
    3,326,053     3,083,461  
             
  $  3,501,603   $  3,409,709  
             
Contingencies And Commitments (Note 11)            

Approved by the Directors:

“J. Robertson”   “J. Lorette”
Director   Director

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)

    YEARS ENDED MAY 31  
    2006     2005     2004  
                   
Revenue                  
         Oil and gas income $  27,154   $  28,307   $  21,037  
                   
Expenses                  
         Amortization   6,847     7,664     2,199  
         Corporation capital taxes   11,549     3,029     4,528  
         Filing fees   12,804     13,658     28,843  
         Foreign exchange loss (gain)   4,687     (1,942 )   153  
         Management and directors’ fees   74,262     84,899     224,877  
         Office and sundry   14,756     12,385     21,974  
         Office rent and utilities   5,737     5,560     5,200  
         Oil and gas production, royalties and                  
             other   12,605     30,937     7,118  
         Professional fees   46,228     50,718     29,435  
         Publicity, promotion and investor                  
              relations   110,076     229,678     327,302  
         Secretarial and employee benefits   33,578     45,132     25,141  
         Shareholders and meeting costs   7,180     2,573     4,324  
         Telephone   6,207     8,226     13,193  
         Transfer agent fees   6,830     7,167     10,405  
         Travel, auto and entertainment   25,128     28,402     64,466  
    378,474     528,086     769,158  
                   
Operating Loss   (351,320 )   (499,779 )   (748,121 )
                   
Other Income (Expenses)                  
         Interest income   3,079     2,620     2,625  
         Interest expense   (14,704 )   (16,562 )   (17,860 )
         Mineral property written off   (29,161 )   -     -  
         Exploration expenditures written off   (38,540 )   (2,019 )   (2,152 )
         Accounts receivable written off   -     -     (26,268 )
    (79,326 )   (15,961 )   (43,655 )
                   
Net Loss For The Year $  (430,646 ) $  (515,740 ) $  (791,776 )
                   
                   
Loss Per Share, Basic and diluted $  (0.01 ) $  (0.01 ) $  (0.03 )
                   
                   
Weighted Average Number Of                  
     Common Shares Outstanding   36,889,399     34,436,365     28,925,934  

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF DEFICIT
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)

    YEARS ENDED MAY 31  
    2006     2005     2004  
Deficit, Beginning Of Year $  (7,036,809 ) $  (6,521,069 ) $  (5,729,293 )
Net Loss For The Year   (430,646 )   (515,740 )   (791,776 )
Deficit, End Of Year $  (7,467,455 ) $  (7,036,809 ) $  (6,521,069 )

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)

    YEARS ENDED MAY 31  
    2006     2005     2004  
                   
Cash Flows From Operating Activities                  
         Revenue receipts for the year $  27,343   $  22,706   $  22,764  
         Receipt of interest income   3,079     2,620     2,625  
         Refunds of Goods and Services Tax   10,201     18,634     16,634  
         Payment of interest on debenture   (26,749 )   (15,000 )   (15,000 )
         Payments to suppliers for goods and                  
              services   (404,366 )   (558,388 )   (1,194,832 )
    (390,492 )   (529,428 )   (1,167,809 )
                   
Cash Flows From Financing Activities                  
         Borrowings under bank overdraft facilities   -     -     (55,112 )
         Share capital issued for cash   671,250     913,013     2,446,687  
         Repayment of debenture   (150,000 )   -     -  
         Related party advances (repayments)   26,956     (142,203 )   (170,922 )
    548,206     770,810     2,220,653  
                   
Cash Flows From Investing Activities                  
         Purchase of mineral property interests   -     (22,602 )   (20,645 )
         Purchase of equipment   -     (17,084 )   (11,730 )
         Purchase of natural gas well interest   (103,045 )   -     -  
         Exploration expenditures   (163,320 )   (253,967 )   (654,642 )
    (266,365 )   (293,653 )   (687,017 )
                   
(Decrease) Increase In Cash   (108,651 )   (52,271 )   365,827  
                   
Cash, Beginning Of Year   318,287     370,558     4,731  
                   
Cash, End Of Year $  209,636   $  318,287   $  370,558  
                   
Supplemental Disclosure Of Cash Flow                  
 Information                  
         Interest paid $  26,749   $  15,000   $  15,000  
         Income taxes paid   -     -     -  
                   
Non-Cash Financing Activities                  
         Shares issued for debt settlement $  -   $  -   $  70,560  

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)

1.

NATURE OF OPERATIONS AND GOING CONCERN

     

Teryl Resources Corp. is a public company incorporated under the British Columbia Business Corporations Act on July 16, 1985. Its shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange.

     

The Company makes expenditures on acquiring mineral properties and carries out exploration work. It also acquires oil and gas property interests and participates in drilling wells. The recoverability of amounts shown for investments, mineral properties, interest in oil and gas properties and the related deferred expenditures is dependent upon the existence of economically recoverable reserves, the ability to obtain the necessary financing to complete the exploration, the profitability of future production or the ability of the Company to dispose of those assets on a profitable basis. The Company's ongoing operation is dependent upon cash flow from successful operations and equity financing. The Company has incurred a loss of $430,646 in the year ended May 31, 2006 (2005 - $515,740; 2004 - $791,776). These consolidated financial statements do not include adjustments that would be necessary should it be determined that the Company may be unable to continue as a going concern.

     
2.

SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

     
a)

Consolidation

     

These consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries, Argon Investment Corporation (inactive) and Teryl, Inc. Teryl, Inc. was incorporated on November 17, 1988, in the State of Delaware and registered to do business in the USA, to hold and operate the Alaska mineral property interests and Texas oil and gas well interests.

     
b)

Equipment

     

The Company records its office and automotive equipment at cost and depreciates them on the declining-balance basis over the estimated useful lives at the following rates:


Office equipment 20% per annum
Automotive equipment 30% per annum


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


2.

SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued)

       
c)

Accounting for Oil and Gas Well Interests

       

The Company follows the successful efforts method of accounting for its oil and gas producing activities. Under this method, all costs associated with productive exploratory wells and productive or non-productive development wells are capitalized while the costs of non-productive exploratory wells are expensed. If an exploratory well finds oil and gas reserves, but a determination that such reserves can be classified as proved is not made after one year following completion of drilling, the costs of drilling are charged to operations. Indirect exploratory expenditures, including geophysical costs and annual lease rentals, are expensed as incurred. Unproved oil and gas properties that are individually significant are periodically assessed for impairment of value, and a loss is recognized at the time of impairment by providing an impairment allowance. Capitalized costs of producing oil and gas properties and related support equipment are depreciated and depleted by the unit-of-production method.

