UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.  20549
 
FORM S-1
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
 
VENZA GOLD CORP .
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)
 
British Columbia, Canada
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
 
1000
(Primary Standard Industrial Classification Code Number)
 
99-0364150
(I.R.S. Employer Identification Number)
 
Suite 610, 1100 Melville Street, Vancouver , BC Canada V6E 4A6
Tel: (604) 306-2525
 (Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of Registrant’s principal executive offices)
 
CAMLEX MANAGEMENT INC.
Suite 950, 650 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, BC Canada V6B 4N8
Tel: ( 604) 687-5792
(Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of agent for service)
 
Copies to:
NORTHWEST LAW GROUP
Suite 950, 650 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, BC Canada V6B 4N8
Tel: (604) 687-5792
 
As soon as practicable after this Registration Statement is declared effective.
(Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public)
 
If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933 check the following box:   [X]
 
If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.   [    ]
 
If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.   [    ]
 
If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering. [   ]
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company.  See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer [   ]
Accelerated filer [   ]
Non-accelerated filer [   ] (Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
Smaller reporting company [ X ]
 
CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
Title of Each Class of
Securities to be Registered
Amount
 to be Registered
Proposed Maximum
 Offering Price Per Unit
Proposed Maximum Aggregate Offering Price (1)
Amount of
Registration Fee (1)
Common Shares, without par value
6,443,328
$0.10
$644,332.8
$73.84
Note:
(1) Estimated solely for the purpose of calculating the registration fee in accordance with Rule 457 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”).
 
The Registrant hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this Registration Statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the Securities Act, or until this Registration Statement shall become effective on such date as the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), acting pursuant to said Section 8(a), may determine.
 
 
 
SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, JUNE 8 , 2012

The information contained in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. The selling security holders may not sell these securities until the registration statement filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) is effective. This prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any state where the offer or sale is not permitted.
 


VENZA GOLD CORP.

PROSPECTUS

6,443,328 COMMON SHARES

We are offering up to 1,500,000 common shares at a fixed price of $0.10 per share in a direct offering. There is no minimum number of common shares that must be sold by us for the offering to proceed, and we will retain the proceeds from the sale of any of the offered shares. The offering will be done without the involvement of underwriters or broker-dealers.  The common shares to be sold by us will be sold on our behalf by our President, Ralph Biggar.  Mr. Biggar will not receive any commission on proceeds from the sale of our common shares on our behalf.

The selling security holders named in this prospectus are offering 4,943,328 common shares.  We will not receive any proceeds from the sale of shares being sold by selling security holders.  The prices at which the selling security holders may sell their shares will be determined by prevailing market prices, prices related to prevailing market prices or at privately negotiated prices.  The selling security holders may resell their shares to or through underwriters, broker-dealers or agents, who may receive compensation in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions.  The selling security holders named in this prospectus will bear the costs of all commission or discounts, if any, attributable to the sale of their shares.  We are bearing the costs, expenses and fees associated with the registration of the common shares in this prospectus.

 
Price per Share
Commission
Net Proceeds to Company Before Offering Expenses
Common Shares offered by Us
$0.10
None
$150,000
Common Shares offered by the Selling Security Holders
Not Applicable
None
None

Our common shares presently not traded on any market or securities exchange.  Although we intend to apply for quotation of our common shares on the OTC Bulletin Board, public trading of our common shares may never materialize.

The purchase of the securities offered through this prospectus involves a high degree of risk. You should carefully read and consider the section of this prospectus titled “Risk Factors” on page 6 before buying any common shares.

Neither the SEC nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or passed upon the adequacy or accuracy of this prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

This Prospectus is Dated June 8, 2012
 

 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
PROSPECTUS
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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GLOSSARY OF TECHNICAL GEOLOGICAL TERMS

The following defined technical geological terms are used in our prospectus:

Acanthite
A mineral that is a source of silver.
   
Actinolite
A mineral containing magnesium and iron and is commonly formed in metamorphic rocks.
   
Albite
A plagioclase feldspar mineral.
   
Amygdules
A small gas bubble in igneous, especially volcanic, rock filled with secondary minerals such as zeolite, calcite, or quartz.
   
Andesite
An extrusive igneous rock named after the andes mountains where it is very abundant.
   
Argentite
A metallic lead grey mineral found in veins with silver and sulfide minerals and is an important ore of silver.
   
Arsenopyrite
An arsenic iron sulphide mineral.
   
Augite
A common rock-forming mineral in igneous and metamorphic rocks .
   
Auriferous
Means containing gold or gold-bearing.
   
Azurite
A mineral found in oxidized parts of copper deposits.
   
Banded
The property of rocks having thin and nearly parallel bands of different textures, colors, or minerals. Banded coal has alternating bands of different types.
   
Biotite
A common rock-forming silicate mineral .
   
Boudin
One of a series of elongate, sausage-shaped segments occurring in boudinage structure, either separate or joined by pinched connections, and having barrel-shaped cross sections.
   
Carboniferous
The Mississippian and Pennsylvanian periods combined, ranging from about 345 million years to about 280 million years ago; also, the corresponding systems of rocks.
   
Cerargyrite
A supergene mineral occurring in silver veins; an important source of silver.
   
Chalcopyrite
A copper iron sulphide mineral.
   
Chevron
Any V-shaped pattern or device .
   
Chloritize
The replacement by, conversion into, or introduction of chlorite.
   
Cirque
A bowl-shaped depression with very steep sides that forms at the head of a mountain glacier.
   
Cretaceous
A geological period from 145 to 65 million years ago.
   
Concordant
An intrusive igneous body where the contacts of which are parallel to the bedding or foliation of the country rock.
   
Cuprite
An oxide mineral composed of copper oxide, and is a minor ore of copper.
   
Dacite
A common volcanic or intrusive rock type, highly feldspathic but with little free quartz, usually fine grained.
   
Delta
The flat alluvial area at the mouth of some rivers where the mainstream splits up into several distributaries.
   
Diorite
A grey to dark grey intermediate intrusive igneous rock composed principally of plagioclase feldspar .
   
Discordant
A contact between an igneous intrusion and the country rock that is not parallel to the foliation or bedding planes of the latter.
   
Epidote
An abundant rock forming mineral, but one of secondary origin.
 
 
Flow
A tabular-shaped body of lava that consolidated from magma on the surface of the Earth.
   
Fluvial
Means relating to or occurring in a river.
   
Fold
A planar feature, such as a bedding plane, that has been strongly warped, presumably by deformation.
   
Foliated
A planar arrangement of textural or structural features in any type of rock.
   
Fracture Zone
The outer, rigid part of a glacier, in which the ice is much fractured.
   
Galena
A mineral that is an important source of lead and silver.
   
Garnet
A group of minerals used as gemstones and abrasives.
   
Glacial Drift
Boulders, till, gravel, sand, or clay transported and deposited by a glacier or its meltwater.
   
Granite
A common, coarse-grained, light-colored, hard igneous rock consisting chiefly of quartz, orthoclase or microcline, and mica.
   
Granodiorite
A medium- to coarse-grained rock that is among the most abundant intrusive igneous rocks.
   
Greenstone
Igneous rocks that have developed enough chlorite in alteration to give them a green cast.
   
Heterogeneous
Unlike in character, quality, structure, or composition; consisting of dissimilar elements or ingredients of different kinds; not homogeneous.
   
Hornblende
An informal name for dark green to black amphiboles.
   
Hydrothermal
A mineral deposit formed by circulating fluids, usually implies elevated temperatures but is without any particular restrictions of temperature or pressure.
   
Intercalated
Layered material.
   
Intrusive rocks
A rock formation that intrudes into a host rock.
   
Isoclinal
Sloping in the same direction and at the same angle .
   
Jurassic
The geological period between 190 million years and 135 million years ago.
   
Lamina (Laminae)
The thinnest recognizable layer in a sedimentary rock.
   
Lithologic
The gross physical character of a rock or rock formation.
   
Limestone
A sedimentary rock composed largely of mineral calcite.
   
Lode
A mineral deposit in solid rock .
   
Mafic
Silicate minerals, magmas, and volcanic and intrusive igeneous rocks that have relatively high concentrations of the heavier elements.
   
Megacryst
A crystal or grain that is considerably larger than the encircling matrix. They are found in igneous and metamorphic rock.
   
Malachite
A carbonate mineral known as copper carbonate.
   
Mesozoic
The Mesozoic Era is a period from about 250 million years ago to about 67 million years ago.
   
Metasediments
In geology, metasediment is sediment or sedimentary rock that shows evidence of having been subjected to metamorphism.
   
Metavolcanic
A partly metamorphosed volcanic rock.
   
Molybendum
A hard, silvery-white metallic element used to toughen alloy steels and soften tungsten alloy.
   
Nepheline
A whitish mineral consisting of sodium potassium aluminum silicate used in the manufacture of glass and ceramics.
 
 
Placer Mining
The extraction and concentration of heavy metals or minerals from placer deposits by various methods, generally using running water.
   
Pelitic
A metamorphic rock derived from a pelite.
   
Pluton
A body of medium- to coarse-grained igneous rock that formed beneath the surface by crystallization of a magma.
   
Porphyritic granite
Granite rock with two grain sizes, containing large crystals (phenocrysts) of orthoclase feldspar (reddish) and smaller granite -size grains of quartz.
   
Porphyry
A heterogeneous rock characterized by the presence of crustals in a relatively finer- grained matrix.
   
Pyrargyrite
A trigonal mineral, soft; deep red; in late-primary or secondary-enrichment veins, and an important source of silver.
   
Pyrite
Iron sulphide mineral.
   
Pyrrhotite
An unusual iron sulphide mineral with variable iron content.
   
Quartz
A mineral whose composition is silicon dioxide. A crystalline form of silica.
   
Quartz Vein
A rock composed chiefly of sutured quartz crystals of pegmatitic or hydrothermal origin and commonly of variable size.
   
Quartzite
A very hard but unmetamorphosed sandstone, consisting chiefly of quartz grains that are so completely cemented with secondary silica that the rock breaks across or through the grains rather than around them; an orthoquartzite.
   
Recumbant
(of a fold in a rock formation) in which the axial plane is nearly horizontal.
   
Regression
the retreat of the sea from the land.
   
Riparian
An area bordering streams, lakes and wetlands that link water to land.
   
Schist
a strongly foliated crystalline rock that can be readily split into thin flakes or slabs.
   
Sericite
a term for a fine-grained white, pale green to oily greenish mica, mainly muscovite.
   
Shear Zone
A tabular zone of rock that has been crushed and brecciated by many parallel fractures due to shear strain. Such an area is often mineralized by ore-forming solutions.
   
Sill
A bed of lava or tuff between older layer of rocks.
   
Skarn
A metamorphic rock formed in the thermal aureole of an intrusive body.
   
Sphalerite
A zinc sulphide mineral.
   
Stringer
A mineral veinlet or filament, usually one of a number, occurring in a discontinuous subparallel pattern in host rock.
   
Syenite
A group of plutonic rocks containing alkali feldspar, a small amount of plagioclase, one or more mafic minerals, and quartz, if present, only as an accessory.
   
Synkinematic
Refers to a geologic process or event occurring during tectonic activity.
   
Tactite
A rock formed by contact metamorphism and metasomatism of carbonate rocks.
   
Terrace
A flat area bounded by a short steep slope formed by the down-cutting of a river or by erosion.
   
Tetrahedrite
A copper iron sulphide mineral.
   
Transgression
The spread or extension of the sea over land areas, and the consequent evidence of such advance.
   
Veinlet
Any small vein or venule.


SUMMARY

As used in this prospectus, unless the context otherwise requires, “we,” “us,” “our,” the “Company” and “Venza” refers to Venza Gold Corp.  All dollar amounts in this prospectus are in U.S. dollars unless otherwise stated. You should read the entire prospectus before making an investment decision to purchase our common shares.

About Us

We were incorporated on August 4, 2010 under the laws of the State of Nevada under the name “SOS Link Corporation”.  On April 15, 2011, we continued into the Province of British Columbia, Canada and concurrently changed our name to “Venza Gold Corp.”  Our principal executive office is located at Suite 610, 1100 Melville Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6E 4A6 and our telephone number is (604) 306 - 2525.

Overview of Business

We are an exploration stage company engaged in the acquisition and exploration of mineral properties.  We currently hold a 100% interest in the OS Gold Claim and the Quad Gold Claim.  The OS Gold Claim, being our lead mineral project, is comprised of one mineral claim totaling 1,292.5 acres located approximately 7 kilometres west of Osoyoos, British Columbia, Canada.  The Quad Gold Claim is comprised of one mineral claim totaling 408.9 acres and is located approximately 16 kilometres north of the City of Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada.  See sections titled “Our Business” and “Properties” for additional information.

We have not earned any revenues to date and do not anticipate earning revenues until such time as we enter into commercial production of our properties.  We are presently in the exploration stage of our business and we can provide no assurance that commercially viable minerals exist on our properties or that we will discover commercially exploitable levels of mineral resources on our properties, or if such deposits are discovered, that we will enter into further substantial exploration programs.

The Offering

Common Shares Offered by Us:
1,500,000 common shares at a fixed price of $0.10 per share.
   
Common Shares Offered by the Selling Security Holders:
4,943,328 common shares at prices determined by prevailing market prices, prices related to prevailing market prices and privately negotiated prices.
   
Minimum Number of Common Shares To Be Sold in This Offering:
None.
   
Common Shares Outstanding Before and After the Offering:
6,916,661 common shares are issued and outstanding as of the date of this prospectus. Upon completion of the offering, if all shares being offered are sold, there will be 8,416,661 common shares issued and outstanding.
   
Use of Proceeds:
Any proceeds that we receive from this offering will be used by us to implement Phase II of our exploration program on the OS Gold Claim, pay for the expenses of this offering and as general working capital.


RISK FACTORS

An investment in our common shares involves a high degree of risk.  You should carefully consider the risks described below and the other information in this prospectus before investing in our common shares. If any of the following risks occur, our business, operating results and financial condition could be seriously harmed. The trading price of our common shares, if we publicly trade at a later date, could decline due to any of these risks, and you may lose all or part of your investment.

Risks Related To Our Business

We lack an operating history and have losses which we expect to continue into the future. As a result, we may have to suspend or cease exploration activities and if we do not obtain sufficient financing, our business will fail.

We were incorporated on August 4, 2010 and to date have been involved primarily in the acquisition and exploration of our mineral properties.  We have no exploration history upon which an evaluation of our future success or failure can be made. Our ability to achieve and maintain profitability and positive cash flow is dependent upon: (i) our ability to locate a profitable mineral property, and (ii) our ability to generate revenues.

For the next twelve months, management anticipates that the minimum cash requirements to fund our proposed exploration program and our continued operations will be $72,000. Accordingly, we will have sufficient funds to meet our planned expenditures over the next twelve months if we complete our offering.  In the event that we decide to proceed with phase three of our exploration program, of which there is no assurance, we will be required to raise additional financing.

Obtaining financing would be subject to a number of factors, including the market prices for the mineral property and base and precious metals.  These factors may make the timing, amount, terms or conditions of additional financing unavailable to us.  Since our inception, we have used our common shares to raise money for our operations and for our property acquisitions. We have not attained profitable operations and are dependent upon obtaining financing to pursue our plan of operation.

Because we are an exploration stage company, our business has a high risk of failure.

We are an exploration stage company that has incurred net losses since inception, we have not attained profitable operations and we are dependent upon obtaining adequate financing to complete our exploration activities.  The success of our business operations will depend upon our ability to obtain further financing to complete our planned exploration program and to attain profitable operations. If we are not able to complete a successful exploration program and attain sustainable profitable operations, then our business will fail.

Our auditors have expressed substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern; as a result we could have difficulty finding additional financing.

Our financial statements have been prepared assuming that we will continue as a going concern.   Except for the interest revenue, we have not generated any revenue from our main operations since inception and have accumulated losses.  As a result, our auditors have expressed substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern.  Our ability to continue our operations depends on our ability to complete equity or debt financings or generate profitable operations.  Such financings may not be available or may not be available on reasonable terms.  Our financial statements do not include any adjustments that could result from the outcome of this uncertainty.
 
 
Because of the unique difficulties and uncertainties inherent in mineral exploration ventures, we face a high risk of business failure.

You should be aware of the difficulties normally encountered by new mineral exploration companies and the high rate of failure of such enterprises. The likelihood of success must be considered in light of the problems, expenses, difficulties, complications and delays encountered in connection with the exploration of the mineral properties that we plan to undertake. These potential problems include, but are not limited to, unanticipated problems relating to exploration, and additional costs and expenses that may exceed current estimates.  Our mineral properties do not contain a known body of commercial ore and, therefore, any program conducted on our mineral properties would be an exploratory search of ore.  There is no certainty that any expenditures made in the exploration of our mineral properties will result in discoveries of commercial quantities of ore.  Most exploration projects do not result in the discovery of commercially mineable deposits of ore.  Problems such as unusual or unexpected formations and other conditions are involved in mineral exploration and often result in unsuccessful exploration efforts.  If the results of our exploration program do not reveal viable commercial mineralization, we may decide to abandon our claim and acquire new claims for new exploration. The acquisition of additional claims will be dependent upon our possessing sufficient capital resources to purchase such claims. If we do not have sufficient capital resources and are unable to obtain sufficient financing, we may be forced to abandon our operations.

We have no known mineral reserves and if we cannot find any, we may have to cease operations.

We are in the initial phase of our exploration program for the OS Gold Claim.  It is unknown whether this property contains viable mineral reserves.  If we do not find a viable mineral reserve, or if we cannot exploit the mineral reserve, either because we do not have the money to do it or because it will not be economically feasible to do it, we may have to cease operations and you may lose your investment.  Mineral exploration is a highly speculative endeavor.  It involves many risks and is often non-productive.  Even if mineral reserves are discovered on our properties our production capabilities will be subject to further risks and uncertainties including:

 
(i)
Costs of bringing the property into production including exploration work, preparation of production feasibility studies, and construction of production facilities, all of which we have not budgeted for;
 
(ii)
Availability and costs of financing;
 
(iii)
Ongoing costs of production; and
 
(iv)
Environmental compliance regulations and restraints.

The marketability of any minerals acquired or discovered may be affected by numerous factors which are beyond our control and which cannot be accurately predicted, such as market fluctuations, the lack of milling facilities and processing equipment near the OS Gold Claim and the Quad Gold Claim, and such other factors as government regulations, including regulations relating to allowable production, importing and exporting of minerals, and environmental protection.

Because we have not commenced business operations, we face a high risk of business failure.

We have not earned any revenues from business operations as of the date of this prospectus. Potential investors should be aware of the difficulties normally encountered by new mineral exploration companies and the high rate of failure of such enterprises. The likelihood of success must be considered in light of the problems, expenses, difficulties, complications and delays encountered in connection with the exploration of the mineral properties that we plan to undertake. These potential problems include, but are not limited to, unanticipated problems relating to exploration, and additional costs and expenses that may exceed current estimates.

Because of the inherent dangers involved in mineral exploration, there is a risk that we may incur liability or damages as we conduct our business.

The search for valuable minerals involves numerous hazards.  As a result, we may become subject to liability for such hazards, including pollution, cave-ins and other hazards against which we cannot insure or against which we may elect not to insure. At the present time we have no coverage to insure against these hazards. The payment of such liabilities may result in our inability to complete our planned exploration program and/or obtain additional financing to fund our exploration program.
 
 
Because the prices of metals fluctuate, if the price of metals for which we are exploring decreases below a specified level, it may no longer be profitable to explore for those metals and we will cease operations.

Metal prices are determined by such factors as expectations for inflation, the strength of the United States dollar, global and regional supply and demand, and political and economic conditions and production costs in metals producing regions of the world.  The aggregate effect of these factors on metal prices is impossible for us to predict. In addition, the prices of metals such as lead, zinc, copper, silver, gold or uranium are sometimes subject to rapid short-term and/or prolonged changes because of speculative activities. The current demand for and supply of these metals affect the metal prices, but not necessarily in the same manner as current supply and demand affect the prices of other commodities. The supply of these metals primarily consists of new production from mining. If the prices of the metals are, for a substantial period, below our foreseeable cost of production, it may not be economical for us to continue operations and you could lose your entire investment.

We sometimes hold a significant portion of our cash in United States dollars, which could weaken our purchasing power in other currencies and limit our ability to conduct our exploration programs.

Currency fluctuations could affect the costs of our operations and affect our operating results and cash flows.  Gold and copper are sold throughout the world based principally on the U.S. dollar price, but most of our operating expenses are incurred in Canadian dollar.  The appreciation of Canadian dollar against the U.S. dollar can increase the costs of our operations.

In order to maintain our rights on the OS Gold Claim and Quad Gold Claim we will be required to make annual payments with the Ministry of Mines or complete assessment work on these mineral properties.

Our prospecting activities are dependent upon the grant of appropriate mineral tenures and regulatory comments, which may be withdrawn or made subject to limitations.  Mineral claims are renewable subject to certain expenditure requirements.  Although we believe that we will obtain the necessary prospecting licenses and permits, including but not limited to drill permits, there can be no assurance that they will be granted or as to the terms of any such grant.  Furthermore, we are required to expend required amounts on the mineral claims of the OS Gold Claim and Quad Gold Claim in order to maintain them in good standing.  If we are unable to expend these amounts, we may lose our title thereto on the expiry date(s) of the relevant mineral claims on the OS Gold Claim and Quad Gold Claim.  There is no assurance that, in the event of losing our title to a mineral claim, we will be able to register the mineral claim in its name without a third party registering its interest first.

Our mineral properties may become subject to aboriginal rights which may affect title to our mineral properties.

In British Columbia, aboriginal rights may be claimed on Crown properties or other types of tenure with respect to which mining rights have been conferred.  We are not aware of any other aboriginal land claims having been asserted or any legal actions relating to native issues having been instituted with respect to any of the land which is covered by the OS Gold Claim and the Quad Gold Claim .

The legal basis of a land claim is a matter of considerable legal complexity and the impact of a land claim settlement and self-government agreements cannot be predicted with certainty.  In addition, no assurance can be given that a broad recognition of aboriginal rights by way of a negotiated settlement or judicial pronouncement would not have an adverse effect on our activities.  Such impact could be marked and, in certain circumstances, could delay or even prevent our exploration or mining activities.

There are environmental risks associated with mineral exploration.

Inherent with mining operations is an environmental risk.  The legal framework governing this area is constantly developing, therefore we are unable to fully ascertain any future liability that may arise from the implementation of any new laws or regulations, although such laws and regulations are typically strict and may impose severe penalties (financial or otherwise).  Our proposed activities of, as with any exploration, may have an environmental impact which may result in unbudgeted delays, damage, loss and other costs and obligations including, without limitation, rehabilitation and/or compensation.  There is also a risk that our operations and financial position may be adversely affected by the actions of environmental groups or any other group or person opposed in general to our activities and, in particular, the proposed exploration and mining by us within the Province of British Columbia, Canada .
 
 
We face significant competition in the mineral exploration industry.

We compete with other mining and exploration companies possessing greater financial resources and technical facilities than we do.  Due to our weaker competitive position, we may have greater difficulty in hiring and retaining qualified personnel to conduct our planned exploration activities, which could cause delays in our exploration programs.  In addition, there is significant competition for a limited number of mineral properties.   Due to our weaker financial position, we may be unable to acquire rights to new mineral properties on a continuing basis.

With the exception of Gerald Diakow, our executive officers and directors do not have formal training specific to the technicalities of mineral exploration, there is a higher risk that our business will fail.

With the exception of Mr. Diakow, none of our executive officers and directors has any formal training as a geologist.  Our executive officers and directors have only limited training in the technical aspects of managing a mineral exploration company. With very limited direct training or experience in these areas, our management may not be fully aware of the specific requirements related to working within this industry.  Our management's decisions and choices may not take into account standard engineering or managerial approaches mineral exploration companies commonly use.  Consequently, our operations, earnings, and ultimate financial success could suffer irreparable harm due to management's lack of experience in this industry.

If we are unable to hire and retain key personnel, we may not be able to implement our business plan and our business will fail

Our success will largely depend on our ability to hire highly qualified personnel with experience in geological exploration. These individuals may be in high demand and we may not be able to attract the staff we need. In addition, we may not be able to afford the high salaries and fees demanded by qualified personnel, or may lose such employees after they are hired. Currently, we have not hired any key personnel. Our failure to hire key personnel when needed could have a significant negative effect on our business.

Risks Related To The Ownership of Our Shares

We will likely conduct further offerings of our equity securities in the future, in which case your proportionate interest may become diluted.

Since our inception, we have relied on such sales of our common shares to fund our operations.  We will likely be required to conduct additional equity offerings in the future to finance our current projects or to finance subsequent projects that we decide to undertake. If common shares are issued in return for additional funds, the price per share could be lower than that paid by our current shareholders. We anticipate continuing to rely on equity sales of our common shares in order to fund our business operations. If we issue additional shares, your percentage interest in us could become diluted.

If a market for our common shares does not develop, shareholders may be unable to sell their shares.

There is currently no market for our common shares and we can provide no assurance that a market will develop. We intend to apply for quotation of our common shares on the OTC Bulletin Board.  However, we can provide no assurance that our shares will be approved for quotation on the OTC Bulletin Board or, if traded, that a public market will materialize.  If our common shares are not quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board or if a public market for our common shares does not develop, shareholders may not be able to re-sell the common shares that they have purchased and may lose all of their investment.

Because our directors are not independent they can make and control corporate decisions that may be disadvantageous to other common shareholders.
 
We intend to apply to have our common shares quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board inter-dealer quotation system, which does not have director independence requirements.  Using the definition of “independent” in NASDAQ Rule 5605(a)(2), we have determined that none of our directors are independent. Our directors have a significant influence in determining the outcome of all corporate transactions or other matters, including mergers, consolidations, and the sale of all or substantially all of our assets.  They also have the power to prevent or cause a change in control. The interests of our directors may differ from the interests of the other stockholders and thus result in corporate decisions that are disadvantageous to other shareholders.


Our securities are considered a penny stock.

Because our securities are considered a penny stock, shareholders will be more limited in their ability to sell their shares. The SEC has adopted rules that regulate broker-dealer practices in connection with transactions in penny stocks. Penny stocks are generally equity securities with a price of less than $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 quotation system. Because our securities constitute “penny stocks” within the meaning of the rules, the rules apply to us and to our securities. The rules may further affect the ability of owners of shares to sell our securities in any market that might develop for them. As long as the trading price of our common shares is less than $5.00 per share, the common shares will be subject to Rule 15g-9 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”). The penny stock rules require a broker-dealer, prior to a transaction in a penny stock, to deliver a standardized risk disclosure document prepared by the SEC, that:

1.
contains a description of the nature and level of risk in the market for penny stocks in both public offerings and secondary trading;

2.
contains a description of the broker’s or dealer’s duties to the customer and of the rights and remedies available to the customer with respect to a violation to such duties or other requirements of securities laws;

3.
contains a brief, clear, narrative description of a dealer market, including bid and ask prices for penny stocks and the significance of the spread between the bid and ask price;

4.
contains a toll-free telephone number for inquiries on disciplinary actions;

5.
defines significant terms in the disclosure document or in the conduct of trading in penny stocks; and

6.
contains such other information and is in such form, including language, type, size and format, as the SEC shall require by rule or regulation.

The broker-dealer also must provide, prior to effecting any transaction in a penny stock, the customer with: (a) bid and offer quotations for the penny stock; (b) the compensation of the broker-dealer and its salesperson in the transaction; (c) the number of shares to which such bid and ask prices apply, or other comparable information relating to the depth and liquidity of the market for such shares; and (d) a monthly account statements showing the market value of each penny stock held in the customer’s account. In addition, the penny stock rules require that prior to a transaction in a penny stock not otherwise exempt from those 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 acknowledgment of the receipt of a risk disclosure statement, a written agreement to transactions involving penny stocks, and a signed and dated copy of a written suitably statement. These disclosure requirements may have the effect of reducing the trading activity in the secondary market for our shares.
 
 
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Certain statements contained in this prospectus constitute "forward-looking statements.” These statements, identified by words such as “plan,” "anticipate,” "believe,” "estimate,” "should,” "expect" and similar expressions include our expectations and objectives regarding our future financial position, operating results and business strategy. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the Company to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Such factors include, among others, general business, economic, competitive, political and social uncertainties; the actual results of current exploration activities; changes in project parameters as plans continue to be refined; changes in labour costs or other costs of production; future mineral prices; equipment or processes to operate as anticipated; accidents, labour disputes and other risks of the mining industry, including but not limited to environmental hazards, cave-ins, pit-wall failures, flooding, rock bursts and other acts of God or unfavourable operating conditions and losses; delays in obtaining governmental approvals or financing or in the completion of development or construction activities, as well as those factors discussed in the section titled "Risk Factors" in this prospectus.

Forward looking statements are based on a number of material factors and assumptions, including the results of exploration and drilling activities, the availability and final receipt of required approvals, licenses and permits, that sufficient working capital is available to complete proposed exploration and drilling activities, that contracted parties provide goods and/or services on the agreed time frames, the equipment necessary for exploration is available as scheduled and does not incur unforeseen break downs, that no labour shortages or delays are incurred and that no unusual geological or technical problems occur. While we consider these assumptions may be reasonable based on information currently available to it, they may prove to be incorrect. Actual results may vary from such forward-looking information for a variety of reasons, including but not limited to risks and uncertainties disclosed in the section titled “Risk Factors” in this prospectus.

We intend to discuss in our Quarterly Reports and Annual Reports any events or circumstances that occurred during the period to which such documents relate that are reasonably likely to cause actual events or circumstances to differ materially from those disclosed in this prospectus. New factors emerge from time to time, and it is not possible for management to predict all of such factors and to assess in advance the impact of each such factor on our business or the extent to which any factor, or combination of such factors, may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forwarding looking statement.


USE OF PROCEEDS

We are offering a total of 1,500,000 common shares at a price of $0.10 per share.  The shares being offered by us are being offered without the use of underwriters or broker-dealers and will be sold by our President.  No commissions or discounts will be paid in connection with the sale of the shares being offered by us. Accordingly, we estimate that we will receive net proceeds of $113,926.16 calculated as follows:

Item
 
Amount
 
Gross proceeds if all shares are sold
  $ 150,000 .00  
Expected offering expenses
  $ 36,073.84  
Net proceeds if all shares are sold
  $ 113,926.16  

If we are able to sell all of the shares being offered by us, we anticipate spending approximately $35,000 on Phase 2 of our exploration program on the OS Gold Claim as described in detail under the heading “Properties – OS Gold Claim”.  We anticipate retaining the remaining proceeds as general working capital and to pay for the costs associated with meeting our reporting obligations under the Exchange Act.  The principal purposes of this offering are to obtain additional capital and to create a public market for our common shares.

We will not receive any proceeds from the sale of common shares sold by the selling security holders.


SELLING SECURITY HOLDERS

The selling security holders named in this prospectus are offering all of the 4,943,328 common shares offered through this prospectus. The selling security holders acquired the 4,943,328 common shares offered through this prospectus from us in offerings that were exempt the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities Act”).

The following table provides as of June 8, 2012 information regarding the beneficial ownership of our common shares held by each of the selling security holders, including:

1.
the number of shares beneficially owned by each prior to this Offering;
2.
the total number of shares that are to be offered by each;
3.
the total number of shares that will be beneficially owned by each upon completion of the Offering;
4.
the percentage owned by each upon completion of the Offering; and
5.
the identity of the beneficial holder of any entity that owns the shares.
 
 
Beneficial Ownership
Before Offering (1)
 
Beneficial Ownership
After Offering (1)
Name Of Selling Security Holder (1)
Number of Shares
Percent (2)
Number of Shares Being Offered
Number of Shares
Percent (2)
Allegretto, Dawn
8,000
*
8,000
Nil
Nil
Athwal, Jorawar
16,000
*
16,000
Nil
Nil
Bakshi, Rajeev
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Ball, Greg
70,000
1.0%
70,000
Nil
Nil
Basi, Iqbal S.
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Cerra, Alita
104,000
1.5%
104,000
Nil
Nil
Christie, Clark Chul
80,000
1.2%
80,000
Nil
Nil
Christie, Song Sook Byun
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Costa, Roy
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Croner, Steven
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Da Costa Management Corp. (3)
320,000
4.6%
320,000
Nil
Nil
Da Costa, Joāo (3)
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Da Silva, Maria
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Da Silva, Nelson (4)
300,000
4.3%
300,000
Nil
Nil
Dadwal, Amritpaul
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Dadwal, Paul
213,333
3.1%
213,333
Nil
Nil
Dhami, Ravinderpal Singh
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Dunse, Alex
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Dunse, James
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Eng, Bruce
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Gidda, Navdeep
200,000
2.9%
200,000
Nil
Nil
Gray, Grant (5)
240,000
3.5%
240,000
Nil
Nil
Henley, Hunter
10,000
*
10,000
Nil
Nil
Howland, Andrew
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Hoyle, Peter
120,000
1.7%
120,000
Nil
Nil
Huang, Jerry Chun Chieh
8,000
*
8,000
Nil
Nil
Hurst, Bob
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Jane, Alex
133,333
1.9%
133,333
Nil
Nil
 
 
  Beneficial Ownership
Before Offering (1)
  Beneficial Ownership
After Offering (1)
Name Of Selling Security Holder (1)
Number of Shares
Percent (2)
Number of Shares Being Offered
Number of Shares
Percent (2)
Jeffs, Caitlin
15,000
*
15,000
Nil
Nil
Jeffs, Richard N.
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Keegan, Gerard
10,000
*
10,000
Nil
Nil
Keegan, Peter
86,666
1.3%
86,666
Nil
Nil
Keegan, Ron
10,000
*
10,000
Nil
Nil
Kostrzewski, Wolfgang
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Lamont, Elena
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Lim, Eng Dee
239,999
3.5%
239,999
Nil
Nil
Lock, Sharon
8,000
*
8,000
Nil
Nil
Lombardo, Joe
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Loureiro, Tony
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Machhiana, Arvind
26,666
*
26,666
Nil
Nil
Mackiewich, Twyla
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Madec, Donald G.
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Malhi, Raun
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Motomochi, Gary
340,000
4.9%
340,000
Nil
Nil
Okamoto, George
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Paris, Enrica
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Pereira, Francisco
8,000
*
8,000
Nil
Nil
Peterson, Don G.
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Rgas Holdings Co. Ltd. (6)
20,000
*
20,000
Nil
Nil
Roche, Tom
80,000
1.2%
80,000
Nil
Nil
Sangha, Justin
153,333
2.2%
153,333
Nil
Nil
Sekhon, Sukhdeep
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Sikich, Michael
140,000
2.0%
140,000
Nil
Nil
Silina, Yanika
54,000
*
54,000
Nil
Nil
Sklavenitis, Terry
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Stader, Curt
24,000
*
24,000
Nil
Nil
Steinhauer, Dianne
100,000
1.4%
100,000
Nil
Nil
Strang, Terran
50,000
*
50,000
Nil
Nil
Strauts, Daniel
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Strauts, Deena
133,332
1.9%
133,332
Nil
Nil
Strauts, Katherine
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Thompson, Michael
15,000
*
15,000
Nil
Nil
Tran, Thuan
66,666
1.0%
66,666
Nil
Nil
Wong, Cindy
40,000
*
40,000
Nil
Nil
Zyp, Greg
80,000
1.2%
80,000
   
TOTAL
4,943,328
 
4,943,328
   
 
 
Notes:
Represents less than 1%.
(1)
Unless otherwise provided, we believe, based on the information provided to us, that the named party beneficially owns and has sole voting and investment power over all shares or rights to these shares, unless otherwise shown in the table.  The numbers in this table assume that none of the selling security holders sells common shares not being offered in this prospectus or purchases additional common shares, and assumes that all shares offered are sold.
(2)
“Beneficial Ownership Before Offering” is based on 6,916,661 common shares outstanding as of June 8, 2012.  “Beneficial Ownership After Offering” is based on 8,416,661 common shares outstanding and assumes that we complete the sale of all of the common shares being offered by us under this prospectus of which there is no assurance.
(3)
Da Costa Management Corp. is beneficially owned by Joāo Da Costa.
(4)
Nelson Da Silva served as our President, Secretary, Treasurer and director from August 4, 2010 to August 19, 2010.
(5)
Grant Gray served as our President and director from August 19, 2010 to September 1, 2011.
(6)
Rgas Holdings Co. Ltd. is beneficially owned by Robert G.A. Shand.