       

On the sale or retirement of a complete unit of a proved property, the cost and related accumulated depreciation, depletion, and amortization are eliminated from the property accounts, and the resultant gain or loss is recognized. On the retirement or sale of a partial unit of proved property, the cost is charged to accumulated depreciation, depletion, and amortization with a resulting gain or loss recognized in income. On the sale of an entire interest in an unproved property for cash or cash equivalent, gain or loss on the sale is recognized, taking into consideration the amount of any recorded impairment if the property had been assessed individually. If a partial interest in an unproved property is sold, the amount received is treated as a reduction of the cost of the interest retained. In joint ventured oil and gas exploration and production activities, the accounts reflect only the Company’s proportionate interest in such activities.

       
d)

Accounting for Mineral Property Interests

       

The Company capitalizes its acquisition costs of mineral properties (including finder’s fees) and the related exploration expenditures by claim groups, or its share of costs on joint ventures, which are to be amortized as follows:

       
i)

If properties are sold outright – costs are written off entirely against proceeds.

       
ii)

If properties are sold under option-type agreement – on the basis of cash or shares received over the total undiscounted amount to be received under the agreement, exclusive of royalties or net profit participation.

       
iii)

If properties are brought into production – on the basis of units of production over the total estimated reserves recoverable.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


2.

SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued)

       
d)

Accounting for Mineral Property Interests (Continued)

       
iv)

If properties are retained, but have no proven economic reserves and are not currently being explored or developed by the Company or joint venture partner – costs are written down to a nominal value.

       
v)

If properties are abandoned – costs are written off entirely.

       
e)

Revenue Recognition

       

Revenue associated with the sales of oil and gas are recorded when title passes to the customer. Revenues from oil and gas production from properties in which the Company has an interest with other producers are recognized on the basis of the Company’s net working interest.

       
f)

Foreign Exchange Translations

       

The Company’s functional currency is the Canadian dollar. Transactions recorded in United States dollars have been translated into Canadian dollars using the temporal method as follows:

       
i)

Monetary items at the rate prevailing at the balance sheet date.

ii)

Non-monetary items at the historical exchange rate.

iii)

Revenue and expense at the average rate in effect during the year.

       

Gains or losses arising on translation are included in the consolidated statements of operations.

       
g)

Investments

       

The Company accounts for its investments in companies subject to significant influence on the equity method. Under the equity method, the pro-rata share of the investee’s earnings is recorded as income and added to the carrying value of the investments shown on the consolidated balance sheet. Dividends received are considered as a return of capital and are accordingly deducted from the carrying value of the investment.

       

The Company's investments in companies that are not subject to significant influence are recorded at cost. Investments are written down only when there is clear evidence that a decline in value that is other than temporary has occurred.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


2.

SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued)

     
h)

Financial Instruments

     

The carrying value of financial instruments, not otherwise disclosed separately in the financial statements, approximate their fair values. Those financial instruments include cash, accounts and advances receivable, accounts payable, and amounts due to related parties. Their fair values approximate their carrying values, since they are short term in nature and are receivable or payable on demand.

     
i)

Use of Estimates

     

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with Canadian generally accepted accounting principles requires the Company’s management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the consolidated financial statements and related notes to the consolidated financial statements. Actual results may differ from those estimates.

     
j)

Income Taxes

     

The Company uses the liability method of accounting for future income taxes, whereby future income taxes assets and liabilities are computed based on the differences between the carrying amount of assets and liabilities on the balance sheet, and their corresponding tax values, using the currently enacted or substantially enacted income tax rates expected to apply when these differences reverse. Future income tax assets also result from unused loss carry forwards and other deductions. The valuation of future income tax assets is reviewed annually and adjusted, if necessary, by the use of a valuation allowance which is recorded against any future income tax asset if it is more likely than not that the asset will not be realized.

     
k)

Loss Per Share

     

Basic and diluted loss per share amounts are computed using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the year. The Company calculates loss per share using the treasury stock method. Under the treasury stock method, only instruments with exercise amounts less than the market prices impact the diluted calculations. In computing diluted loss per share, no shares were added to the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the years ended May 31, 2006 and 2005 for the dilutive effect of employee stock options and warrants, as they were all anti-dilutive. No adjustments were required to reported loss from operations in computing diluted per share amounts.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


2.

SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued)

     
l)

Stock Based Compensation

     

The Company follows the recommendations of CICA Handbook Section 3870 – “Stock Based Compensation and Other Stock Based Payments” to account for stock based transactions with officer, directors and outside consultants. Accordingly, the fair value of stock options is charged to operations, with an offsetting credit to contributed surplus. The fair value of stock options, which vest immediately, is recognized at the date of grant; the fair value of options, which vest in the future, is recognized on a straight-line basis over the vesting period. Any consideration received on exercise of stock options together with the related portion of contributed surplus is credited to share capital.

     
m)

Asset Impairment

     

On an annual basis or when impairment indicators arise, the Company evaluates the future recoverability of its mineral property costs. Impairment losses or write downs are recorded in the event the net book value of such assets exceeds the estimated indicated future cash flow attributable to such assets.

     
n)

Asset Retirement Obligations

     

The Company follows the recommendations in CICA Handbook Section 3110 – “Asset Retirement Obligations” whereby the legal obligations associated with the retirement of tangible long-lived assets are recorded as liabilities. The liabilities are calculated using the net present value of the cash flows required to settle the obligation. A corresponding amount is capitalized to the related asset. Asset retirement costs are charged to earnings in a manner consistent with the depreciation, depletion and amortization of the underlying asset. The liabilities are subject to accretion over time for changes in the fair value of the liability through charges to accretion which is included in cost of sales and operating expenses. As at May 31, 2006, the Company did not have any asset retirement obligations.

     
o)

Variable Interest Entities

     

The Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) issued Accounting Guideline 15, “Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities”, to provide accounting guidance related to variable interest entities (“VIE”). A VIE exists when the entity’s equity investment is at risk. When a VIE is determined to exist, the guidance requires the VIE to be consolidated by the primary beneficiary. The Company adopted the Guideline effective June 1, 2005 and has determined that it does not have a primary beneficiary interest in VIE.

     
p)

Comparative Figures

     

Certain comparative figures have been reclassified to conform with the current year’s presentation.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


3.