Except as disclosed above, none of the selling security holders:

 
(i)
has had a material relationship with us other than as a shareholder at any time within the past three years; or

 
(ii)
has ever been one of our officers or directors.


PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

Offering by the Company

We are offering 1,500,000 common shares at a fixed price of $0.10 per share even if a public trading market for our common shares develops.  This offering is being made by us without the use of outside underwriters or broker-dealers.  The common shares to be sold by us will be sold on our behalf by our President, Ralph Biggar.  Mr. Biggar will not receive commissions or proceeds or other compensation from the sale of any shares on our behalf.

Offering by the Selling Security Holders

The selling security holders named in this prospectus may sell their shares on a continuous or delayed basis for a period of nine months after this registration statement is declared effective.  The selling security holders may sell some or all of their shares in one or more transactions, including block transactions:

1.
On such public markets as the shares may from time to time be trading;

2.
In privately negotiated transactions;

3.
Through the writing of options on the shares;

4.
In short sales; or

5.
In any combination of these methods of distribution.

The selling security holders named in this prospectus may also sell their shares directly to market makers acting as agents in unsolicited brokerage transactions.  Any broker or dealer participating in such transactions as agent may receive a commission from the selling security holders, or, if they act as agent for the purchaser of such shares, from such purchaser. The selling security holders will likely pay the usual and customary brokerage fees for such services.

We are bearing all costs relating to the registration of this offering.  The selling security holders, however, will pay any commissions or other fees payable to brokers or dealers in connection with any sale of the shares.
 
 
Stabilization and Other Activities

Mr. Biggar and the selling security holders named in this prospectus must comply with the requirements of the Securities Act and the Exchange Act in the offer and sale of the shares.  Mr. Biggar is deemed to be an “underwriter” within the meaning of the Securities Act in connection with our offering of 1,500,000 common shares.  The selling security holders and any broker-dealers who execute sales for the selling security holders may be deemed to be an “underwriter” within the meaning of the Securities Act in connection with such sales.  In particular, Mr. Biggar and during such times as the selling security holders may be deemed to be engaged in a distribution of the shares, and therefore be considered to be an underwriter, they must comply with applicable law and may among other things:

1.
Not engage in any stabilization activities in connection with our shares;

2.
In the case of the selling security holders, furnish each broker or dealer through which shares may be offered, such copies of this prospectus, as amended from time to time, as may be required by such broker or dealer; and

3.
Not bid for or purchase any of our securities or attempt to induce any person to purchase any of our securities other than as permitted under the Exchange Act.

Mr. Biggar is aware and the selling shareholders should be aware that the anti-manipulation provisions of Regulation M under the Exchange Act will apply to purchases and sales of common shares by us and the selling security holders, respectively, and that there are restrictions on market-making activities by persons engaged in the distribution of the shares.  Under Regulation M, the Company, the selling security holders and their agents may not bid for, purchase, or attempt to induce any person to bid for or purchase, our common shares while such persons are distributing shares covered by this prospectus.  Accordingly, the selling security holders are not permitted to cover short sales by purchasing shares while the distribution is taking place.  The selling security holders are advised that if a particular offer of shares is to be made on terms constituting a material change from the information set forth above with respect to the Plan of Distribution, then, to the extent required, a post-effective amendment to the accompanying registration statement must be filed with the SEC.


DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES TO BE REGISTERED
General

Our authorized capital consists of an unlimited number of common shares, without par value, and an unlimited number of preferred shares, without par value.  As of the date of this prospectus, we had 6,916,661 common shares issued and outstanding and no preferred shares were issued and outstanding.

Common Shares

The following is a summary of the material rights and restrictions associated with our common shares.  This description does not purport to be a complete description of all of the rights of our shareholders and is subject to, and qualified in its entirety by, the provisions of our most current Notice of Articles and Articles, which are included as exhibits to this Registration Statement.

The holders of our common shares are entitled to receive notice of and to attend and vote at all meetings of the shareholders and each common share shall confer the right to one vote in person or by proxy at all meetings of the shareholders.  Two shareholders, whether present in person or by proxy, constitute a quorum for all meetings of the shareholders.  Except as otherwise provided by the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) or our Articles, all action taken by the holders of a majority of the votes cast, excluding abstentions, at any meeting at which a quorum is present shall be valid and binding.  In the case of certain fundamental changes such as liquidation, amalgamation or changes to our Notice of Articles, a vote by holders of a “special majority”, being two-thirds of the votes cast at the Meeting, is required.  Where a separate vote of a class, classes or series is required, a vote of a majority, for ordinary matters, or special majority, for fundamental changes, is required.  Our Articles do not provide for cumulative voting in the election of directors.
 
 
The holders of the common shares, subject to the prior rights, if any, of any other class of shares, are entitled to receive such dividends in any financial year as the board of directors may by resolution determine. In the event of our liquidation, dissolution or winding-up, whether voluntary or involuntary, the holders of our common shares are entitled to receive, subject to the prior rights, if any, of the holders of any other class of shares, the remaining property and assets of the Company.  The common shares do not carry any pre-emptive, subscription, redemption or conversion rights, nor do they contain any sinking fund provisions.

Dividend Rights

We have never declared, nor paid, any dividend since our incorporation and does not foresee paying any dividend in the near future since all available funds will be used to conduct exploration activities.  Any future payment of dividends will depend on our financing requirements and financial condition and other factors which the board of directors, in its sole discretion, may consider appropriate.

Under the Business Corporations Act, we are prohibited from declaring or paying dividends if there are reasonable grounds for believing that we are insolvent or the payment of dividends would render us insolvent.


INTERESTS OF NAMED EXPERTS AND COUNSEL

No expert or counsel named in this prospectus as having prepared or certified any part of this prospectus or having given an opinion upon the validity of the securities being registered or upon other legal matters in connection with the registration or offering of the shares was employed on a contingency basis, or had, or is to receive, in connection with the offering, a substantial interest, direct or indirect, in our company or any of its parents or subsidiaries.  Nor was any such person connected with our company, or any of its parents or subsidiaries, a promoter, managing or principal underwriter, voting trustee, director, officer, or employee.

Northwest Law Group has assisted us in the preparation of this prospectus and registration statement and will provide counsel with respect to other legal matters concerning the registration and offering of the shares.

Dale Matheson Carr-Hilton Labonte LLP (“DMCL”), our independent registered public accountants, have audited our financial statements included in this prospectus and registration statement to the extent and for the periods set forth in their audit report.  DMCL has presented its report with respect to our audited financial statements.  The report of DMCL is included in reliance upon their authority as experts in accounting and auditing.


OUR BUSINESS

General

We were incorporated on August 4, 2010 under the laws of the State of Nevada under the name “SOS Link Corporation”. On April 15, 2011, we were continued into the Province of British Columbia, Canada with the name Venza Gold Corp.

We are an exploration stage company engaged in the acquisition and exploration of mineral properties.  We currently hold a 100% interest in the OS Gold Claim and the Quad Gold Claim.  The OS Gold Claim, being our lead mineral project, is comprised of one mineral claim totaling 1,292.5 acres located approximately 7 kilometres west of Osoyoos, British Columbia, Canada.  The Quad Gold Claim is comprised of one mineral claim totaling 408.9 acres and is located approximately 16 kilometres north of Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada. We plan to focus our resources on the OS Gold Claim in order to assess whether it possesses mineral deposits capable of commercial extraction.   See section titled “Properties” for additional information.
 
 
We previously signed a letter of intent dated November 16, 2010 (the “Letter of Intent”) with EvidencePix Inc. (“EvidencePix”), a company that develops security software applications, and Raymond Sobol.  Under the terms of the Letter of Intent, we agreed to acquire all of the shares of EvidencePix subject to the conditions of the Letter of Intent.  In conjunction with the proposed acquisition, we advanced loans totaling $195,000 to EvidencePix to provide them with sufficient working capital to commercialize their security software applications.  The loans beared interest at a rate of 5% per annum and were due one year from the date of the loan.  We were unable to reach a formal agreement with EvidencePix and elected to not proceed with the proposed acquisition.  On March 28, 2012, we entered into a British Columbia Supreme Court consent order with EvidencePix whereby EvidencePix agreed to pay us the outstanding loans plus interest and costs as follows: (i) $50,000 on March 31, 2012; (ii) $35,000 on April 30, 2012; (iii) $35,000 on May 31,2012; (iv) $35,000 on June 30, 2012; and (v) $55,037.84 on July 31, 2012. As of May 31, 2012, we collected $120,000 from outstanding loans.

To date, we have not earned any revenues from our main operations and do not anticipate earning revenues until such time as we enter into commercial production of our properties.  We are presently in the exploration stage of our business and we can provide no assurance that commercially viable minerals exist on our properties or that we will discover commercially exploitable levels of mineral resources on our properties, or if such deposits are discovered, that we will enter into further substantial exploration programs.

Competition

We are an exploration stage company. We compete with other mineral resource exploration and development companies for financing and for the acquisition of new mineral properties. Many of the mineral resource exploration and development companies with whom we compete have greater financial and technical resources than we do. Accordingly, these competitors may be able to spend greater amounts on acquisitions of mineral properties of merit, on exploration of their mineral properties and on development of their mineral properties. In addition, they may be able to afford greater geological expertise in the targeting and exploration of mineral properties. This competition could result in competitors having mineral properties of greater quality and interest to prospective investors who may finance additional exploration and development. This competition could adversely impact our ability to finance further exploration and to achieve the financing necessary for us to develop our mineral properties.

Government Regulations

We will be required to comply with all regulations, rules and directives of governmental authorities and agencies applicable to the exploration of minerals in the Province of British Columbia, Canada. The main agency that governs the exploration of minerals in British Columbia is the Ministry of Energy and Mines (“Ministry of Mines”). The Ministry of Mines manages the development of British Columbia’s mineral resources, and implements policies and programs respecting their development while protecting the environment. In addition, the Ministry of Mines regulates and inspects the exploration and mineral production industries in British Columbia to protect workers, the public and the environment.

The material legislation applicable to us is the Mineral Tenure Act (British Columbia), administered by the Mineral Titles Branch of the Ministry of Mines, and the Mines Act (British Columbia), as well as the Health, Safety and Reclamation Code and the Mineral Exploration Code. The Mineral Tenure Act and its regulations govern the procedures involved in the location, recording and maintenance of mineral titles in British Columbia. The Mineral Tenure Act also governs the issuance of leases which are long term entitlements to minerals.

All mineral exploration activities carried out on a mineral claim or mining lease in British Columbia must be in compliance with the Mines Act. The Mines Act applies to all mines during exploration, development, construction, production, closure, reclamation and abandonment. It outlines the powers of the Chief Inspector of Mines, to inspect mines, the procedures for obtaining permits to commence work in, on or about a mine and other procedures to be observed at a mine. Additionally, the provisions of the Health, Safety and Reclamation Code for mines in British Columbia contain standards for employment, occupational health and safety, accident investigation, work place conditions, protective equipment, training programs, and site supervision. Also, the Mineral Exploration Code contains standards for exploration activities including construction and maintenance, site preparation, drilling, trenching and work in and about a water body.

Additional approvals and authorizations may be required from other government agencies, depending upon the nature and scope of the proposed exploration program. If the exploration activities require the falling of timber, then either a free use permit or a license to cut must be issued by the Ministry of Forests. Items such as waste approvals may be required from the Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks if the proposed exploration activities are significantly large enough to warrant them. Waste approvals refer to the disposal of rock materials removed from the earth which must be reclaimed. An environmental impact statement may be required.
 
 
In order to maintain our mineral claims in good standing, we must complete exploration work on the mineral claims and file confirmation of the completion of work on the mineral claims with the applicable mining recording office of the Ministry of Mines. In British Columbia, the recorded holder of a mineral claim is required to perform a minimum amount of exploration work on a claim or make payment in the equivalent sum in lieu of work. The fee is CDN $4.00 per hectare (approximately US $4.04) in the first three years and CDN $8.00 per hectare (approximately US $8.08) in subsequent years. There is a risk that new regulations could increase our costs of doing business and prevent us from carrying out our exploration program. The completion of mineral exploration work or payment in lieu of exploration work in any year will extend the existence of our mineral claims for one additional year. If we fail to complete the minimum required amount of exploration work or fail to make a payment in lieu of this exploration work, then our mineral claims will lapse, and we will lose all interest that we have in our mineral claims.

Environmental Regulations

We will have to sustain the cost of reclamation and environmental remediation for all exploration work undertaken. Both reclamation and environmental remediation refer to putting disturbed ground back as close to its original state as possible. Other potential pollution or damage must be cleaned up and renewed along standard guidelines outlined in the usual permits. Reclamation is the process of bringing the land back to its natural state after completion of exploration activities. Environmental remediation refers to the physical activity of taking steps to remediate, or remedy, any environmental damage caused. The amount of these costs is not known at this time as we do not know the extent of the exploration program that will be undertaken beyond completion of the recommended work program. Because there is presently no information on the size, tenor, or quality of any resource or reserve at this time, it is impossible to assess the impact of any capital expenditures on earnings, our competitive position or us in the event that a potentially economic deposit is discovered.

Prior to undertaking mineral exploration activities, we must make application for a permit, if we anticipate disturbing land. A permit is issued after review of a complete and satisfactory application. We do not anticipate any difficulties in obtaining a permit, if needed. If we enter the production phase, the cost of complying with permit and regulatory environment laws will be greater because the impact on the project area is greater. Permits and regulations will control all aspects of the production program if the project continues to that stage. Examples of regulatory requirements include:

 
(i)
Water discharge will have to meet drinking water standards;
 
(ii)
Dust generation will have to be minimal or otherwise re-mediated;
 
(iii)
Dumping of material on the surface will have to be re-contoured and re-vegetated with natural vegetation;
 
(iv)
An assessment of all material to be left on the surface will need to be environmentally benign;
 
(v)
Ground water will have to be monitored for any potential contaminants;
 
(vi)
The socio-economic impact of the project will have to be evaluated and if deemed negative, will have to be re-mediated; and
 
(vii)
There will have to be an impact report of the work on the local fauna and flora including a study of potentially endangered species.

Employees

As of the date of this prospectus, we have no employees other than our executive officers.

Research and Development

We have not incurred any research and development expenditures since our inception.

Patents and Trademarks

We do not own, either legally or beneficially, any patent or trademark.
 
 
PROPERTIES

We currently do not own any real property.  We currently lease on a month to month basis an office space located at Suite 610, 1100 Melville Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6E 4A6, consisting of approximately 25 square feet at a cost of $1,100 per month.

We own a 100% interest in our lead mineral project called the OS Gold Claim. We also hold a 100% interest in another mineral property called the Quad Gold Claim. To date, we have focused our resources on the OS Gold Claim . Our properties are illustrated in Figure 1 below.
Figure 1. Location and access to properties.

The OS Gold Claim

Description of Property

The OS Gold Claim is comprised of one mineral claim totaling 1,292.5 acres, located approximately 7 kilometers west of the town of Osoyoos, British Columbia, Canada.  The OS Gold Claim is recorded with the Ministry of Mines as follows:

Name of Mineral Claim
 
Tenure Number
 
Expiry Date
OS Gold
 
978304
 
April 5, 2013

Gerald Diakow is the registered owner of the OS Gold Claim and holds the OS Gold Claim in trust for our sole benefit.   The Province of British Columbia owns the land covered by the mineral claims. To our knowledge, there are no aboriginal land claims that might affect our title to our mineral claims or the Province’s title of the property.
 
 
In order to maintain the OS Gold Claim in good standing, we must complete minimum exploration work on the properties and file confirmation of the completion of the work with the Ministry of Mines. In lieu of completing this work, we may pay a fee equal to the minimum exploration work that must be performed with the Ministry of Mines. The completion of mineral exploration work or payment in lieu of exploration work in any year will extend the existence of the OS Gold Claim for one additional year. The minimum exploration work that must be performed and/or the fee for keeping the OS Gold Claim current is equal to CDN $4.00 per hectare.  As the OS Gold Claim is in good standing until April 5, 2013, we will be required to complete minimum exploration work or pay a minimum fee of CDN $2,092 on or before April 5, 2013 and each year thereafter in order to keep the OS Gold Claim current. If we fail to complete the minimum required amount of exploration work or fail to make a payment in lieu of this exploration work, our mineral claim will lapse and we will lose all interest in our mineral claim.

Location and Access

The OS Gold Claim is located in the Osoyoos Mining Division at approximately 7.2 km (4.5 miles) west of Osoyoos, British Columbia, Canada.
 
Figure 2. OS Gold Claim.

The OS Gold Claim is accessible by 4 wheel drive vehicle or an all terrain vehicle from Richter Pass on Highway 3.  From Highway 3, vehicles travel along the old Richter pass road and then travel along Cougar Creek road to Blue Lake.  Once at Blue Lake, vehicles travel 1 kilometre to Kilpoola Lake, which is located on the edge of the OS Gold Claim.

 
Climate and Physiography

The climate of the western Okanagan has little precipitation, being less than 10 inches per year. Snowfall may occur in the winter at higher elevations and generally melts by mid-April in the claim area. During the summer months, the climate is warm and dry and thunderstorms may occur. Due to the light snowfall in the OS Gold Claim area , exploration may be undertaken all year.

Vegetation in the OS Gold Claim area consists of grassy slopes and meadows with pine forest on the higher elevation hills especially on the north facing slopes. Lodge pole pine trees are in the forested areas and Ponderosa pine trees are found in the more open areas. Water courses are choked with wild rose bushes and trembling aspen are found along the riparian area.

The topography of the Thompson Okanagan region is extremely varied. The OS Gold Claim area is bounded by the Cascade Mountains to the west and the Okanagan Mountain Range to the east. The 160 km (100 miles) chain of lakes in the Okanagan Valley are the main feature of the landscape. The three largest lakes in the Okanagan Valley north to south are Okanagan Lake, Skaha Lake and Osoyoos Lake , which straddles the USA-Canada border. The OS Gold Claim is situated approximately 7.4 km west of Osoyoos Lake. Low rolling hills make up most of the OS Gold Claim and running through the center is a shallow valley and Kilpoola Lake. Lone Pine Creek flows south into Kilpoola Lake. The elevation on the OS Gold Claim is from 800 to 1000 meters (2600 to 3300 feet).

History

A large number of prospects and three small mines occur within a 20 kilometre radius of the OS Gold Claim in both Canada and the United States. The earliest recorded mining activity in the area is from placer mining for gold on the Similkameen River on the United States side of the border , 5.5 kilometres south of the OS Gold Claim, in 1859. Quartz veins and lodes were recognized in the area at that time but no exploration was carried out on them.  Most of the mineralization in the area is related to quartz veins with gold and silver values.

The first significant mine development in the area was at the Fairview gold-silver camp located 19 kilometres north of the OS Gold Claim in the early 1890s.  At the Morning Star and Stemwinder mines quartz vein systems containing galena, chalcopyrite, sphalerite and pyrite carry significant gold and silver values. The quartz veins occur within Kobau Group metasedimentary rocks near the contact with the Fairview granodiorite to the south and Oliver granite to the north. Production from the Fairview camp is estimated to be 535,500 tons of ore producing 17,040 ounces of gold and 169,497 ounces of silver between 1898 and 1949.

The Dividend-Lakeview property is located approximately 5 kilometres south-east of the OS Gold Claim and was first explored around 1900. The Dividend-Lakeview property is considered a skarn deposit with high temperature replacement of limestone within the Kobau Group. The skarn mineralization consists of massive pyrrhotite, pyrite, chalcopyrite and arsenopyrite which preferentially replace marble. The Dividend-Lakeview produced 104,200 tons of ore yielding 16,216 ounces of gold and 2,805 ounces of silver between 1907 and 1949.

The Horn Silver mine is located approximately 11 kilometres east of the OS Gold Claim and was first explored around 1900. The Horn Silver mine lies in biotite-hornblende granodiorite of the Kruger syenite. The mineralization which occurs is discontinuous, narrow east and south-east striking quartz veins within weakly developed easterly striking shear zones and consists of argentite, native silver, cerargyrite, pyrite, galena, sphalerite, tetrahedrite, chalcopyrite, pyrargyrite and acanthite. Production from the Horn Silver mine is recorded as 483,614 tons of ore yielding 10,686 ounces of gold and 4,089,471 ounces of silver between 1915 and 1984.

A large porphyry copper-molybdenum type deposit called the Kelsey occurs approximately 9 kilometres south-east of the OS Gold Claim in the state of Washington.  The bulk of the mineralization at the Kelsey property occurs within the coarse crystalline quartz diorite of the Jurassic-Cretaceous Silver Nail pluton. At the south end of the property the pluton has been brecciated and Kobau Group metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks have been incorporated as fragments in the breccia and as slivers in the pluton. The most concentrated copper-molybdenum mineralization is associated with quartz-sericte alteration and intense fracturing and the surrounding country rock is chloritized. Mineralization in greenstone and limey portions of the Kobau group consists of copper-bearing tactite containing pyrrhotite, minor garnet and epidote. Quartz veins contain chalcopyrite rich pods.
 
 
The sole recorded exploration work on the OS Gold Claim occurred in 1973 by Cone Properties Ltd. (“Cone Properties”).  Cone Properties conducted an extensive exploration program on a mineralized occurrence called the “Pass Showing”, which is located within the OS Gold Claim.  Historical records indicate that the exploration program consisted of geological mapping, magnetometer geophysical survey, a 3,100 sample geochemical soil survey, and 10 percussion drill holes totaling 821 metres.  Results of this work program are not available in the public record.

Geology

The OS Gold Claim is located within the Okanagan Terrane of the Intermontane tectonic belt and is mainly underlain by metasediments and metavolcanics of the Carboniferous or older Kobau Group. The Pass showing is reported to occur within the Kobau Group on the OS Gold Claim.

The Kobau Group rocks comprise of banded, foliated quartzite lithologies with minor mafic schists, and thick, compositionally layered mafic schist units with intercalated quartzite bands. Minor meta-carbonates and mafic meta-volcanic flows or sills occur within the quartzites and schists.

The quartzites range from layered, foliated quartzite with thin, biotite rich laminae to boudins of massive, pure quartzite and range in colour from opaque black to translucent grey to green to blue.  The beds generally vary from one to thirty metres in thickness, but range down to several centimetres or less in thickness, interbedded with other rocks.

The schists are generally fine grained, strongly foliated, generally chloritic and range in colour from light to dark green to grey-green and rarely black. The individual units are themselves heterogeneous sequences marked by irregular finer scale alterations of thin beds of slightly different character.

The meta-carbonate unit is similar in character to the schist unit in so much as it is green, fine grained, chloritic and strongly foliated. Its distinction is it is host to concordant and discordant carbonate veinlets as well as containing indigenous carbonate material. The unit also hosts white to light blue marble boudins generally less than 10 metres in thickness. The meta-volcanic units consist of greyish-green lenses of augite-porphyritic mafic flows or sills, sometimes weakly foliated.

Immediately to the north and east of the OS Gold Claim , the Kobau Group metamorphic rocks have been intruded by the Middle Jurassic Osoyoos granodiorite and associated rock types of the Nelson Plutonic Suite. A second pluton of similar age, the Fairview granodiorite intrudes the Kobau Group approximately nineteen kilometres north of the OS Gold Claim. Immediately north of the Fairview granodiorite is the Oliver granite of Jurassic or younger age. The Fairview granodiorite and Oliver granite are very significant as they spatially are related to the auriferous quartz veins at the Fairview gold-silver camp. The western portion of the OS Gold Claim is underlain by Jurassic aged, megacrystic coarse grained syenite of the Kruger syenite.

The regional metamorphism of the Kobau group in the study area is syn-kinematic with the respect to the main phases of pre-Jurassic deformation. Peak metamorphic conditions of greenschist grade are documented by actinolite-biotite-epidote-albite assemblages in mafic schists and calcite-tremolite assemblages in some carbonate rocks. Garnet occurrences are limited to semi-pelitic layers. Contact metamorphism adjacent to the Jurassic plutons overprinted schistocities with secondary, non-oriented growth of greenschist minerals.

The Kobau Group have undergone three distinct phases of deformation. The earliest phase produced near isoclinals folding and shearing accompanied by metamorphism to greenschist facies. The second phase resulted in overturned and normal folds. The third phase of deformation caused doming and gentle folding, along with fracturing and is considered to possibly be contemporaneous with the Mesozoic intrusions. As each period of folding has been successively overprinted on the previous event, the result is a sequence of complex tight, isoclinals, over turned recumbent, chevron and refolded folds.
 
 
Quartz veins are ubiquitous in the metasedimentary rocks and display varying degrees of deformation according to their time of emplacement. Auriferous quartz veins occur within the Kobau group adjacent to and parallel to the Fairview granodiorite contact. Near the Stemwinder mine, these veins form two sets at distances of approximately 50 metres and 100 metres from the intrusive contact.  Near the Fairview mine, veins occur at structurally higher levels near the contact between quartzite and mafic schist, as well as close to or within the Fairview granodiorite. All veins are locally concordant to the regional foliation but cut lithologic contacts on the map scale. In general, they form planar bodies striking north-westerly and dipping to the south-east. Individual veins pinch and swell greatly, attain thicknesses up to 5 metres, and may be traced up to 500 metres along strike.

Mineralization

In the Southern Portion of the OS Gold Claim the pluton has been brecciated and Kobau Group metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks have been incorporated as fragments in the breccia and as slivers in the pluton. The most concentrated copper-molybdenum mineralization is associated with quartz-sericte alteration and intense fracturing and the surrounding country rock is chloritized. Mineralization in greenstone and limey portions of the Kobau group consists of copper-bearing tactite containing pyrrhotite, minor garnet and epidote. Quartz veins contain chalcopyrite rich pods.

Mineralization at the Pass showing is described as consisting of quartz lenses and veins containing copper, lead, gold and silver mineralization. The proximity to the Kelsey deposit and that Porphyry Copper systems commonly occur in clusters and align along convergent plate boundaries suggests that the the Pass showings may be an apophysis where leakage of a much larger porphyry system is occurring.

Current Exploration Program

We have made a determination to implement the following three phase exploration program to test the potential of the OS Gold Claim:

Phase 1 – Filed Work Sampling

Phase 1 of our exploration program involved sending a suitably equipped experienced prospecting team for about one week performing a reconnaissance survey of the entire claim.  In April 2012, we sent up a geological team to prospect the claim area and to complete a geochemical soil survey covering a grid area of 4.9 kilometers (3 miles). In total, 56 soil samples were collected and sent to Acme Analytical Laboratories (Vancouver) Ltd. The samples were analyzed using a standard ICP (Inductive Couple Plasma) Mass Spectrometer aqua regia Digestion which yields a 36 element analysis. The geochemical soil grid is illustrated in Figure 3 below.
 
 
Figure 3. Geochemical soil grid.

The geochemistry survey was successful in delineating both copper and gold anomalies on the OS Gold Claim. The copper soil samples show a large geochemical anomaly covering the eastern third of the grid area. This zone starts at the most north eastern sample collected on the grid and extends south for a length of 800 meters (2600 feet) and a width over 300 meters (1000 feet). The copper anomaly is open along the eastern boundary of the grid area.

The gold anomalies resulting from the geochemical soil survey shows two distinct zones the largest is located on the northern 1/3 of the grid area. This anomaly is approximately 500 meters (1600 feet) in a east-west direction and 200 meters (650 feet) north to south. The second anomaly is located in the southeastern corner of the grid area. This anomaly is smaller in area at approximately 200 meters (650 feet) north to south and 100 meters (325 feet) east to west, this anomaly is open to the east and further geochemical surveying east ward may enlarge this anomaly.

The geochemical soil survey has successfully picked up the reclaimed Pass Showing’s location and also located a new area of interest. Because of this success and that the anomalies for both copper and gold are open the geochemical exploration program should be expanded. A second phase of geochemical sampling is recommended . The phase 2 geochemical survey will extend the phase 1 grid eastward and south to the claim boundaries. The second geochemical survey will extend the grid area to approximately 2.5 times the area initially surveyed.

The total cost of Phase 1 was $7,125


Phase 2 – Follow Up Geophysical Work

Based on the results of Phase I, we have elected to proceed with Phase 2 of our exploration program on the OS Gold Claim.  Phase 2 will involve an induced potential geophysical survey. Further rock and soil geochemistry sampling, including a visit to the Kelsey property. A budget of about US $25,000 will likely be required but depending upon efficiencies, field conditions and the scope of surveys, trenching, etc. may approach US $35,000.

Completion of Phase 2 should be followed again by a thorough review of data obtained. One or more areas of mineral potential should be recognized and at least partially defined. Depending on the results from Phase 1, an additional soil sampling grid may be recommended to constrain anomalies produced from the Phase 1 and 2. Following this stage a geological mapping, a coincident Induced Potential Geophysical survey will be undertaken over the same grid that the soil samples were collected from.

Phase 3 – Geochemical Surveys and Diamond Drilling

Selected target areas will have to be more carefully detailed in order to identify drill sites. Geophysical surveys, either of a different method or on a more dense grid, should clarify the type of structure being investigated and will ensure that diamond drill holes are placed in the most prospective areas. Speculatively, an initial drill program of 1500 to 2000 meters is likely to be required.

Costs of Phase 3 will be between US $150,000 and $250,000.

The Quad Gold Claim

Description of Property

The Quad Gold Claim comprises an area of 408.9 acres and is located approximately 16.2km north of the City of Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada.  The Quad Gold Claim is recorded with the Ministry of Mines as follows:

Name of Mineral Claim
 
Tenure Number
 
Expiry Date
Quad Gold
 
978305
 
April 5, 2013

Gerald Diakow is the registered owner of the Quad Gold Claim and holds the Quad Gold Claim in trust for our sole benefit.   The Province of British Columbia owns the land covered by the mineral claims. To our knowledge, there are no aboriginal land claims that might affect our title to our mineral claims or the Province’s title of the property.

In order to maintain the Quad Gold Claim in good standing, we must complete minimum exploration work on the properties and file confirmation of the completion of the work with the Ministry of Mines. In lieu of completing this work, we may pay a fee equal to the minimum exploration work that must be performed with the Ministry of Mines. The completion of mineral exploration work or payment in lieu of exploration work in any year will extend the existence of the Quad Gold Claim for one additional year. The minimum exploration work that must be performed and/or the fee for keeping the Quad Gold Claim current are equal to CDN $4.00 per hectare.  As the Quad Gold Claim is in good standing until April 5, 2013, we will be required to complete minimum exploration work or pay a minimum fee of CDN $661.96 on or before April 5, 2013 and each year thereafter in order to keep the Quad Gold Claim  current.  If we fail to complete the minimum required amount of exploration work or fail to make a payment in lieu of this exploration work, our mineral claim will lapse and we will lose all interest in our mineral claim.

Location and Access

The Quad Gold Claim is located in the Nanaimo Mining Division located on Quadra Island and is 16.2 km (10 miles) north of the City of Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada.
 
 
Figure 4. Quad Gold Claim.

Access to the Quad Gold Claim is done by vehicle ferry from Campbell River to Quathiaski Cove on Quadra Island. From Quathiaski Cove , it is a 6 km (3.5 mile) drive to Heriot Bay on paved road and then a 9.7 km drive on unpaved logging road to the Quad Gold Claim.

Climate and Physiography

The Quad Gold Claim is located on the west coast of British Columbia, which generally receives higher rainfall than the interior of the province. The Campbell River area receives 32 inches of rain a year the majority falling between November and May. Snow on Quadra Island stays until mid May especially in the forest under the tree canopy. Winters along the coast near sea level vary from year to year depending on the number of mid Pacific storms that come ashore carried by what is locally called the “Japanese Current”, these weather systems may be frequent or rare, although they tend to be frequent most years. Mining exploration may continue throughout the year on the Quad Gold Claims because of the claims low elevation. However , field work should be done between May and October because of the short daylight during winter months restricts outside activities to between the hours of 8:00 AM and 4:00 PM.

The vegetation on Quadra Island is typical of the British Columbia coastal areas where large forests once dominated the landscape. The accessible areas have long since been logged and the second growth on Quadra Island is actively been logged by small independent logging contractors. These forests which are being logged generally consist of Douglas fir, spruce and balsam in the well drained areas and cedar and hemlock in the wet or swampy areas. The undergrowth is dominated by Pacific salal, and in the sunnier areas blackberry, salmonberry and grasses are common.
 
 
The Quad Gold Claim area lies within two major northwest –trending physiographic divisions, namely, the Vancouver Island Ranges and the Coastal Trough. Between the front ranges of the Vancouver Island Ranges and Strait of Georgia, which occupies most of the Coastal Trough, is the Coastal Lowland. This lowland extends about 80 miles northwest from Nanoose Harbour to Campbell River and averages 4 miles wide, but widens to a maximum of about 12 miles in the Courtenay-Comox area. The lowland rises gently from the sea to meet the front ranges at elevations of 700 to 1000  feet.The Front ranges include Forbidden Plateau, with summits approaching an altitude of 7,000 feet above sea-level, the Beaufort Range with summits 3,000 to 5,000 feet and Mount Arrowsmith, which reaches an altitude of 5,962 feet.

Quadra Island is mainly mountainous, but the southern peninsula has a gently undulating suface150 to 300 feet above sea-level. This peninsula from Heriot Bay to Cape Mudge is about 7 miles long and 2 miles wide.