ADVANCES TO RELATED COMPANIES


      2006     2005  
               
  Access Information Systems $  -   $  70  
  Information Highway.com Inc.   -     818  
  KLR Petroleum Inc.   -     8,810  
  Reg Technologies Inc.   5,419     -  
  REGI US, Inc.   1,420     1,420  
  SMR Investments Ltd.   -     14,480  
  International Diamond Syndicate Ltd. (Note 4)   1     1  
               
    $  6,840   $  25,599  

The advances to related companies bear no interest and have no fixed repayment terms.

   
4.

INVESTMENTS


      2006     2005  
               
  Linux Gold Corp.            
           15,880 shares at cost $  4,026   $  4,026  

Linux Gold Corp. (formerly LinuxWizardry Systems, Inc.) is a public company listed on US Stock Exchanges having a market value of $7,347 at May 31, 2006 (2005 - $2,492).

   
5.

EQUIPMENT


      2006     2005  
               
  Furniture and fixtures, at cost $  21,237   $  48,215  
           Less: Accumulated amortization   (12,804 )   (36,197 )
      8,433     12,018  
               
  Automotive equipment, at cost   15,531     15,531  
           Less: Accumulated amortization   (7,921 )   (4,659 )
      7,610     10,872  
               
    $  16,043   $  22,890  


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


6.

OIL AND GAS WELL INTERESTS

   

The Company owns 6.5% working interest (4.680% net revenue interest) in the Peters No. 1 Well, in Fayette County, Texas, and a 7.5% working interest (5.79375% net revenue interest) in each of the C-S #1, Jancik #2 and Herrmann #4 wells, located in Burleson County, Texas. The carried cost of these wells has been completely depleted.

   

On May 18, 2006, the Company entered into an agreement with IAS Communications, Inc. to purchase a 40% interest (subject to 40% net revenue interests to others) in the Ken Lee #1 natural gas well, located in Knox County, Kentucky, USA, for $103,045 ($92,500 US). As the well was still being drilled at the date of the balance sheet, no depletion has been allowed for. The Company has first refusal rights to participate in up to 23 future wells.

   
7.

MINERAL PROPERTY INTERESTS


      BALANCE                 BALANCE  
      MAY 31                 MAY 31  
      2005     ADDITIONS     WRITE-OFFS     2006  
                           
  Property costs                        
           Silverknife $  1   $  -   $  -   $  1  
           Fish Creek   33,538     -     -     33,538  
           Anderson Group – 2nd   15,878     -     (15,878 )   -  
           Fox Creek   13,283     -     (13,283 )   -  
           West Ridge   116,189     -     -     116,189  
           Gil Venture   31,127     -     -     31,127  
           Stepovich Lease   9,381     -     -     9,381  
                           
    $  219,397   $  -   $  (29,161 ) $  190,236  

      BALANCE                 BALANCE  
      MAY 31                 MAY 31  
      2004     ADDITIONS     WRITE-OFFS     2005  
                           
  Property costs                        
           Silverknife $  1   $  -   $  -   $  1  
           Fish Creek   33,538     -     -     33,538  
           Anderson Group – 2nd   6,559     9,319     -     15,878  
           Fox Creek   -     13,283     -     13,283  
           West Ridge   116,189     -     -     116,189  
           Gil Venture   31,127     -     -     31,127  
           Stepovich Lease   9,381     -     -     9,381  
                           
    $  196,795   $  22,602   $  -   $  219,397  


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


7.

MINERAL PROPERTY INTERESTS (Continued)

     
a)

Silverknife, Liard, BC, Canada

     

Pursuant to agreements between Reg Technologies Inc., SMR Investments Ltd., Rapitan Resources Inc., and Chevron Minerals Ltd., the Company acquired a 30% working interest in the Silverknife mineral claims, situated in the Liard Mining Division in the Province of British Columbia, subject to a 10% Net Profit Royalty to Rapitan and a 1% Net Smelter Returns to SMR. Acquisition costs have been written down to $1 and exploration expenditures have been written off entirely, since the claims are not currently being explored and have no proven economic reserves.

     
b)

Fish Creek, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA

     

On March 5, 2002, the Company and Linux Gold Corp. entered into an agreement whereby the Company may earn up to a 50% interest in the Fish Creek mineral claims located in the Fairbanks district of Alaska, USA, by expending $550,750 ($500,000 US) within three years and issuing 200,000 common shares (issued December 16, 2002 at $0.08 per share). Linux will have a 5% net royalty interest until the Company pays $2,203,000 ($2,000,000 US). The agreement was extended to expire on March 5, 2007, subject to TSX approval. The Company authorized 100,000 common shares for issuance to Linux as consideration for the extension. TSX approval of the extension is dependent upon receipt of approval of disinterested shareholders. Approval will be sought at the Annual General Meeting scheduled for November 14, 2006.

     
c)

Anderson Group, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA

     

Pursuant to a purchase agreement dated August 18, 2003, the Company paid Michael D. Roberts $15,878 ($12,500 US), with an additional $148,703 ($135,000 US) owing in the next two years, for a 100% interest (subject to a 5% net profit interest) for 70.785 acres located in the Fairbanks Mining district of Alaska, USA, known as Anderson Group 2nd Tier. During the year, $15,878 in mineral property costs were written off as management decided not to maintain this option.

     
d)

Upper Fox Creek, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA

     

On June 23, 2004, the Company, Jean Turner and Ron Way (Owners) entered into a mineral property lease with Right of First Refusal, for a period of ten years to develop the property known as the Upper Fox Creek mining lease, subject to a 3% Net Smelter Return, for payments of $13,283 ($10,000 US) per year. The Company made the first $13,283 ($10,000 US) payment, but did not make the 2005 payment and the lease was canceled; accordingly, $13,283 in property costs and $36,377 in exploration costs were written off during the year.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


7.

MINERAL PROPERTY INTERESTS (Continued)

     
e)

West Ridge, Dome Creek, Alaska, USA

     

Pursuant to various agreements, the Company earned a 100% interest in the West Ridge (48 claims) mineral properties (approximately 5,200 acres) located in the Dome Creek area of the Fairbanks District of Alaska, USA. Teryl, Inc. has been conducting a geophysical survey over the past three years.

     
f)

Gil Venture, Dome Creek, Alaska, USA

     

Pursuant to various agreements, the Company acquired a 50% interest in 237 claims located in the Gilmore Dome area of Fairbanks District of Alaska. On May 31, 1991, the Company, NERCO Exploration Company and Fort Knox Venture entered into an agreement which granted the Company a 20% participating interest in the claims, valued at $171,720 ($150,000 US). Under the agreement, Fort Knox Venture paid the Company a total of $164,279 ($143,500 US) and contributed $686,880 ($600,000 US) to fund approved programs and budgets earning them an 80% participating interest in the property with the Company, retaining a 20% participating interest. Fort Knox Venture, through its operator Fairbanks Gold, has been doing exploration work on this property during the 2005 and 2006 years and hopes to go into production in the next few years. This has resulted in the Company being required to pay its 20% share of expenses, which amounted to $111,127 ($98,916 US) in the May, 2006 year and $126,925 ($104,824 US) in the May 2005 year. Further cash calls are expected for the 2007 year.

     
g)

Stepovich Lease, Dome Creek, Alaska, USA

     

On May 29, 1992, the Company granted Fort Knox Venture all of their interest in the Stepovich lease, except for a 10% Net Profit Interest. Fort Knox Venture assumed all of the Company’s liabilities and obligations under the Stepovich lease.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


7.