The major physiographic features are related to the bedrock, but at least two major ice-sheets have covered the area. Upon retreat of the ice, the mountains were left glacially sculptured with cirques and U-shaped valleys and over the lowland, glacial drift, with an undulating surface, accumulated. Transgressing and regressing seas further modified the lowland surface and, with lowering of sea-level, rivers cut or incised their valleys into the glacial and interglacial deposits and built terraces, deltas, and fluvial plains. In places along the coast bold cliffs have been left that expose 200 feet or more of glacial and interglacial deposits, and at sea-level benches and terraces have been cut by wave action on the exposed bedrock.

History

Historical work on the Quad Gold Claim has focused on two mineral properties: (i) the White Swan copper/silver prospect and the (ii) Condor copper/gold/silver prospect .

Previous work on the White Swan prospect includes the sinking of a 3.4 by 2.6 metre (11ft by 8ft) shaft 15 metres (50 feet), driving 30 metres (100 feet) or more at the bottom of the shaft. In addition, considerable surface work in the shape of pits, trenches and open-cuts has been done. Several bodies of pyrrhotite occur in limestone and andesite near their contact. A large pit, about 4 metres (12.5 feet) deep, has exposed three parallel mineralized fracture zones which strike about 72 degrees, all of which are included within a width of 5.5 metres (17 feet). The larger central zone is about 1.2 metres (4 feet) thick, and the smaller deposits on either side range from 5 to 40 centimetres (2 to 16 inches) in thickness. These mineralized zones or deposits are composed mainly of pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, arsenopyrite, pyrite, quartz, garnets and epidote, the better ore material consisting mainly of quartz, pyrrhotite and chalcopyrite. An average sample was taken across the central deposit, 1.2 metres (4 feet) from the surface. This was assayed and proved to contain trace gold, no silver and 0.62 per cent copper .

A mass of pyrrhotite about 3.6 metres (12.4 feet) thick was exposed in the old water filled shaft in 1913. An average sample was taken across this width and it assayed trace gold, no silver and 0.70 per cent copper.

A 6-metre (20 feet) wide quartz vein containing pyrite and chalcopyrite was exposed at the northwest end of the old White Swan prospect. A sample of pyrrhotite from the surface assayed trace gold, 6.86 grams per tonne silver and 1.0 per cent copper.

At the Condor showing a body of pyrrhotite with quartz about 1 metre (3 ft) wide has been exposed at the mouth of a tunnel that has been driven 33 metres (100 ft) south- west in limestone. The Condor occurrence is situated to the north- west of the Anaconda, which exhibits similar geology. The latter occurs at the contact of andesitic rock and limestone. The intrusive contact occurs within a few hundred metres to the northeast.

A sample of pyrrhotite and quartz assayed 0.69 grams per tonne gold, 6.86 grams per tonne silver and 0.9 per cent copper.

Geology

The western-half of Quadra Island is underlain primarily by andesitic volcanic rocks of the Upper Triassic Karmutsen Formation which are overlain and bounded on the east by a northwest trending belt of Upper Triassic Quatsino Formation limestone, both of the Vancouver Group.

The area is underlain by highly fractured and sheared Karmutsen Formation amygdaloidal andesitic flow rocks interlayered with dense, fine to medium grained andesitic units and minor thin beds of sedimentary and tuffaceous material. The flow rocks dip gently south and southeast and range in thickness from 0.3 to 3.6 metres (1 to 12 ft) and more. Many of the flows are highly amygdaloidal with the amygdules filled with calcite, quartz, chlorite, actinolite or prehnite. The rocks are chloritized and cut by numerous stringers and veinlets of quartz, calcite and epidote.
 
 
Chalcocite is the most abundant mineral with native copper and chalcopyrite in lesser amounts. Bornite and pyrite are rare. Malachite, azurite and cuprite are confined to oxidized and weathered surfaces. The distribution of the mineralization is erratic. It is found along fracture plane surfaces and within irregular quartz- calcite veinlets, less commonly it occurs within amygdules or is otherwise locally disseminated. The mineralization tends to be more concentrated where fracture density is high. The White Swan area is underlain by Upper Triassic Karmutsen Formation volcanics of the Vancouver Group. These are interbedded with, and overlain to the northeast by a northwest trending belt of Quatsino Formation limestone (Vancouver Group) known historically as the "lime-belt". The Vancouver Group rocks are in fault and/or intrusive contact to the northeast with intrusive rocks of the Coast Plutonic Complex.

Property Geology

The Quad Gold Claims are underlain by upper Triassic Karmutsen Formation volcanics of the Vancouver Group. The Quad Gold Claims are well situated near numerous historic copper-gold-silver past producers, prospects and showings.

Current Exploration Activities

To date, we have not conducted any exploration work on the Quad Gold Claims.  We are focusing our resources on the exploration of the OS Gold Claims.


LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

We are not a party to any other legal proceedings and, to our knowledge, no other legal proceedings are pending, threatened or contemplated.


MARKET FOR COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED SHAREHOLDER MATTERS

Holders of Our Shares

As of the date of this prospectus, there were 70 registered shareholders.

No Public Market for Common Shares

There is currently no public market for our common shares.  We anticipate making an application for quotation of our common shares on the OTC Bulletin Board upon: (i) the effectiveness of the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part; and (ii) our obtaining a sufficient number of stockholders to enable our common shares to become quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board.  However, we can provide no assurance that our shares will be quoted on the bulletin board or, if quoted, that a public market will materialize.

Dividend Rights

We have never declared, nor paid, any dividend since our incorporation and does not foresee paying any dividend in the near future since all available funds will be used to conduct exploration activities.  Any future payment of dividends will depend on our financing requirements and financial condition and other factors which the board of directors, in its sole discretion, may consider appropriate.

Under the Business Corporations Act, we are prohibited from declaring or paying dividends if there are reasonable grounds for believing that we are insolvent or the payment of dividends would render us insolvent.
 
 
Outstanding Options, Warrants or Convertible Securities

As of the date of this prospectus, we do not have any outstanding options, warrants to purchase our shares or securities convertible into common shares .


FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1.
Audited financial statements for the fiscal years ended October 31, 2011 and 2010, including:
     
 
(a)
Report of Independent Registered Accounting Firm;
 
 
(b)
Balance Sheets as of October 31, 2011 and 201 0 ;
 
 
(c)
Statements of Operations for the years ended October 31, 2011 and 201 0 and cumulative from inception on August 4, 2010 to October 31, 2011;
 
 
(d)
Statement of Stockholders’ Equity (Deficiency) from inception on August 4, 2010 to October 31, 2011;
 
 
(e)
Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended October 31, 2011 and 201 0 and cumulative from inception on August 4, 2010 to October 31, 2011; and
 
 
(f)
Notes to the Financial Statements.
     
2 .
Interim financial statements for the periods ended April 30, 2012 and 2011, including:
     
 
(a)
Balance Sheets as of April 30, 2012 and October 31, 2011;
 
 
(b)
Statements of Operations for the six months ended April 30, 2012 and 2011 and cumulative from inception on August 4, 2010 to April 30, 2012;
 
 
(c)
Statement of Stockholders’ Equity (Deficiency) from inception on August 4, 2010 to April 30, 2012;
 
 
(d)
Statements of Cash Flows for the six months ended April 30, 2012 and 2011 and cumulative from inception on August 4, 2010 to April 30, 2012; and
 
 
(e)
Notes to the Financial Statements.
 
 


REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Stockholders and Board of Directors of Venza Gold Corp.

We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Venza Gold Corp. (the “Company”) as at October 31, 2011 and 2010 and the related statements of operations, stockholders’ equity and cash flows for the period from August 4, 2010 (inception) to October 31, 2010, the year ended October 31, 2011 and the period from August 4, 2010 (inception) to October 31, 2011. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with 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. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. Our audit included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also 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. We believe that our audits provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, based on our audits, these financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as at October 31, 2011 and October 31, 2010 and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the year ended October 31, 2011 and the period from August 4, 2010 (inception) to October 31, 2010 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

The accompanying financial statements have been prepared assuming that the Company will continue as a going concern. As discussed in Note 1 to the financial statements, the Company has incurred losses in developing its business, and further losses are anticipated. The Company requires additional funds to meet its obligations and the costs of its operations. These factors raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern. Management’s plans in this regard are described in Note 1. The financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from the outcome of this uncertainty.
 
“ DMCL”
 
DALE MATHESON CARR-HILTON LABONTE LLP
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS
Vancouver, Canada
June 8, 2012
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
BALANCE SHEETS
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
 
   
October 31, 2011
   
October 31, 2010
 
             
ASSETS
             
Current assets
           
Cash
  $ 21,960     $ 14,647  
Notes receivable, net
    191,858       60,005  
Prepaids
    1,640       -  
    $ 215,458     $ 74,652  
                 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                 
Current liabilities
               
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
  $ 39,690     $ 4,724  
Due to related parties
    94,500       21,000  
      134,190       25,724  
                 
Stockholders' equity:
               
Common stock, no par value, unlimited authorized 3,543,328, and 1,750,000 issued and outstanding at October 31, 2011, and October 31, 2010
    219,000       51,500  
Common stock subscribed
    41,250       38,250  
Additional paid in capital
    (27,180 )     (13,995 )
Deficit
    (151,802 )     (26,827 )
      81,268       48,928  
    $ 215,458     $ 74,652  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
 
   
Year ended
October 31, 2011
   
From August 4, 2010
(Inception) to
October 31, 2010
   
From August 4, 2010
(Inception) to
October 31, 2011
 
                   
Operating expenses:
                 
Administration
  $ 2,435     $ -     $ 2,435  
Accounting
    7,463       -       7,463  
Bank charges
    411       103       514  
Consulting
    48,658       -       48,658  
Management fees
    75,435       18,917       94,352  
Office
    1,962       595       2,557  
Professional fees
    11,802       5,657       17,459  
Regulatory
    1,408       1,555       2,963  
Foreign exchange
    (561 )     -       (561 )
Loss before other item
    (149,013 )     (26,827 )     (175,840 )
                         
Other item
                       
Interest income
    24,038       -       24,038  
                         
Net Loss
  $ (124,975 )   $ (26,827 )   $ (151,802 )
                         
Loss per share - basic and diluted
  $ 0.04     $ 0.03          
Weighted average number of shares outstanding:
    2,803,349       871,591          
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
 
   
Common Stock Issued
                         
   
Number of
Shares
   
Amount
   
Common
Stock
Subscribed
   
Additional
Paid-in
Capital
   
Accumulated
Deficit
   
Total
 
                                     
                                     
Balance at August 4, 2010 (inception)
    -     $ -     $ -     $ -     $ -     $ -  
                                                 
Common stock issued for cash
    1,750,000       51,500       -       -       -       51,500  
                                                 
Obligation to issue shares
    -       -       38,250       -               38,250  
                                                 
Discount on notes receivable
    -       -       -       (13,995 )     -       (13,995 )
                                                 
Net loss
    -       -       -       -       (26,827 )     (26,827 )
                                                 
Balance at October 31, 2010
    1,750,000       51,500       38,250       (13,995 )     (26,827 )     48,928  
                                                 
                                                 
Common stock issued for cash
    1,793,328       167,500       (38,250 )     -       -       129,250  
                                                 
Obligation to issue shares
    -       -       41,250       -       -       41,250  
                                              -  
Discount on notes receivable
    -       -       -       (13,185 )     -       (13,185 )
                                                 
Net loss
    -       -       -       -       (124,975 )     (124,975 )
                                                 
Balance at October 31, 2011
    3,543,328     $ 219,000     $ 41,250     $ (27,180 )   $ (151,802 )   $ 81,268  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these  financial statements
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
 
   
Year ended
October 31, 2011
   
From August 4, 2010
(Inception) to
October 31, 2010
   
From August 4, 2010
(inception) to
October 31, 2011
 
Cash flow from operating activities:
                 
Net loss
  $ (124,975 )   $ (26,827 )   $ (151,802 )
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:                        
Interest income
    (24,038 )     -       (24,038 )
                         
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
                       
Prepaids
    (1,640 )     -       (1,640 )
Accounts payable
    34,966       4,724       39,690  
Due to related parties
    73,500       21,000       94,500  
Net cash used in operating activities
    (42,187 )     (1,103 )     (43,290 )
                         
Cash flows from investing activities:
                    -  
Notes receivable
    (121,000 )     (74,000 )     (195,000 )
Net cash used in investing activities
    (121,000 )     (74,000 )     (195,000 )
                         
Cash flows from financing activities:
                       
Shares issued
    167,500       51,500       219,000  
Shares subscribed
    3,000       38,250       41,250  
Net cash provided by financing activities
    170,500       89,750       260,250  
                         
Net increase in cash
    7,313       14,647       21,960  
Cash, beginning
    14,647       -       -  
Cash, ending
  $ 21,960     $ 14,647     $ 21,960  
                         
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
                       
Cash paid for
                       
Taxes
  $ -     $ -     $ -  
Interest
  $ -     $ -     $ -  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these  financial statements
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
OCTOBER 31, 2011
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS

NOTE 1 – ORGANIZATION AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
Nature of Operations

Venza Gold Corp. (the “Company”) was incorporated on January 10, 2005 under the laws of the State of Nevada as SOS Link Corporation. On March 25, 2012, the Company consolidated their shares on a 2.5:1 basis. All share and per share information in these financial statements have been retroactively re-stated to reflect this share consolidation. On April 15, 2011, the Company continued from the State of Nevada to British Columbia, Canada and changed its name to Venza Gold Corp.  The Company’s principal business is the acquisition and exploration of mineral resources in British Columbia, Canada.

The Company’s financial statements are prepared on a going concern basis in accordance with US generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) which contemplates the realization of assets and discharge liabilities and commitments in the normal course of business.  The Company is in the exploration stage.  It has not generated operating revenues to date, and has accumulated losses of $151,802 since inception.  The Company has funded its operations through the issuance of capital stock and debt.  Management plans to raise additional funds through equity and/or debt financings.  There is no certainty that further funding will be available as needed.  These factors raise substantial doubt about the ability of the Company to continue operating as a going concern.  The Company’s ability to continue its operations as a going concern, realize the carrying value of its assets, and discharge its liabilities in the normal course of business is dependent upon its ability to raise new capital sufficient to fund its commitments and ongoing losses, and ultimately on generating profitable operations.

NOTE 2 – SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Basis of Presentation

These financial statements and related notes are presented in accordance with US GAAP, and are presented in United States dollars. The Company has not produced revenues from its principal business and is an exploration stage company as defined by “Accounting and Reporting by Development Stage Enterprises.”

Use of Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with US GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect certain of the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the year. The Company regularly evaluates estimates and assumptions. The Company bases its estimates and assumptions on current facts, historical experience and various other factors it believes to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which form the basis for making judgments about the carrying values of assets and liabilities and the accrual of costs and expenses that are not readily apparent from other sources. Significant areas of estimate include the carrying value of the notes receivable, accrued liabilities and deferred income tax obligations. The actual results experienced by the Company may differ materially and adversely from the Company’s estimates. To the extent there are material differences between the estimates and the actual results, future results of operations will be affected.
Asset Retirement Obligations

The Company records the fair value of an asset retirement obligation as a liability in the period in which it incurs an obligation associated with the retirement of tangible long-lived assets that result from the acquisition, construction, development and/or normal use of the assets. The estimated fair value of the asset retirement obligation is based on the current cost escalated at an inflation rate and discounted at a credit adjusted risk-free rate. This liability is capitalized as part of the cost of the related asset and amortized over its useful life.  The liability accretes until the Company settles the obligation.  To date the Company has not incurred any measurable asset retirement obligations.

Impairment or Disposal of Long Lived Assets

The carrying value of intangible assets and other long-lived assets is reviewed on a regular basis for the existence of facts or circumstances that may suggest impairment. The Company recognizes impairment when the sum of the expected undiscounted future cash flows is less than the carrying amount of the asset. Impairment losses, if any, are measured as the excess of the carrying amount of the asset over its estimated fair value.

Fair Value of Financial Instruments

Fair value is defined as the price that would be received upon sale of an asset or paid upon transfer of a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date and in the principal or most advantageous market for that asset or liability. The fair value should be calculated based on assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability, not on assumptions specific to the entity. In addition, the fair value of liabilities should include consideration of non-performance risk including the entity’s own credit risk.
 
A fair value hierarchy for valuation inputs is established. The hierarchy prioritizes the inputs into three levels based on the extent to which inputs used in measuring fair value are observable in the market. Each fair value measurement is reported in one of the three levels and which is determined by the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety.
 
These levels are:
 
Level 1 – inputs are based upon unadjusted quoted prices for identical instruments traded in active markets.
 
Level 2 – inputs are based upon quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are not active, and model-based valuation techniques for which all significant assumptions are observable in the market or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities.
 
Level 3 – inputs are generally unobservable and typically reflect management’s estimates of assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability. The fair values are therefore determined using model-based techniques that include option pricing models, discounted cash flow models, and similar techniques.
 
The Company’s financial instruments consist of cash, notes receivable, accounts payable and amounts due from related parties. The carrying value of these financial instruments approximates their fair value based on their liquidity, their short-term nature or application of appropriate risk based discount rates to determine fair value. These financial assets and liabilities are valued using Level 3 inputs, except for cash which is at Level 1. The Company is not exposed to significant interest, exchange or credit risk arising from these financial instruments except on its notes receivable, which are denoted in Canadian dollars and bear interest and are therefore exposed to exchange and credit risk.
 
Foreign Currency Translation and Transaction

The Company’s functional currency is the Canadian dollar and reporting currency is the United States dollar. The Company translates assets and liabilities to US dollars using year-end exchange rates, translates unproved mineral properties using historical exchange rates, and translates revenues and expenses using average exchange rates during the period. Gains and losses arising on settlement of foreign currency denominated transactions or balances are included in the determination of income. The Company has not to the date of these financial statements, entered into derivative instruments to offset the impact of foreign currency fluctuations.

Income Taxes

Income taxes are determined using the liability method.  Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the future tax consequences attributable to differences between the financial statement carrying amounts of assets and liabilities and their respective tax basis. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using the enacted tax rates expected to apply to taxable income in the years in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled.  The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in income in the period that includes that date of enactment.  In addition, a valuation allowance is established to reduce any deferred tax asset for which it is determined that it is more likely than not that some portion of the deferred tax asset will not be realized.
 
The Company accounts for uncertainty in income taxes by applying a two-step method. First, it evaluates whether a tax position has met a more likely than not recognition threshold, and second, it measures that tax position to determine the amount of benefit, if any, to be recognized in the financial statements. The application of this method did not have a material effect on the Company's financial statements.
 
Loss per Share

The Company presents both basic and diluted loss per share (“LPS”) on the face of the statements of operations. Basic LPS is computed by dividing net loss available to common shareholders by the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the year. Diluted LPS gives effect to all dilutive potential common shares outstanding during the period including convertible debt, stock options, and warrants, using the treasury stock method. Diluted LPS excludes all dilutive potential shares if their effect is anti-dilutive.

Mineral Properties

The Company classifies its mineral rights as tangible assets and accordingly acquisition costs are capitalized as mineral property costs. Mineral exploration costs are expensed as incurred until commercially mineable deposits are determined to exist within a particular property.

When it has been determined that a mineral property can be economically developed as a result of establishing proven and probable reserves, the costs then incurred to develop such property, are capitalized. Such costs will be amortized using the units-of-production method over the estimated life of the probable reserves. If mineral properties are subsequently abandoned or impaired, any capitalized costs will be charged to operations.
 
Recently Adopted Accounting Guidance

The Company has reviewed recently issued accounting pronouncements and plans to adopt those that are applicable to it. It does not expect the adoption of these pronouncements to have a material impact on its financial position, results of operations or cash flows.
NOTE 3 – NOTES RECEIVABLE

During the period ended October 31, 2010, the Company loaned $74,000 to an unrelated party through a series of promissory notes. The notes were unsecured, bore interest at 5% per annum and were due one year from the date of issuance.

During the year ended October 31, 2011, the Company loaned $121,000 to an unrelated party through a series of promissory notes. The notes were unsecured, bore interest at 5% per annum and were due one year from the date of issuance. As at October 31, 2011, the total notes receivable, including accrued interest of $15,038, was $210,038 (2010 - $74,000).

The fair value of the notes was determined to be $191,858 at October 31, 2011 (2010 – $60,005) using an effective interest rate of 15%. During the year ended October 31, 2011, interest income of $24,038 was recognized.

Subsequent to October 31, 2011, the Company secured a court approved consent order for a repayment plan for its notes receivable. The repayment terms are as follows:

Amount
Due date
$50,000 CDN
 
March 30, 2012
 
$35,000 CDN
 
April 30, 2012
 
$35,000 CDN
 
May 31, 2012
 
$35,000 CDN
 
June 30, 2012
 
$50,038 CDN
 
July 31, 2012
 
$5,000 CDN
 
July 31, 2012
 
$210,038 CDN
     

As at the date of issuance of these financial statements, $120,000 CDN had been collected.

NOTE 4 – RELATED-PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
The following amounts were due to related parties at October 31, 2011, and October 31, 2010:
 
   
October 31, 2011
   
October 31, 2010
 
             
Due to a director
  $ 76,500     $ 16,500  
Due to a former director
    18,000       4,500  
Total due to related parties
  $ 94,500     $ 21,000  

Amounts due to related parties are unsecured, are due on demand and bear no interest.

During the year ended October 31, 2011, the Company incurred $75,435 (2010 – $18,917).in management fees to directors of the Company.

NOTE 5 – INCOME TAXES

The Company is subject to United States federal income taxes at an approximate rate of 35%. The reconciliation of the provision for income taxes at the United States federal statutory rate compared to the Company’s income tax expense as reported is as follows :
   
October 31, 2011
   
October 31, 2011
 
             
Loss before income taxes
  $ (124,975 )   $ (26,827 )
Statutory tax rate
    35 %     35 %
Expected recovery of income taxes
    (43,741 )     (9,389 )
Non deductible items
    (3,150 )     -  
Effect of changes in tax rate
    13,398       2,682  
      33,494       6,707  
Change in valuation allowance
    (33,494 )     (6,707 )
Provision for income taxes
  $ -     $ -  
 
The Company’s tax-effected future income tax assets and liabilities are estimated as follows:
 
   
October 31, 2011
   
October 31, 2011
 
Deferred income tax assets
           
Non-capital losses carried forward
    40,201       6,707  
Less: Valuation allowance
    (40,201 )     (6,707 )
Net deferred income tax assets
    -       -  

NOTE 6 – SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

As at the date of issuance of these financial statements, $120,000 of the Company’s notes receivable had been collected (Note 3).

On April 11, 2012, the Company acquired two mineral claims located in British Columbia through the issuance of  200,000 shares of its common stock. The Company has the following minimum exploration commitment to keep the property in good standing:

   
Exploration Expenditure
Required
 
2013 (Incurred)
  $ 2,754  
2014
  $ 2,754  
2015
  $ 2,754  
2016
  $ 5,508  
2017-2022
  $ 33,051  
    $ 46,821  
 
Failure to do work or pay the cash in lieu will result in forfeiture of title.

On April 13, 2012, the Company issued 1,573,333 common shares at $0.075 to settle $118,000 in debt to related parties and 700,000 common shares at $0.075 to settle $52,500 in debt to non-related parties.

 On April 13, 2012, the Company issued 250,000 common shares to its Chief Financial Officer and 100,000 common shares to a consultant as a stock bonus. The fair value of the shares issued was $26,250.

On April 14, the Company issued 550,000 shares for which gross proceeds of $41,250 were received prior to October 31, 2011.
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
BALANCE SHEETS
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
 
   
April 30, 2012
   
October 31, 2011
 
   
(Unaudited)
       
             
ASSETS
             
Current assets
           
Cash
  $ 49,355     $ 21,960  
Notes receivable, net
    120,745       191,858  
Prepaids
    8,640       1,640  
      178,740       215,458  
                 
Unproved mineral property
    15,000       -  
    $ 193,740     $ 215,458  
                 
                 
                 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                 
Current liabilities:
               
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
  $ 11,674     $ 39,690  
Due to related parties
    1,500       94,500  
      13,174       134,190  
                 
                 
                 
Stockholders' equity
               
Common stock, no par value, unlimited authorized 6,916,661, and 3,543,328, issued and outstanding at April 30, 2012, and October 31, 2011
    472,000       219,000  
Common stock subscribed
    -       41,250  
Additional paid in capital
    (27,180 )     (27,180 )
Deficit
    (264,254 )     (151,802 )
      180,566       81,268  
    $ 193,740     $ 215,458  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these interim financial statements

 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
(UNAUDITED)
 
   
Six months ended
   
From August 4, 2010
(Inception) to
 
   
April 30, 2012
   
April 30, 2011
   
April 30, 2012
 
                   
Operating expenses:
                 
Administration
  $ 788     $ 1,533     $ 3,223  
Accounting
    4,188       -       8,291  
Bank charges
    67       301       581  
Consulting
    21,866       7,476       70,524  
Management fees
    57,718       39,000       152,070  
Mineral exploration
    3,000       -       3,000  
Office
    2,636       281       5,193  
Professional fees
    34,319       9,852       55,138  
Regulatory
    1,830       1,408       4,793  
Foreign exchange
    (73 )     (95 )     (634 )
Loss before other items
    (126,339 )     (59,756 )     (302,179 )
                         
Other items:
                       
Interest income
  $ 13,887     $ 4,500     $ 37,925  
                         
Net Loss
    (112,452 )     (55,256 )     (264,254 )
                         
Loss per share - basic and diluted
  $ 0.03     $ 0.02          
                         
Weighted average number of shares outstanding:
  $ 3,810,160     $ 2,355,000          
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these interim financial statements
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
(UNAUDITED)
 
   
Common Stock Issued
                         
   
Number of
Shares
   
Amount
   
Common
Stock
Subscribed
   
Additional
Paid-in
Capital
   
Accumulated
Deficit
   
Total
 
                                     
                                     
Balance at August 4, 2010
    -     $ -     $ -     $ -     $ -     $ -  
                                                 
Common stock issued for cash
    1,750,000       51,500       -       -       -       51,500  
                                                 
Obligation to issue shares
    -       -       38,250       -       -       38,250  
                                              -  
Discount on notes receivable
    -       -       -       (13,995 )             (13,995 )
                                                 
Net loss
    -       -       -       -       (26,827 )     (26,827 )
                                                 
Balance at October 31, 2010
    1,750,000       51,500       38,250       (13,995 )     (26,827 )     48,928  
                                                 
Common stock issued for cash
    660,000       82,500       (38,250 )     -       -       44,250  
                                                 
Obligation to issue shares
    -       -       86,000       -       -       86,000  
                                              -  
Discount on notes receivable
    -       -       -       (13,185 )             (13,185 )
                                                 
Net loss
    -       -       -       -       (55,256 )     (55,256 )
                                                 
Balance at April 30, 2011
    2,410,000       134,000       86,000       (27,180 )     (82,083 )     110,737  
                                                 
Common stock issued for cash
    1,133,328       85,000       (86,000 )     -       -       (1,000 )
                                                 
Obligation to issue shares
    -       -       41,250       -       -       41,250  
                                                 
Net loss
    -       -       -       -       (69,719 )     (69,719 )
                                                 
Balance at October 31, 2011
    3,543,328       219,000       41,250       (27,180 )     (151,802 )     81,268  
                                                 
Common stock issued
    550,000       41,250       (41,250 )     -       -       -  
                                                 
Common stock issued for debt
    2,273,333       170,500       -       -       -       170,500  
                                                 
Common stock issued for asset
    200,000       15,000       -       -       -       15,000  
                                                 
Common stock issued for services
    350,000       26,250       -       -       -       26,250  
                                                 
Net loss
    -       -       -       -       (112,452 )     (112,452 )
                                                 
Balance at April 30, 2012
    6,916,661     $ 472,000     $ -     $ (27,180 )   $ (264,254 )   $ 180,566  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these interim financial statements
 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
(UNAUDITED)
 
   
Six months ended
   
From August 4, 2010 (inception) to April 30, 2012
 
   
April 30, 2012
   
April 30, 2011
       
Cash flow from operating activities:
                 
Net loss
  $ (112,452 )   $ (55,256 )   $ (264,254 )
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:                        
Interest income
    (13,887 )     (4,500 )     (37,925 )
Consulting fees
    26,250       -       26,250  
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
                       
Prepaids
    (7,000 )     (5,000 )     (8,640 )
Accounts payable
    24,484       153       64,174  
Due to related parties
    25,000       39,000       119,500  
Net cash used in operating activities
    (57,605 )     (25,603 )     (100,895 )
                         
Cash flows from investing activities:
                    -  
Notes receivable
    85,000       (121,089 )     (110,000 )
Net cash used in investing activities
    85,000       (121,089 )     (110,000 )
                         
Cash flows from financing activities:
                       
Shares issued
    -       82,500       260,250  
Shares subscribed
    -       52,750       -  
Net cash provided by financing activities
    -       135,250       260,250  
                         
Net increase (decrease) in cash
    27,395       (11,442 )     49,355  
                         
Cash, beginning
    21,960       14,647       -  
                         
Cash, ending
  $ 49,355     $ 3,205     $ 49,355  
                         
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
                       
                         
Cash paid for
                       
Taxes
  $ -     $ -     $ -  
Interest
  $ -     $ -     $ -  
                         
Non-cash transactions
                       
Shares issued for mineral properties
  $ 15,000     $ -     $ 15,000  
Shares issued for settlement of debt
  $ 170,500     $ -     $ 170,500  
Shares issued for consulting services
  $ 26,250     $ -     $ 26,250  
 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these interim financial statements
 
 
 

 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
(AN EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
APRIL 30, 2012
EXPRESSED IN US DOLLARS
(UNAUDITED)

NOTE 1 – ORGANIZATION AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
Nature of Operations

Venza Gold Corp. (the “Company”) was incorporated on August 4, 2010 under the laws of the State of Nevada as SOS Link Corporation. On March 25, 2012, the Company consolidated their shares on a 2.5:1 basis. On April 15, 2011, the Company continued from the State of Nevada to British Columbia, Canada and changed its name to Venza Gold Corp.  The Company’s principal business is the acquisition and exploration of mineral resources in British Columbia, Canada. The Company has not determined whether its properties contain mineral reserves that are economically recoverable.  
 
Unaudited Interim Financial Statements
 
 
The unaudited interim financial statements of the Company have been prepared in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) for interim financial information and the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). They do not include all information and footnotes required by GAAP for complete financial statements. Except as disclosed herein, there have been no material changes in the information disclosed in the notes to the financial statements for the year ended October 31, 2011, included in the Company’s s-1 Registration Statement, filed with the SEC. The interim unaudited financial statements should be read in conjunction with those financial statements for the year ended October 31, 2011 included in the Company’s S-1 registration statement. In the opinion of management, all adjustments considered necessary for fair presentation, consisting solely of normal recurring adjustments, have been made. Operating results for the three month period ended April 30, 2012, are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the year ending October 31, 2012.
 
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
 
The Company has reviewed recently issued accounting pronouncements and plans to adopt those that are applicable to it. It does not expect the adoption of these pronouncements to have a material impact on its financial position, results of operations or cash flows.
 
NOTE 2 – NOTE RECEIVABLE

During the period ended October 31, 2010, the Company loaned $74,000 to an unrelated party through a series of promissory notes. The notes were unsecured, bore interest at 5% per annum and were due one year from the date of issuance.

During the year ended October 31, 2011, the Company loaned $121,000 to an unrelated party through a series of promissory notes. The notes were unsecured, bore interest at 5% per annum and were due one year from the date of issuance.

As at April 30, 2012, he Company has the following notes recoverable:

Amount
Due date
$35,000 CDN
 
May 31, 2012
 
$35,000 CDN
 
June 30, 2012
 
$50,038 CDN
 
July 31, 2012
 
$5,000 CDN
 
July 31, 2012
 
$125,038 CDN
     
The fair value of the notes was determined to be $120,745 at April 30, 2012 (2011 – $191,858) using an effective interest rate of 15%. During the six months ended April 30, 2012, interest income of $13,887 (April 30, 2011 - $4,500) was recognized.

During the six months ended April 30, 2012, notes with a face value of $85,000 had been collected. A further $35,000 was collected subsequent to April 30, 2012.

NOTE 3 – RELATED-PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
The following amounts were due to related parties at April 30, 2012 and October 31, 2011:
 
   
April 30, 2012
   
October 31, 2011
 
             
Due to a director
  $ 1,500     $ 76,500  
Due to a former director
    -       18,000  
Total due to related parties
  $ 1,500     $ 94,500  

Amounts due to related parties are unsecured, are due on demand and bear no interest.

During the six months ended April 30, 2012, the Company incurred $25,000 (April 30, 2011- $39,000) in management fees to directors of the Company, $6,720 (April 30, 2011- $Nil) in management fees to its Chief Financial Officer, and exploration expenditures of $3,000 (April 30, 2011- $Nil) to a Company controlled by a director.

During the six months ended April 30, 2012, the Company issued 250,000 shares to its Chief Financial Officer as a stock bonus. The fair value of the shares was $18,750 and has been recorded as management fees (Note 5).

During the six months ended April 30, 2012, the Company issued 200,000 shares to one of its directors for the acquisition of mineral claims (Notes 4 and 5)

NOTE 4 – UNPROVED MINERAL PROPERTY

On April 11, 2012, the Company acquired two mineral claims located in British Columbia from one of its directors through the issuance of 200,000 shares of its common stock at a fair value of $15,000 (Notes 3 and 5). The Company has the following minimum exploration commitments to keep the property in good standing:

   
Exploration Expenditure
Required
 
2013 (Incurred)
  $ 2,754  
2014
  $ 2,754  
2015
  $ 2,754  
2016
  $ 5,508  
2017-2022
  $ 33,051  
    $ 46,821  
 
Failure to do work or pay the cash in lieu will result in forfeiture of title.
NOTE 5 – COMMON STOCK

On April 11, 2012, the Company issued 200,000 common shares for the acquisition of mineral properties. The fair value of the shares issued was $15,000.

On April 13, 2012, the Company issued 1,573,333 common shares at $0.075 to settle $118,000 in debt to related parties and 700,000 common shares at $0.075 to settle $52,500 in debt to non-related parties.

On April 13, 2012, the Company issued 250,000 common shares to its Chief Financial Officer and 100,000 common shares to a consultant for management fees. The fair value of the shares issued was $26,250.

On April 14, the Company issued 550,000 shares for gross proceeds of $41,250.
 
 

Plan of Operation

Our plan of operation is to conduct mineral exploration activities on the OS Gold Claim in order to assess whether the property contains mineral reserves capable of commercial extraction. Our exploration program is designed to explore for commercially viable deposits of gold. We have not, nor has any predecessor, identified any commercially exploitable reserves of these minerals on the OS Gold Claim.