MINERAL PROPERTY INTERESTS (Continued)

Deferred Exploration Expenditures


      2006     2005  
               
  Silverknife Claims (Joint Venture)            
           Work assessment $  2,163   $  2,019  
               
  Fish Creek Claims (Joint Venture)            
           Geophysical survey   756     7,257  
           Placer sampling and drilling   26,967     21,818  
           Assays, maps, reports and insurance   11,949     6,440  
      39,672     35,515  
               
  Fox Creek Claims            
           Geophysical survey   1,564     34,813  
               
  West Ridge Claims            
           Geophysical survey   8,794     34,982  
           Rent assessment   -     7,832  
      8,794     42,814  
               
  Gil Venture (Joint Venture)            
           Maps and reports   -     937  
           Phase II exploration – trenching and drilling   111,127     126,925  
      111,127     127,862  
               
  Exploration expenditures for the year   163,320     243,023  
               
  Exploration expenditures written off – abandoned and            
         inactive claims   (38,540 )   (2,019 )
      124,780     241,004  
  Exploration expenditures, beginning of year   2,743,061     2,502,057  
               
  Exploration expenditures, end of year $  2,867,841   $  2,743,061  


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


8.

INCOME TAXES

   

Future income taxes reflect the net tax effects of the temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes. Significant components of the Company’s future tax assets as of May 31 are as follows:


      2006     2005  
               
  Non-capital losses carry forwards $  804,000   $  741,000  
  Equipment   16,000     14,000  
  Resource deductions   474,000     472,000  
      1,294,000     1,227,000  
  Valuation allowance   (1,294,000 )   (1,277,000 )
               
  Future income tax asset $  -   $  -  

A reconciliation of the combined federal and provincial income taxes at statutory rates and the Company’s effective income tax expense is as follows:

      2006     2005  
               
  Statutory tax rate   34%     36%  
               
  Income tax recovery at statutory rate $  (148,300 ) $  (183,800 )
  Permanent differences   2,900     1,300  
  Effect of change in tax rate   51,700     43,100  
  Tax benefits not recognized   93,700     139,400  
               
    $  -   $  -  

The Company has non-capital losses of approximately $2,356,000 (2005 - $2,082,000), which expire over the years 2007 to 2016. The Company also has cumulative exploration expenses in the amount of $1,584,000 (2005 - $1,545,000) in Canada, which can be carried forward indefinitely.


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


9.

DEBENTURE PAYABLE

   

Pursuant to various agreements, the Company agreed to issue a convertible debenture for $150,000 to Keltic Bryce Enterprises Inc. (“Keltic Bryce”), subject to regulatory approval. The original agreement, dated September 1, 1991, was approved. However, an amendment requested by Keltic Bryce, which resulted in the withdrawal of the original agreement, increasing the number of units and decreasing the share and warrant prices, did not subsequently receive approval and the debenture is not convertible under existing regulatory policy. The Company paid Keltic Bryce $15,000 interest on November 15, 2005. Interest of $11,749 was accrued to May 1, 2006 (2005 - $13,260). Therefore, the $150,000 debenture has been fully repaid plus accrued interest.

   
10.

ADVANCES FROM RELATED COMPANIES


      2006     2005  
               
  Linux Gold, Inc. $  20,936   $  23,371  
  JGR Petroleum Inc.   22,584     22,584  
  KLR Petroleum, Inc.   485     -  
  Rainbow Network   22,569     22,946  
  Reg Technologies Inc.   -     6,157  
  SMR Investments Ltd.   16,681     -  
               
    $  83,255   $  75,058  

The advances from related companies bear no interest and have no fixed repayment terms.

   
11.

CONTINGENCIES AND COMMITMENTS

   

Pursuant to an agreement dated May 24, 2006, effective June 1, 2006, Agoracom Investor Relations Corp. will provide investor relation services for one year for $3,000 per month plus GST, and a stock option allowing Agoracom to purchase up to 250,000 common shares in four equal instalments of 62,500 shares, vesting each quarter starting September 1, 2006, and exercisable June 1, 2007 at a price of $0.285 per share. The option will expire on June 1, 2009.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


12.

SHARE CAPITAL

   

Authorized share capital consists of:

   

100,000,000 voting common shares with no par value
5,000,000 non-voting preferred shares with $1 par value

   

The Preferred Shares have attached thereto a right to receive dividends as determined by the Directors. The Preferred Shares may be issued in series, with special rights and restrictions therefore being determined by the Directors, subject to regulatory approval. No Preferred Shares have been issued to the date of these financial statements.


      NUMBER OF           CONTRIBUTED  
      SHARES     AMOUNT     SURPLUS  
                     
  Balance, May 31, 2004   33,180,688   $  9,018,122   $  169,355  
                     
  Private placement warrants exercised                  
   (a)   622,000     186,600     -  
  Private placement warrants exercised                  
   (b)   975,000     146,250     -  
  Private placement (c)   -     600,000     -  
  Share issue costs   -     (6,637 )   -  
  Stock based compensation   -     -     6,580  
      3,597,000     926,213     6,580  
                     
  Balance, May 31, 2005   36,777,688     9,944,335     175,935  
                     
  Stock options exercised (d)   37,500     7,500     -  
  Fair value of stock options exercised   -     12,776     (12,776 )
  Private placement (e)   2,648,000     662,000     -  
  Private placement warrants exercised (f)   5,000     1,750     -  
  Share issue costs   -     (4,254 )   -  
  Stock based compensation   -     -     6,242  
      2,690,500     679,772     (6,534 )
                     
  Balance, May 31, 2006   39,468,188   $  10,624,107   $  169,401  

  a)

From June 4 to August 12, 2004, 10 individuals exercised private placement warrants totalling 622,000 shares at a price of $0.30 per share.

     
  b)

From September 14 to October 19, 2004, 3 individuals exercised private placement warrants totalling 975,000 shares at a price of $0.15 per share.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


12.