Our plan is to conduct Phase II of our exploration program on the OS Gold Claim in summer 2012.  Phase II will involve a geophysical program on the program on the Pass Showing.  The estimated cost of Phase II will be $35,000.

We anticipate that we will incur the following expenses over the next twelve months:

Category
Expenditures During
Next Twelve Months
Legal and Accounting Expenses
$25,000
Management Expenses
$12,000
Office Expenses
$10,000
Mineral Exploration Program
$35,000
Total
$72,000
 
Note :
 
(1)
Excludes estimated costs of this offering of 36,073.

As of April 30, 2012, we had cash on hand of $49,355 and notes receivable of $120,745. Upon completion of the offering and collection of notes receivable, we will have sufficient cash on hand to pay the anticipated costs of Phase 2 of our proposed exploration program on the OS Gold Claim. However, there are no assurances that the actual cost of completing this exploration program will not exceed our estimates of those costs. If the actual costs of the exploration program are substantially greater than we have estimated, we may be required to seek additional financing. In addition, if we decide to proceed with additional work beyond Phase III, of which there is no assurance, we may also be required to seek additional financing. We currently do not have any arrangements for additional financing.

Results of Operation

Years Ended October 31, 2011 and 2010

Summary
    Year Ended October 31,     Percentage  
    2011     2010     Increase / (Decrease)  
Interest Income
  $ 24,038     $ -       100.0 %
Expenses
    (149,013 )     (26,827 )     455.0 %
Net Loss
  $ (124,975 )   $ (26,827 )     366.0 %

Revenues

We only earned interest revenue during the year ended October 31, 2011 and do not anticipate earning revenues from business operations until such time as we enter into commercial production of our mineral properties. There can be no assurance that we will be successful in discovering commercial quantities or that we can commercially produce metals or minerals. We are presently an exploration stage company engaged in the search for mineral reserves. We can provide no assurances that we will be able to discover any commercially exploitable levels of mineral resources on our property, or, even if such resources are discovered, that we will be able to enter into commercial production of our mineral properties .
 
 
Expenses

The major components of our expenses for the fiscal years ended October 31, 2011 and 2010 are outlined in the table below:
 
   
Year Ended
October 31
   
Percentage
 
   
2011
   
2010
   
Increase / (Decrease)
 
Administration
  $ 2,435     $ -       100 %
Accounting
    7,463       -       100 %
Bank charges
    411       103       299 %
Consulting
    48,658       -       100 %
Management fees
    75,435       18,917       298.8 %
Mineral exploration
    -       -       n/a  
Office
    1,962       595       230 %
Professional fees
    11,802       5,657       109 %
Regulatory
    1,408       1,555       (9.5 )%
Foreign exchange
    (561 )     -       (100 )%
Total Expenses
  $ 149,013     $ 26,827       455 %

Our expenses increased from $26,827, during the year ended October 31, 2010, to $149,013, during the year ended October 31, 2011.  The following sets out the most significant changes from fiscal 2010 to fiscal 2011:

 
·
During the year ended October 31, 2011, we incurred $7,463 in accounting expenses associated with the preparation of our audited financial statements.

 
·
Due to higher financial advisory requirements we incurred $48,658 in consulting fees in fiscal 2011.

 
·
Management fees increased from $18,917, during fiscal 2010, to $75,435, during fiscal 2011.  The increase was due to management fees incurred with our President.

 
·
Professional fees increased from $5,657, during fiscal 2010, to $11,802, during fiscal 2011.  The increase was mainly associated with our continuation from Nevada to British Columbia.

Six Months Ended April 30, 2012 and 2011

Summary
   
Six Months Ended April 30
   
Percentage
 
   
2012
   
2011
   
Increase / (Decrease)
 
Interest Income
  $ 13,887     $ 4,500       208.6 %
Expenses
    (126,339 )     (59,756 )     111.4 %
Net Loss
  $ (112,452 )   $ (55,256 )     103.5 %

Revenues

We only earned interest revenue during the six months ended April 30, 2012 and 2011 and do not anticipate earning revenues from business operations until such time as we enter into commercial production of our mineral properties. There can be no assurance that we will be successful in discovering commercial quantities or that we can commercially produce metals or minerals. We are presently an exploration stage company engaged in the search for mineral reserves. We can provide no assurances that we will be able to discover any commercially exploitable levels of mineral resources on our property, or, even if such resources are discovered, that we will be able to enter into commercial production of our mineral properties .
 
 
Expenses

The major components of our expenses during the six months ended April 30, 2012 and 2011 are outlined below:
 
   
Six Months Ended
April 30,
   
Percentage
 
   
2012
   
2011
   
Increase / (Decrease)
 
Administration
  $ 788     $ 1,533       (48.6 )%
Accounting
    4,188       -       100 %
Bank charges
    67       301       (77.7 )%
Consulting
    21,866       7,476       192.5 %
Management fees
    57,718       39,000       47.9 %
Mineral exploration
    3,000       -       100 %
Office
    2,636       281       838 %
Professional fees
    34,319       9,852       248 %
Regulatory
    1,830       1,408       30 %
Foreign exchange
    (73 )     (95 )     23 %
Total Expenses
  $ 126,339     $ 59,756       111 %

Our expenses increased from $59,756, during the six months ended April 30, 2011, to $126,339, during the six months ended April 30, 2012.  The following sets out the most significant changes from the six months ended April 30, 2011 to the six months ended April 30, 2012:

 
·
During the six months ended April 30, 2012, we incurred $4,188 in accounting expenses associated with the preparation of our interim financial statements.

 
·
Our consulting fees have increased from 7,476 for the six month ended April 30, 2011 to $21,866 for the six months ended April 30, 2012. This increase was associated with increased financial compliance due to the preparation of our registration statement.

 
·
Management fees have increased from $39,000 for the six month ended April 30, 2011 to $57,718 for the six months ended April 30, 2012. This increase was mainly associated with the stock bonuses paid to our Chief Financial Officer and corporate development consultant.

 
·
During the six months ended April 30, 2012, we recorded mineral exploration expenses of $3,000 in connection with the Phase 1 of the exploration program  on the OS Gold Claim.

 
·
Professional fees increased from $9,852, during the six months ended April 30, 2011, to $34,319, during the six months ended April 30, 2012.  The increase in professional fees was mainly associated with legal costs incurred to collect loans receivable from EvidencePix.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

Year Ended October 31, 2011

Working Capital
   
At October 31, 2011
   
At October 31, 2010
 
Current Assets
  $ 215,458     $ 74,652  
Current Liabilities
    134,190       25,724  
Working Capital Surplus
  $ 81,268     $ 48,928  
 
 
Cash Flows
   
Year Ended October 31
 
   
2011
   
2010
 
Net Cash used in Operating Activities
  $ 42,187     $ 1,103  
Net Cash used in Investing Activities
    121,000       74,000  
Net Cash from Financing Activities
    170,500       89,750  
Net Increase in Cash During Period
  $ 7,313     $ 14,647  

Our working capital surplus increased from $48,928 , during the year ended October 31, 2010, to $81,268 , during the year ended October 31, 2011.  The increase in working capital surplus was primarily a result of (i) an increase in amounts payable and accrued liabilities; (ii) an increase in amounts due to related parties; and (iii) proceeds from issuance of our shares of common stock.

Six Months Ended April 30, 2012

Working Capital
   
At April 30, 2012
   
At October 31, 2011
 
Current Assets
  $ 178,740     $ 215,458  
Current Liabilities
    13,174       134,190  
Working Capital Surplus
  $ 165,566     $ 81,268  

Cash Flows
   
Six Months Ended April 30
 
   
2012
   
2011
 
Net Cash used in Operating Activities
  $ 57,605     $ 25,603  
Net Cash (used in) provided by Investing Activities
    85,000       (121,089 )
Net Cash from Financing Activities
    -       (135,250 )
Net Increase (Decrease) in Cash During Period
  $ 27,395     $ (11,442 )

Our working capital surplus increased during the six months ended April 30, 2012 to $165,566. The increase in working capital is primarily a result of (i) a decrease in amounts due to related parties; and (ii) a decrease in accounts payable and accrued liabilities.  These amounts were partially offset by a decrease in notes receivable.

Since our inception, we have used our common shares to raise money for our operations and to fund our property acquisitions. We have not obtained profitable operations and are dependent upon obtaining additional financing to pursue our plan of operation.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

We have no significant off-balance sheet arrangements that have or are reasonably likely to have a current or future effect on our financial condition, changes in financial condition, revenues or expenses, results of operations, liquidity, capital expenditures or capital resources that is material to shareholders.

Critical Accounting Policies

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting principles requires our management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amount of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.  Actual results could differ from those estimates.  Our management routinely makes judgments and estimates about the effects of matters that are inherently uncertain.

Our significant accounting policies are disclosed in the notes to the audited financial statements for the year ended October 31, 2011 and the notes to the interim financial statements for the six months ended April 3 0 , 2012. The following accounting policies have been determined by our management to be the most important to the portrayal of our financial condition and results of operation:
 
 
Mineral Properties

We classify our mineral rights as tangible assets and accordingly acquisition costs are capitalized as mineral property costs. Mineral exploration costs are expensed as incurred until commercially mineable deposits are determined to exist within a particular property.

When it has been determined that a mineral property can be economically developed as a result of establishing proven and probable reserves, the costs then incurred to develop such property, are capitalized. Such costs will be amortized using the units-of-production method over the estimated life of the probable reserves. If mineral properties are subsequently abandoned or impaired, any capitalized costs will be charged to operations.

Foreign Currency Translation and Transaction

Our functional and reporting currency is the United States dollar. We translate assets and liabilities to US dollars using year-end exchange rates, translate unproved mineral properties using historical exchange rates, and translates revenues and expenses using average exchange rates during the period. Gains and losses arising on settlement of foreign currency denominated transactions or balances are included in the determination of income. Foreign currency transactions are primarily undertaken in Canadian dollars. We have not to the date of these financial statements, entered into derivative instruments to offset the impact of foreign currency fluctuations.




The following table sets forth the name and positions of our executive officers and directors as of the date hereof.

Name
Age
Positions
Ralph Biggar
47
President and Director
Denis Zyrianov
34
Chief Financial Officer,
Gerald Diakow
63
Vice-President Exploration and Director

Set forth below is a brief description of the background and business experience of our executive officers and directors:

Ralph Biggar has served as a member of our Board of Directors since August 20, 2010 and as President since September 1, 2011. Mr. Biggar is currently the president of Biggar Investments Corp., a private investment company since January 2004 . In May 2002, Mr. Biggar founded Canwood Capital Corp., and served as its President from inception to September 2004. Canwood Capital Corp. specialized in investing in start-up companies in the technology and resource sectors. Prior thereto, Mr. Biggar was in the brokerage industry as an investment advisor. Since February 2010, Mr. Biggar has served as Chief Executive Officer, President and director of Cairo Resources Inc . , a capital pool company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange and from May 2006 to February 2011 he served as a director of Sunridge Investments Corp., a former capital pool company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange.

Denis Zyrianov has served as our Chief Financial Officer since October 1, 2011.  Since January 2006, Mr. Zyrianov has been a senior accountant with Da Costa Management Corp, a company that has provided management and accounting services to public and private companies since August 2003. Mr. Zyrianov is currently the controller of Red Metal Resources Ltd., a company reporting under the Exchange Act with mineral exploration projects in Chile. Mr. Zyrianov has a Bachelor of Business Administration from Thompson Rivers University since 2001 and received his accounting designation in 2009 .
 
 
Gerald Diakow has served as a member of our Board of Directors and as Vice-President Exploration since April 15, 2012.  Mr. Diakow is a mineral explorer and prospector with over thirty years’ experience in the mining industry having begun his career in the early seventies. He has worked for several major mining corporations (Union Carbide, Canadian Superior) and has been involved is all aspects of mineral exploration and development, both in Canada and internationally. His skills include managing operations and logistics, strategic planning and regulatory issues (mining, worker safety and environmental). He has been involved with mineral properties containing diamonds, platinum group metals, gold, silver, copper, nickel, molybdenum, gypsum, limestone, gabbro, perlite, placer gold and gravel deposits. Mr . Diakow is also a member of the B.C. and Yukon Chamber of Mines and the Society of Economic Geologists.  Mr. Diakow is currently Chief Executive Officer, President and director of Velocity Minerals Ltd., a company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange engaged in the exploration of mineral projects in western Canada.

Term Of Office

Our directors are elected to hold office until the next annual meeting of the shareholders and until their respective successors have been elected and qualified. Our executive officers are appointed by our board of directors and hold office until removed by our board of directors or until their successors are appointed.

Family Relationships

There are no family relationships between our executive officers and directors.

Other Significant Employees

Other than our executive officers, we do not currently have any significant employees.


EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
Summary Compensation Table

The following table sets forth the total compensation paid or accrued to our named executive officers, as that term is defined in Item 402(m)(2) of Regulation S-K, during our last two completed fiscal years.

SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
Name & Principal Position
Year
Salary
($)
Bonus
($)
Stock Awards
($)
Option Awards
($)
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compen-sation ($)
Nonqualified Deferred Compen-sation Earnings
($)
All Other Compen-sation
($)
Total
($)
Ralph Biggar,
President & Director
 
2011
2010
 
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$60,000
$15,000
 
$60,000
$15,000
 
Denis Zyrianov
CFO
 
2011
2010
 
 
$1,000
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$1,000
$0
Gerald Diakow ,
Vice President Exploration & Director
 
2011
2010
 
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
$0
$0
 
Grant Gray,
Former President & Former Director
2011
2010
 
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$0
$0
 
$13,500
$4,500
$13,500
$4,500
 
 
 
Notes:
1.
Mr. Biggar was appointed as a member of our Board of Directors on August 20, 2010, and as President on September 1, 2011.  From August 2010 to March 31, 2012, we paid Mr. Biggar a consulting fee of $5,000 per month. At this time, we have no compensation arrangements with Mr. Biggar.
2.
Mr. Zyrianov was appointed as Chief Financial Officer on October 1, 2011.  Since October 1, 2011, we have paid Mr. Zyrianov $1,000 per month in accordance with his consulting agreement dated October 1, 2011. The term of the consulting agreement is for a period of one year.
3.
Mr. Diakow was appointed as Vice President Exploration and director on April 15, 2012.
4.
Mr. Gray served as our president and director from August 5, 2010 to  September 1, 2011.

Outstanding Equity Awards At Fiscal Year End

As at October 31, 2011, we did not have any outstanding equity awards.


SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

The following table sets forth certain information concerning the number of common shares owned beneficially as of June 8, 2012 by: (i) each person (including any group) known to us to own more than five percent (5%) of any class of our voting securities, (ii) each of our directors, (iii) each of our named executive officers; and (iv) officers and directors as a group. Unless otherwise indicated, the shareholders listed possess sole voting and investment power with respect to the shares shown.

Title of Class
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner
Amount and Nature of Beneficial Ownership
Percentage of Common Shares (1)
 
Directors and Officers
Common Shares
RALPH BIGGAR
President and Director
 
1,533,333
Direct
22.2%
Common Shares
DENIS ZYRIANOV
Chief Financial Officer
 
240,000
Direct
3.5%
Common Shares
GERALD DIAKOW
Vice President Exploration and Director
 
200,000
Direct
2.9%
 
All Officers and Directors as a Group
(3 persons)
1,973,333
28.5%
 
5% Shareholders
Common Shares
RALPH BIGGAR
Suite 610, 1100 Melville Street
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6E 4A6
 
1,533,333
Direct
22.2%
Note:
(1)
Under Rule 13d-3, a beneficial owner of a security includes any person who, directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement, understanding, relationship, or otherwise has or shares: (i) voting power, which includes the power to vote, or to direct the voting of shares; and (ii) investment power, which includes the power to dispose or direct the disposition of shares. Certain shares may be deemed to be beneficially owned by more than one person (if, for example, persons share the power to vote or the power to dispose of the shares). In addition, shares are deemed to be beneficially owned by a person if the person has the right to acquire the shares (for example, upon exercise of an option) within 60 days of the date as of which the information is provided. In computing the percentage ownership of any person, the amount of shares outstanding is deemed to include the amount of shares beneficially owned by such person (and only such person) by reason of these acquisition rights. As a result, the percentage of outstanding shares of any person as shown in this table does not necessarily reflect the person’s actual ownership or voting power with respect to the number of our shares actually outstanding on June 8, 2012.  As of June 8, 2012, there were 6,916,661 common shares issued and outstanding.
 
 
Changes in Control

We are not aware of any arrangement, which may result in a change in control in the future.


RELATED TRANSACTIONS

Except as disclosed below, none of the following parties has, during our last two fiscal years, had any material interest, direct or indirect, in any transaction with us or in any presently proposed transaction that has or will materially affect us, in which the Company is a participant and the amount involved exceeds the lesser of $120,000 or 1% of the average of the Company’s total assets for the last two completed fiscal years:

 
(i)
Any of our directors or officers;
 
(ii)
Any person proposed as a nominee for election as a director;
 
(iii)
Any person who beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, shares carrying more than 10% of the voting rights attached to our outstanding common shares;
 
(iv)
Any of our promoters; and
 
(v)
Any relative or spouse of any of the foregoing persons who has the same house as such person.

Related Party Indebtedness and Debt Settlement

As at our fiscal year ended October 31, 2011, we were indebted to Ralph Biggar, President and director, in the amount of $75,000 (2010 - $15,000) for accrued consulting fees.  The amount was non-interest bearing, unsecured and due on demand. Subsequent to fiscal 2011, on April 13, 2012, we issued to Mr. Biggar 1,333,333 common shares at a deemed price of $0.075 in order to settle corporate indebtedness of $100,000.