SHARE CAPITAL (Continued)

     
c)

On May 18, 2005, the Company issued 2,000,000 units of capital stock pursuant to a Private Placement with 42 placees at a price of $0.30 per unit. Each unit consists of one share and one-half share purchase warrant exercisable within one year for $0.35 per share.

     
d)

On February 23, 2006, a consultant exercised a portion of his stock options for 37,500 common shares at a price of $0.20 per share.

     
e)

On May 17, 2006, the Company issued 2,648,000 units of capital stock pursuant to a Private Placement with 3 placees at a price of $0.25 per unit. Each unit consists of one share and one-half share purchase warrant exercisable within one year for $0.30 per share (or for $0.35 within the second year).

     
f)

On May 18, 2006, one individual exercised warrants for 5,000 shares at a price of $0.35 per share.

     

On October 19, 2004, the Company granted a consultant stock options for up to 25,000 common shares exercisable at $0.45 per share for a five-year term; and on March 7, 2005, one employee’s options for 50,000 common shares were repriced from $0.63 to $0.35. On October 7, 2005, one employee’s options for 150,000 common shares were repriced from $0.40 to $0.20; and on November 17, 2005, one employee’s options for 25,000 common shares at $0.45 were cancelled. On February 19, 2006, a consultant’s options for 350,000 common shares at a price of $0.40 expired without being exercised.

     

Subsequent to year-end, on June 29, 2006, the Company granted a consultant stock options for 25,000 common shares exercisable at $0.30 per share for a five-year term.

     

Outstanding Commitments to Issue Shares

     

At May 31, 2006, the following commitments to issue shares were outstanding:


  TYPE OF NUMBER OF   EXPIRY
  COMMITMENT SHARES PRICE DATE
         
  Private placement warrants 1,324,000         $ 0.30/0.35 May 17, 2007/2008
  Consultants’ options 112,500 $ 0.20 October 7, 2006
  Directors’ options 1,590,000 $ 0.15 April 22, 2007
  Employees’ options 50,000 $ 0.40 December 16, 2007
  Consultants’ options 75,000 $ 0.40 March 4, 2008
  Consultants’ options 300,000 $ 0.45 November 13, 2008
  Directors’ options 50,000 $ 0.35 March 5, 2009
         
    3,501,500    


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


12.

SHARE CAPITAL (Continued)

   

During the year ended May 31, 2006, the Company had the following stock option activities:


            WEIGHTED  
      NUMBER     AVERAGE  
      OF     EXERCISE  
      OPTIONS     PRICE  
               
  Balance, May 31, 2004   2,565,000   $  0.26  
               
  Granted   25,000     0.45  
               
  Balance, May 31, 2005   2,590,000     0.27  
               
  Expired   (350,000 )   0.40  
  Exercised   (37,500 )   0.20  
  Cancelled   (25,000 )   0.45  
               
  Balance, May 31, 2006   2,177,500   $  0.21  

Stock Based Compensation Expense

The fair value of each option granted is estimated on the grant date using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model assuming no dividend yield and the following weighted average assumptions for options granted: expected volatility of 52% (2005 - 158%; 2004 – 158%), weighted average risk free interest rate of 3.40% (2005 - 4.56%; 2004 – 4.56%) and expected life of 1 year (2005 – 2 years; 2004 – 2 years).

The following table summarizes information about the stock options outstanding at May 31, 2006:

    WEIGHTED  
WEIGHTED NUMBER AVERAGE NUMBER
AVERAGE OF REMAINING OF
EXERCISE OPTIONS CONTRACTUAL OPTIONS
PRICE OUTSTANDING LIFE (YEARS) EXERCISABLE
       
$ 0.15 1,590,000 0.89 1,590,000
$ 0.40 125,000 1.68 125,000
$ 0.45 300,000 2.46 300,000
$ 0.35 50,000 2.76 50,000
$ 0.20 112,500 0.35 112,500
       
$ 0.20 2,177,500 1.17 2,177,500


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


13.

RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

     

Related party transactions are in the normal course of operations and are measured at the exchange amount, which is the amount of consideration established and agreed to by the related parties. Related party transactions not disclosed elsewhere in these financial statements are as follows:

     

Reg Technologies Inc. is a public company which shares office facilities and staff, and several directors. REGI US, Inc. is another company with common directors, staff and office facilities.

     

SMR Investments Ltd. is a private company controlled by an officer of the Company. Under a management contract with SMR Investments Ltd., the Company agreed to pay up to $2,500 per month for management services. The Company was charged management fees of $30,000 (2005 - $30,000; 2004 - $17,500) by SMR during the current year.

     

The Company holds 15,880 shares of Linux Gold, Inc., a BC public company with common directors.

     

During the 2006 fiscal year, director’s fees of $12,000 (2005 - $12,000; 2004 - $12,000) were paid to J. Robertson, President of the Company; administration consulting fees of $19,000 (2005 - $25,750; 2004 - $24,375) were paid to J. Lorette, a director of the Company and secretarial fees of $19,550 (2005 - $23,500; 2004 - $20,874) were paid to M. van Oord, a director of the Company.

     

Fees of $6,770 (2005 - $9,019; 2004 - $1,646) were paid to KLR Petroleum Ltd. (which is controlled by an officer of the Company) for administration of the Company payroll and benefit plan.

     

Office rent amounted to $17,040 (2005 - $16,680; 2004 - $15,600) for the year ended May 31, 2006 of which $11,360 (2005 - $11,120; 2004 - $10,400) has been shared with Reg Technologies Inc. and REGI US, Inc.

     
14.

SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

     

On June 10, 2006, the Company and Frederic & John Rothermel (the Vendors) entered into an agreement whereby the Company would purchase a 100% interest in the Gold Hill Patented Claim Group located in the Warren Mining District, Cochise County, Arizona, USA, subject to a 10% Net Profits Royalty to the vendors, for the following considerations:

     
a)

$5,508 ($5,000 US) to complete a due diligence within 90 days.

     
b)

$11,015 ($10,000 US) upon completion of the due diligence and $11,015 ($10,000 US) per year thereafter.

     
c)

complete a $55,075 ($50,000 US) first phase exploration program conducted by the Vendors.

     
d)

$275,375 ($250,000 US) per year upon commencement of production.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


15.

TERYL, INC. TRANSACTIONS (100% US SUBSIDIARY)

   

In 1998, Teryl, Inc. offered a private placement for up to 1,000,000 shares at a price of $0.23 ($0.15 US) and subscriptions of $146,044 ($96,750 US) were received by November 19, 1999. Since the offering was not fully subscribed, the Companies negotiated with the subscribers to replace the Teryl, Inc. shares with Teryl Resources Corp. shares. $76,072 ($51,750 US) worth of capital stock was issued on May 23, 2003 for these subscriptions. One subscriber did not return the agreement and negotiations are proceeding to resolve this.

   
16.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CANADIAN AND UNITED STATES GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES

   

These consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Canadian generally accepted accounting principles (“Canadian GAAP”). Material variations in the accounting measurement principles, practices and methods used in preparing these consolidated financial statements from measurement principles, practices and methods accepted in the United States (“US GAAP”) are described and quantified below.

   

Mineral Properties and Deferred Exploration Costs

   

Under Canadian GAAP, mineral property interests and deferred exploration costs, including acquisition and exploration costs, are carried at cost and written down if the properties are abandoned, sold or if management determines there to be an impairment in value. Under United States GAAP, mineral property interests are carried at cost and deferred exploration costs are expensed as incurred.

   

Asset Retirement Obligations

   

Under US GAAP, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 143, “Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations” (“SFAS 143”) requires companies to record the fair value of the liability for closure and removal costs associated with legal obligations upon the retirement or removal of any tangible long-lived assets effective June 1, 2003. Under this standard, the initial recognition of the liability is capitalized as part of the asset cost and amortized over its estimated useful life. For Canadian GAAP purposes, effective June 1, 2004, the Company adopted the provisions of CICA HB 3110 “Asset Retirement Obligations” which are substantially similar to those of SFAS 143.

   

The Company has determined that there were no material differences in the measurement and presentation of asset retirement obligations between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP as at May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


16.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CANADIAN AND UNITED STATES GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (Continued)

   

Stock-Based Compensation

   

Under US GAAP, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 123, “Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation” (“SFAS 123”) encourages companies to establish a fair market value based method of accounting for stock-based compensation plans. Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25 (“APB 25”) permits the measurement of compensation cost for stock options as the excess, if any, of the quoted market price of the Company’s stock at the date of grant over the option price. The Company has chosen to account for stock-based compensation under SFAS 123.

   

The Company has a stock-based compensation plan which is described in note 12. The Company accounts for stock-based compensation, including stock options and warrants, using the fair value based method, as prescribed by CICA HB 3870 “Stock-based Compensation and Other Stock-Based Payments” to account for stock based transactions with officers, directors and consultants. Under this method, the fair value of the stock options and warrants at the date of grant is amortized over the vesting period, with an offsetting credit recorded as an increase in contributed surplus. If the stock options or warrants are exercised, the proceeds are credited to share capital and the fair value at the date of the grant is reclassified from contributed surplus to share capital. Accordingly, there were no material differences between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP for the years ended May 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004.

   

Marketable Securities

   

Under Canadian GAAP, short-term marketable securities are carried at the lower of aggregate cost or current market value, with any unrealized loss included in the statements of operations. Long-term investments are carried on the cost or equity basis and are only written down when there is evidence of a decline in value that is other than temporary.

   

Under US GAAP, Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 115, “Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities” (SFAS 115”) requires that certain equity investments must be classified into available-for-sale securities and carried at fair market value. Any unrealized holding gains or losses are reported as a separate component of shareholders’ equity until realized for available-for-sale securities, and included in earnings for trading securities. Under US GAAP, the Company’s investments are classified as available-for-sale securities.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


16.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CANADIAN AND UNITED STATES GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (Continued)

   

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

   
In May 2005, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued SFAS No. 154, “Accounting Changes and Error Corrections – A Replacement of APB Opinion No. 20 and SFAS No. 3 ”. SFAS No. 154 changes the requirements for the accounting for and reporting of a change in accounting principle and applies to all voluntary changes in accounting principle. It also applies to changes required by an accounting pronouncement in the unusual instance that the pronouncement does not include specific transition provisions. SFAS No. 154 requires retrospective application to prior periods’ financial statements of changes in accounting principle, unless it is impracticable to determine either the period-specific effects or the cumulative effect of the change. The provisions of SFAS No. 154 are effective for accounting changes and correction of errors made in fiscal years beginning after June 1, 2006. The adoption of this standard is not expected to have a material effect on the Company’s results of operations or financial position.
   

In December 2004, the FASB issued SFAS No. 153, “Exchanges of Non-monetary Assets - An Amendment of APB Opinion No. 29 ”. The guidance in APB Opinion No. 29, “Accounting for Non-monetary Transactions”, is based on the principle that exchanges of non-monetary assets should be measured based on the fair value of the assets exchanged. The guidance in that Opinion, however, included certain exceptions to that principle. SFAS No. 153 amends Opinion No. 29 to eliminate the exception for non- monetary exchanges of similar productive assets and replaces it with a general exception for exchanges of non-monetary assets that do not have commercial substance. A non- monetary exchange has commercial substance if the future cash flows of the entity are expected to change significantly as a result of the exchange. The provisions of SFAS No. 153 are effective for non-monetary asset exchanges occurring in fiscal periods beginning after June 1, 2006. Early application is permitted and companies must apply the standard prospectively. The adoption of this standard is not expected to have a material effect on the Company’s results of operations or financial position.

   

The FASB has also issued SFAS No. 155 “Accounting for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments” and SFAS No. 156 “Accounting for Servicing of Financial Assets”, but they will not have any relationship to the operations of the Company. Therefore, a description and its impact for each on the Company’s operations and financial position have not been disclosed.



TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


16.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CANADIAN AND UNITED STATES GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (Continued)

   

The impact of the differences between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP on the consolidated balance sheets would be as follows:


            2006        
      BALANCE           BALANCE  
      CANADIAN           US  
      GAAP     ADJUSTMENTS     GAAP  
                     
  Current Assets $  320,412   $  -   $  320,412  
  Investments   4,026     3,321     7,347  
  Equipment   16,043     -     16,043  
  Natural gas well   103,045     (103,045 )   -  
  Mineral property interests   190,236     -     190,236  
  Deferred expenditures   2,867,841     (2,867,841 )   -  
                     
    $  3,501,603   $  (2,967,565 ) $  534,038  
                     
  Current liabilities $  105,578   $  -   $  105,578  
  Shareholders’ equity   3,396,025     (2,967,565 )   428,460  
                     
    $  3,501,603   $  (2,967,565 ) $  534,038  

            2005        
      BALANCE           BALANCE  
      CANADIAN           US  
      GAAP     ADJUSTMENTS     GAAP  
                     
  Current Assets $  420,335   $  -   $  420,335  
  Investments   4,026     (1,534 )   2,492  
  Equipment   22,890     -     22,890  
  Mineral property interests   219,397     -     219,397  
  Deferred expenditures   2,743,061     (2,743,061 )   -  
                     
    $  3,409,709   $  (2,744,595 ) $  665,114  
                     
  Current liabilities $  256,276   $  -   $  256,276  
  Shareholders’ equity   3,153,433     (2,744,595 )   408,838  
                     
    $  3,409,709   $  (2,744,595 ) $  665,114  


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


16.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CANADIAN AND UNITED STATES GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (Continued)


            2004        
      BALANCE           BALANCE  
      CANADIAN           US  
      GAAP     ADJUSTMENTS     GAAP  
                     
  Current Assets $  427,773   $  -   $  427,773  
  Investments   4,026     519     4,545  
  Equipment   13,470     -     13,470  
  Mineral property interests   196,795     -     196,795  
  Deferred expenditures   2,502,057     (2,502,057 )   -  
                     
    $  3,144,121   $  (2,501,538 ) $  642,583  
                     
  Current liabilities $  407,741   $  -   $  407,741  
  Shareholders’ equity   2,736,380     (2,501,538 )   234,842  
                     
    $  3,144,121   $  (2,501,538 ) $  642,583  

The impact of the differences between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP on the consolidated statements of operations and deficit would be as follows:

      2006     2005     2004  
                     
  Net loss for the year, Canadian                  
    GAAP $  (430,646 ) $  (515,740 ) $  (791,776 )
                     
  Adjustments:                  
    Deferred exploration costs   (124,780 )   (241,004 )   (652,490 )
                     
  Net loss for the year, US GAAP $  (555,426 ) $  (756,744 ) $  (1,444,266 )
                     
  Basic and diluted loss per share,                  
    US GAAP $  (0.02 ) $  (0.02 ) $  (0.05 )
                     
  Weighted average number of                  
   common shares outstanding,                  
   basic and diluted   36,889,399     34,436,365     28,925,934  


TERYL RESOURCES CORP.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

MAY 31, 2006 AND 2005
(Stated in Canadian Dollars)


16.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CANADIAN AND UNITED STATES GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (Continued)

   

The Company’s comprehensive loss is comprised as follows:


      2006     2005     2004  
  Net loss for the year, US GAAP $  (555,426 ) $  (756,744 ) $  (1,444,266 )
  Change in net unrealized gains (losses) on                  
   available-for-sale investments   4,855     (2,053 )   4,002  
  Comprehensive loss $  (550,571 ) $  (758,797 ) $  (1,440,264 )

The impact of the differences between Canadian GAAP and US GAAP on the consolidated statements of cash flows would be as follows:

      2006     2005     2004  
  Cash flows used in operating activities,                  
   Canadian GAAP $  (390,492 ) $  (529,428 ) $  (1,167,809 )
  Deferred exploration costs   (163,320 )   (253,967 )   (654,642 )
  Cash flows used in operating activities, US                  
   GAAP   (553,812 )   (783,395 )   (1,822,451 )
  Cash flows provided by financing activities,                  
   Canadian GAAP and US GAAP   548,206     770,810     2,275,765  
  Cash flows used in investing activities,                  
   Canadian GAAP   (266,365 )   (293,653 )   (687,017 )
  Deferred exploration costs   163,320     253,967     654,642  
  Cash flows used in investing activities, US                  
   GAAP   (103,045 )   (39,686 )   (32,375 )
  (Decrease) Increase in cash   (108,651 )   (52,271 )   420,939  
  Cash (Bank indebtedness), beginning of                  
   year   318,287     370,558     (50,381 )
  Cash, end of year $  209,636   $  318,287   $  370,558  


ITEM 18.        FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Not applicable.

ITEM 19.        EXHIBITS

Documents filed as exhibits to this annual report:

Number Description  
1.1 Certificate of Incorporation – Candy Mountain Gold Corporation May 23, 1980 (1)
1.2 Certificate of Name Change, Special Resolution and Altered Memorandum to change name from Candy Mountain Resources to Teryl Resources Corp. dated January 20, 1984 (1)
1.3 Special resolutions and Altered memorandum dated October 25, 1985 increasing the authorized capital to 15,000,000 by creating 5,000,000 Preferred Shares with a par value of $1.00, and amending the Articles of the Company by adding Special Rights and Restrictions Attached to the Preferred Shares as a Class (1)
1.4 Altered memorandum and special resolution dated November 30, 1988 increasing the number of authorized common shares to 30,000,000 common shares from 10,000,000 common shares (1)
1.5 Altered memorandum and special resolution dated November 30, 1988 canceling the then existing Articles of the Company and replacing the Articles in their entirety with new Articles of the Company (1)
1.6 Altered memorandum and special resolution dated November 20, 2000 increasing the authorized capital to 100,000,000 common shares from 30,000,000, effective December 4, 2002 (4)
1.7 Altered Memorandum and special resolution, certificate of name change dated February 4, 2003 changing the name from Teryl Resources Corp. to Teryl Gold Corp. (4)
1.8 Transition Application and Notice of Articles transitioning from the former Company Act (British Columbia) to the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) dated September 15, 2004 (6)
1.9 Notice of Alteration effective November 25, 2004 changing the name of the Company back to Teryl Resources Corp. (6)
1.10 Notice of Articles dated November 25, 2004 reflecting the Altered memorandum and special resolution dated November 15, 2004 canceling the then existing Articles of the Company and replacing the Articles in their entirety with new Articles of the Company (6)
2.1 Specimen copy of Registrant’s common share certificate (1)
4.1 Commitment to provide financing to Teryl Resources Corp. as required for ongoing operations dated February 14, 2000 from John Robertson (2)
4.2 Mining Joint Venture Agreement between Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc. and Teryl, Inc. dated September 23, 1999 (1)
4.3 Management Agreement dated December 1, 1994 between Teryl Resources Corp. and SMR Investments Ltd. (1)
4.4 Agreement between Teryl Resources Corp. and Linux Gold Corp. (formerly LinuxWizardry Systems, Inc.) made March 5, 2002 Fish Creek Mineral Claims (3)
4.5 Amendment to Joint Venture Agreement between Linux Gold Corp. and Teryl Resources Corp. dated November 4, 2002 (4)

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4.6 Anderson Group Property Purchase Agreement dated August 18, 2003 (5)
4.7 West Ridge Property Lease Agreement dated July 2003 (5)
4.8 Extension to Joint Venture Agreement between Linux Gold Corp. and Teryl Resources Corp. dated March 5, 2005 (6)
4.9 Upper Fox Creek Development Agreement dated June 23, 2004 between the Company, Jean Turner and Ron Way (6)
8.1 List of Subsidiaries (7)
12.1
Certification pursuant to Title 18, United States Code, Section 1350 as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(John G. Robertson)
(7)
12.2
Certification pursuant to Title 18, United States Code, Section 1350 as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(Susanne Robertson)
(7)
13.1
Certification pursuant to Title 18, United States Code, Section 1350 as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(John G. Robertson)
(7)
13.2
Certification pursuant to Title 18, United States Code, Section 1350 as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(Susanne Robertson)
(7)
14.1 Consent of Morgan and Company (7)

(1)

incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form 20-F filed on December 29, 2000 with the US Securities and Exchange Commission

(2)

incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year-ended May 31, 2000.

(3)

incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year-ended May 31, 2002

(4)

incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year-ended May 31, 2003

(5)

incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year-ended May 31, 2004

(6)

incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year-ended May 31, 2005

(7)

attached hereto

GLOSSARY OF MINING TERMS

The following is a glossary of some of the terms used in the mining industry and referenced herein:

Alluvial: A term used to identify particular types of, or minerals found associated with, deposits made by flowing water, such as alluvial gold

Arsenopyrite: A major ore of arsenic, Arsenopyite can contain a small amount of gold as an impurity

Assay – a precise and accurate analysis of the metal contents in an ore or rock sample

Au - gold.

Auger drill – a handheld machine that produces small, continuous core samples in unconsolidated materials

Breccia: A fragmental rock; any rock formation essentially composed of uncemented, or loosely consolidated, small angular

Contained gold – total measurable gold in grams or ounces estimated to be contained within a mineral deposit. Makes no allowance for economic criteria, mining dilution or recovery losses.

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Diamond drill – a large machine that produces a more or less continuous core sample of the rock or material being drilled.

Feasibility study – a detailed report assessing the feasibility, economics and engineering of placing a mineral deposit into commercial production

Fracture: The general term to include any kind of discontinuity in a body of rock if produced by mechanical process such as shear stress or tensile stress

Gm/mt or gpt - grams per metric tonne.

Gold deposit - means a mineral deposit mineralized with gold.

Gold resource – see geological or mineral resource

Grams per cubic meter - alluvial mineralization measured by grams of gold contained per cubic meter of material, a measure of gold content by volume not by weight.

Graphite: A allotropic form of carbon found in nature

Inferred mineral resource: That part of a mineral resource for which quantity and grade or quality can be estimated on the basis of geological evidence and limited sampling and reasonably assumed, but not verified, geological and grade continuity. The estimate is based on limited information and sampling gathered through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes

Indicated mineral resource: That part of a mineral resource for which quantity and grade or quality, densities, shape and physical characteristics, can be estimated with a level of confidence sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical and economic parameters, to support mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. The estimate is based on detailed and reliable exploration and testing information gathered through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes that are spaced closely enough for geological and grade continuity to be reasonably assumed

Intrusive: cuts across (is intrusive into)

Listwanite: (carbonate altered serpentinite) is associated with gold mineralization.

Lode mining – mining of gold bearing rocks, typically in the form of veins or stockworks

Measured resource means that part of a mineral resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape, physical characteristics are so well established that they can be estimated with confidence sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical and economic parameters, to support production planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. The estimate is based on detailed and reliable exploration, sampling and testing information gathered through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes that are spaced closely enough to confirm both geological and grade continuity.

mineral claim or mining claim: The portion of mining ground held under law by a claimant.

mineralization: Implication that the rocks contain sulphide minerals and that these could be related to ore.

net profit interest (NPI) – effectively a royalty based on the net profits generated after recovery of all costs

net smelter royalty or NSR - a royalty based on the gross proceeds received from the sale of minerals less the cost of smelting, refining, freight and other related costs.

ore – a naturally occurring rock or material from which economic minerals can be extracted at a profit

ounce or oz. - a troy ounce or 20 pennyweights or 480 grains or 31.103 grams.

opt – troy ounces per short ton

placer: A place where gold is obtained by washing; an alluvial or glacial deposit, as of sand or gravel, containing particles of gold or other valuable minerals including gemstones.

probable reserve - the economically mineable part of an indicated, and in some circumstances a measured resource demonstrated by at least a preliminary feasibility study. This study must include adequate information on mining, processing, metallurgical, economic, and other relevant factors that demonstrate, at the time of reporting, that economic extraction can be justified.

prospect – an area prospective for economic minerals based on geological, geophysical, geochemical and other criteria

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proven reserve means the economically mineable part of a measured resource demonstrated by at least a preliminary feasibility study. This study must include adequate information on mining, processing, metallurgical, economic, and other relevant factors that demonstrate, at the time of reporting, that economic extraction is justified.

reserve: That part of a mineral deposit which could be economically and legally extracted or produced at the time of the reserve determination.

reverse circulation drill – a large machine that produces a continuous chip sample of the rock or material being drilled

skarn: a fine-grained metamorphic rock that is usually coloured green or red, occasionally gray, black, brown or white. It forms through thermal metamorphism as the mineralogical, chemical and crystallographic changes in a solid-state rock, i.e. without melting, in response to new conditions of pressure and/or temperature, and/or introduction of fluids.

Stockwork: Small veins of mineralization that have so penetrated a rock mass that the whole rock mass can be considered mineralized

ton - short ton (2,000 pounds).

tonne - metric tonne (2,204.6 pounds).

trenching – the surface excavation of a linear trench to expose mineralization for sampling

vein – a tabular body of rock typically of narrow thickness and often mineralized occupying a fault, shear, fissure or fracture crosscutting another pre-existing rock

For ease of reference, the following conversion factors are provided:

1 mile = 1.609 kilometers 2,204 pounds = 1 tonne
1 yard = 0.9144 meter 2,000 pounds/1 short ton = 0.907 tonne
1 acre = 0.405 hectare 1 troy ounce = 31.103 grams

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SIGNATURE PAGE

The Registrant hereby certifies that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form 20-F and that it has duly
caused and authorized the undersigned to sign this transitional report on its behalf.

TERYL RESOURCES CORP.
REGISTRANT

Dated: August 7, 2007 By: /s/ John G. Robertson
    John G. Robertson
    Chairman of the Board/Director

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