Acquisition of OS Gold Claim and Quad Gold Claim

On April 11, 2012, we entered into a property purchase agreement with Gerald Diakow, a director of the Company, whereby we acquired the OS Gold Claim and Quad Gold Claim from Mr. Diakow.  In consideration of the properties, we issued Mr. Diakow 200,000 common shares at a deemed price of $0.075 per share.  Subsequent to the transaction, Mr. Diakow was appointed as a member of our Board of Directors and Vice-President Exploration on April 15, 2012.

Phase I Exploration Work

Subsequent to our fiscal year end, we paid $10,000, to a company owned by Mr. Diakow, for exploration work conducted during Phase I of our exploration program on the OS Gold Claim.


DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

Our common shares are currently not listed on a national securities exchange or an inter-dealer quotation system.  We intend to apply to have our common shares quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board inter-dealer quotation system, which does not have director independence requirements.  Under NASDAQ Rule 5605(a)(2), a director is not considered to be independent if he or she is also an executive officer or employee of the corporation.  Neither Ralph Biggar nor Gerald Diakow are independent directors as a result of their respective offices of President and Vice-President Exploration.  Accordingly, we do not have any independent members on our Board of Directors .

As a result of our limited operating history and minimal resources, our management believes that it will have difficulty in attracting independent directors.  In addition, we would likely be required to obtain directors and officers insurance coverage in order to attract and retain independent directors.  Our management believes that the costs associated with maintaining such insurance is prohibitive at this time.

 
DISCLOSURE OF COMMISSION POSITION ON INDEMNIFICATION FOR SECURITIES ACT LIABILITIES

Our Articles provide that we will indemnify an officer, director, or former officer or director, to the full extent permitted by law.  Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to our directors, officers and controlling persons pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, we have been advised that in the opinion of the SEC such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act, and is, therefore, unenforceable.

In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities, other than the payment by us of expenses incurred or paid by one of our directors, officers, or controlling persons in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding, is asserted by one of our directors, officers, or controlling persons in connection with the securities being registered, we will, unless in the opinion of our counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act, and we will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
 
 
SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED JUNE 8, 2012

PROSPECTUS

VENZA GOLD CORP.

6,443,328 COMMON SHARES



Dealer Prospectus Delivery Obligation

Until ninety days after the date this registration statement is declared effective, all dealers that effect transactions in these securities whether or not participating in this offering, may be required to deliver a prospectus.  This is in addition to the dealer's obligation to deliver a prospectus when acting as underwriters and with respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.

WE HAVE NOT AUTHORIZED ANY DEALER, SALESMAN OR OTHER PERSON TO GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATION OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS AND ANY ACCOMPANYING SUPPLEMENT TO THIS PROSPECTUS. YOU MUST NOT RELY UPON ANY INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATION NOT CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS OR ANY ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT. THIS PROSPECTUS AND ANY ACCOMPANYING SUPPLEMENT TO THIS PROSPECTUS DO NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR THE SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY SECURITIES OTHER THAN THE REGISTERED SECURITIES TO WHICH THEY RELATE, NOR DO THIS PROSPECTUS AND ANY ACCOMPANYING SUPPLEMENT TO THIS PROSPECTUS CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR THE SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY SECURITIES IN ANY JURISDICTION TO ANY PERSON TO WHOM IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION IN SUCH JURISDICTION. THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS AND ANY ACCOMPANYING SUPPLEMENT TO THIS PROSPECTUS IS ACCURATE AS OF THE DATES ON THEIR COVERS. WHEN WE DELIVER THIS PROSPECTUS OR A SUPPLEMENT OR MAKE A SALE PURSUANT TO THIS PROSPECTUS OR A SUPPLEMENT, WE ARE NOT IMPLYING THAT THE INFORMATION IS CURRENT AS OF THE DATE OF THE DELIVERY OR SALE.
 
 
INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION
The estimated costs of this Offering are as follows:

Expenses (1)
US($)
SEC Registration Fee
$73.84
Transfer Agent Fees
$1,000
Accounting Fees and Expenses
$15 ,000
Legal Fees and Expenses
$15 ,000
Miscellaneous
$5,000
Total
$36,073.84

Note:
(1)   All amounts are estimates, other than the SEC's registration fee.

We are paying all expenses of the Offering listed above.  No portion of these expenses will be paid by the selling security holders.  The selling security holders, however, will pay any other expenses incurred in selling their shares, including any brokerage commissions or costs of sale.


INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

Our officers and directors are indemnified as provided by the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) (the “BCA”) and our Articles.

Indemnification

The BCA provides that we are required to indemnify our officers and directors to the extent that they are successful, on the merits or otherwise, in the outcome of the proceeding brought against them as a result of serving in that position, including criminal, civil, administrative or investigative actions and actions brought by or on behalf of Venza.

The BCA further provides that we are permitted to indemnify our officers and directors for criminal, civil, administrative or investigative actions brought against them by third parties and for actions brought by or on behalf of Venza, even if they are unsuccessful in defending that action, if the officer or director:

 
(a)
is not found liable for a breach of his or her fiduciary duties as an officer or director or to have engaged in intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of the law; or

 
(b)
acted in good faith and in a manner which he reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of Venza, and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe that his conduct was unlawful.

However, with respect to actions brought by or on behalf of Venza against our officers or directors, we are not permitted to indemnify our officers or directors where they are adjudged by a court, after the exhaustion of all appeals, to be liable to us or for amounts paid in settlement to Venza, unless, and only to the extent that, a court determines that the officers or directors are entitled to be indemnified.

Our Articles provide that we will indemnify our officers and directors to the full extent permitted by law for any threatened, pending or completed actions or proceedings, whether they be civil, criminal, administrative or investigative, including actions or proceedings brought by or in the right of our company.
 
 
Advance of Expenses

As permitted by the BCA and our Articles, we are to advance funds to our officers or directors for the payment of expenses incurred in connection with defending a proceeding brought against them in advance of a final disposition of the action, suit or proceeding. However, as a condition of our doing so, the officers or directors to which funds are to be advanced must provide us with undertakings to repay any advanced amounts if it is ultimately determined that they are not entitled to be indemnified for those expenses.

Insurance

Our Articles also allow us to purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of our officers or directors, regardless of whether we have the authority to indemnify them against such liabilities or expenses.


RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES

During the past three years, we completed the following sales of unregistered securities (all amounts have been adjusted to reflect a 1-for-2.5 reverse split effective March 25, 2011):

1.
On August 26, 2010, we issued 800,000 common shares to Ralph Biggar, our President and director, at a price of $0.005 per share for proceeds of $4,000.  This private placement was completed pursuant to the provisions of Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Mr. Biggar represented that he was not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and that he was not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person .

2.
On October 5, 2010, we issued 950,000 common shares to twenty-seven investors at a price of $0.05 per share for proceeds of $47,500.  We completed the offering pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Each investor represented that they were not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and that they were not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person.

3.
On November 16, 2010, we issued 660,000 common shares to twenty-four investors at a price of $0.125 per share for proceeds of $82,500.  We completed the offering pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Each investor represented that they were not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and that they were   not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person.

4.
On June 17, 2011, we issued 1,133,328 common shares to twelve investors at a price of $0.075 per share for proceeds of $84,999.60.  We completed the offering pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Each investor represented that they were not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and they were not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person.

5.
On April 11, 2012, we issued 200,000 common shares to Gerald Diakow in accordance with the terms of the property purchase agreement dated April 11, 2012.  We completed the offering pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Mr. Diakow represented that he was not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and that he was not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person .

6.
On April 13, 2012, we issued 2,523,333 common shares to five subscribers at a price of $0.075 per share.  Under this issuance, we issued 2,173,333 shares to settle corporate indebtedness of $163,000, 250,000 common shares to Denis Zyrianov as stock based compensation and 100,000 common shares to an employee as stock based compensation.  We completed the issuance pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Each investor represented that they were not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and that they were   not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person.
 
 
7.
On April 14, 2012, we issued 650,000 common shares to five subscribers at a price of $0.075 per share for proceeds of $41,250 and to settle corporate indebtedness of $7,500.  We completed the offering pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act.  We did not engage in a distribution of this offering in the United States. Each investor represented that they were not a US person as defined in Regulation S, and that they were   not acquiring our securities for the account or benefit of a US person.



Exhibit Number
 
Description of Exhibit
3.1
 
Notice of Articles.
3.2
 
Articles.
5.1
 
Opinion of Northwest Law Group with consent to use.
10.1
 
Consulting Agreement dated October 1, 2011 between the Company and Denis Zyrianov.
10.2
 
Property Purchase Agreement dated April 11, 2012 between the Company and Gerald Diakow.
23.1
 
Consent of Dale Matheson Carr-Hilton Labonte LLP, Chartered Accountants.
 
 
UNDERTAKINGS

The undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes:
 
1.
To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-effective amendment to this registration statement:

 
(a)
To include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933;

 
(b)
To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after the effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the registration statement.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the SEC pursuant to Rule 424(b) if, in the aggregate, the changes in the volume and price represent no more than a 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the “Calculation of Registration Fee” table in the effective registration statement; and

 
(c)
To include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the registration statement or any material change to such information in the registration statement.
 
2.
That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act of 1933, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered herein, and the offering of such securities at that time to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

3.
To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering.

Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to our directors, officers and controlling persons pursuant to the provisions above, or otherwise, we have been advised that in the opinion of the SEC such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act, and is, therefore, unenforceable.

In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities, other than the payment by us of expenses incurred or paid by one of our directors, officers, or controlling persons in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding, is asserted by one of our directors, officers, or controlling persons in connection with the securities being registered, we will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act, and we will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

For the purposes of determining liability under the Securities Act for any purchaser, each prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) as part of a registration statement relating to an offering, other than registration statements relying on Rule 430B or other than prospectuses filed in reliance on Rule 430A, shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the date it is first used after effectiveness.  Provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such first use, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such date of first use.
 
 
SIGNATURES


Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized in the City of Vancouver, Province of British Columbia, Canada, on June 8,  2012.


     
VENZA GOLD CORP.
       
       
       
   
By:
/s/ Ralph Bigger
     
RALPH BIGGAR
     
President
     
(Principal Executive Officer)
       
       
   
By:
/s/ Denis Zyrianov
     
DENIS ZYRIANOV
     
Chief Financial Officer
     
(Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer)




Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

Signature
Title
Date
     
 
/s/ Ralph Bigger
President and Director
(Principal Executive Officer)
June 8, 2012
RALPH BIGGAR    
     
 
/s/ Denis Zyrianov
Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer)
June 8, 2012
DENIS ZYRIANOV    
     
/s/ Gerald Diakow
Vice-President Exploration and Director
June 8, 2012
GERALD DIAKOW    
 
Exhibit 3.1
 
 
 

 
 
Exhibit 3.2
 
ARTICLES
of
VENZA GOLD CORP.
 
Incorporation number: C0908409  
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
    Page No.
     
1. Interpretation 2
2. Shares and Share Certificates 2
3. Issue of Shares 4
4. Share Registers 5
5. Share Transfers 5
6. Transmission of Shares 6
7. Purchase of Shares 7
8. Borrowing Powers 7
9. Alterations 8
10. Meetings of Shareholders 9
11. Proceedings at Meetings of Shareholders 11
12. Votes of Shareholders 14
13. Directors 18
14. Election and Removal of Directors 19
15. Alternate Directors 22
16. Powers and Duties of Directors 23
17. Disclosure of Interest of Directors 24
18. Proceedings of Directors 25
19. Executive and Other Committees 27
20. Officers 29
21. Indemnification 30
22. Dividends 31
23. Documents, Records and Reports 33
24. Notices 33
25. Seal 34
26. Prohibitions 35
27. Special Rights & Restrictions 35
 
 
 

 
 
1.            Interpretation
 
1.1
Definitions
 
In these Articles, the following words and phrases have the meanings set out beside them:
 
(1)
board of directors ”, “ directors ” and “ board ” mean the directors or sole director of the Company for the time being;
 
(2)
Business Corporations Act ” means the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) from time to time in force and all amendments thereto and includes all regulations and amendments thereto made pursuant to that Act;
 
(3)
Company ” means the company whose name is set out at the top of page 1, being the company which has adopted these Articles;
 
(4)
Interpretation Act ” means the Interpretation Act (British Columbia) from time to time in force and all amendments thereto and includes all regulations and amendments thereto made pursuant to that Act;
 
(4)
legal personal representative ” means the personal or other legal representative of the shareholder;
 
(5)
registered address ” of a shareholder means the shareholder’s address as recorded in the central securities register;
 
(6)
seal ” means the seal of the Company, if any.
 
1.2
Business Corporations Act and Interpretation Act Definitions Applicable
 
The definitions in the Business Corporations Act and the definitions and rules of construction in the Interpretation Act , with the necessary changes, so far as applicable, and unless the context requires otherwise, apply to these Articles as if they were an enactment. If there is a conflict between a definition in the Business Corporations Act and a definition or rule in the Interpretation Act relating to a term used in these Articles, the definition in the Business Corporations Act will prevail in relation to the use of the term in these Articles. If there is a conflict between these Articles and the Business Corporations Act , the Business Corporations Act will prevail.

 
2.          Shares and Share Certificates
 
2.1
Authorized Share Structure
 
The authorized share structure of the Company consists of shares of the kinds, classes and, if any, series described in the Notice of Articles of the Company.
 
 
2

 
 
2.2
Form of Share Certificate
 
Each share certificate issued by the Company must comply with, and be signed as required by, the Business Corporations Act .
 
2.3
Shareholder Entitled to Certificate or Acknowledgment
 
Each shareholder is entitled, without charge, to (a) one share certificate representing the shares of each class or series of shares registered in the shareholder’s name or (b) a non-transferable written acknowledgment of the shareholder’s right to obtain such a share certificate, but in respect of a share held jointly by several persons, the Company is not bound to issue more than one share certificate and delivery of a share certificate for a share to one of several joint shareholders or to one of the shareholders’ duly authorized agents will be sufficient delivery to all.
 
2.4
Delivery by Mail
 
Any share certificate or non-transferable written acknowledgment of a shareholder’s right to obtain a share certificate may be sent to the shareholder by mail at the shareholder’s registered address and neither the Company nor any director, officer or agent of the Company is liable for any loss to the shareholder because the share certificate or acknowledgement is lost in the mail or stolen.
 
2.5
Replacement of Worn Out or Defaced Certificate or Acknowledgement
 
If the directors are satisfied that a share certificate or a non-transferable written acknowledgment of the shareholder’s right to obtain a share certificate is worn out or defaced, they must, on production to them of the share certificate or acknowledgment, as the case may be, and on such other terms, if any, as they think fit:
 
(1)
order the share certificate or acknowledgment, as the case may be, to be cancelled; and
 
(2)
issue a replacement share certificate or acknowledgment, as the case may be.
 
2.6
Replacement of Lost, Stolen or Destroyed Certificate or Acknowledgment
 
If a share certificate or a non-transferable written acknowledgment of a shareholder’s right to obtain a share certificate is lost, stolen or destroyed, a replacement share certificate or acknowledgment, as the case may be, must be issued to the person entitled to that share certificate or acknowledgment, as the case may be, if the directors receive:
 
(1)
proof satisfactory to them that the share certificate or acknowledgment is lost, stolen or destroyed; and
 
(2)
any indemnity the directors consider adequate.
 
2.7
Splitting Share Certificates
 
If a shareholder surrenders a share certificate to the Company with a written request that the Company issue in the shareholder’s name two or more share certificates, each representing a specified number of shares and in the aggregate representing the same number of shares as the share certificate so surrendered, the Company must cancel the surrendered share certificate and issue replacement share certificates in accordance with that request.
 
 
3

 
 
2.8
Certificate Fee
 
There must be paid to the Company, in relation to the issue of any share certificate under Articles 2.5, 2.6 or 2.7, the amount, if any and which must not exceed the amount prescribed under the Business Corporations Act , determined by the directors.
 
2.9
Recognition of Trusts
 
Except as required by law or statute or these Articles, no person will be recognized by the Company as holding any share upon any trust, and the Company is not bound by or compelled in any way to recognize (even when having notice thereof) any equitable, contingent, future or partial interest in any share or fraction of a share or (except as by law or statute or these Articles provided or as ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction) any other rights in respect of any share except an absolute right to the entirety thereof in the shareholder.
 
 
3.          Issue of Shares
 
3.1
Directors Authorized
 
Subject to the rights of the holders of issued shares of the Company, the Company may allot, sell, issue and otherwise dispose of the unissued shares, and issued shares held by the Company, at the times, to the persons, including directors, in the manner, on the terms and conditions and for the issue prices (including any premium at which shares with par value may be issued) that the directors may determine. The issue price for a share with par value must be equal to or greater than the par value of the share.
 
3.2
Commissions and Discounts
 
The Company may pay at any time a reasonable commission or allow a reasonable discount to any person in consideration of that person purchasing or agreeing to purchase shares of the Company from the Company or any other person or procuring or agreeing to procure purchasers for shares of the Company.
 
3.3
Brokerage
 
The Company may pay such brokerage fee or other consideration as may be lawful for or in connection with the sale or placement of its securities.
 
3.4
Conditions of Issue
 
Except as provided for by the Business Corporations Act , no share may be issued until it is fully paid. A share is fully paid when:
 
(1)
consideration is provided to the Company for the issue of the share by one or more of the following:
 
 
(a)
past services performed for the Company;
 
 
(b)
property;
 
 
(c)
money; and
 
 
4

 
 
(2)
the value of the consideration received by the Company equals or exceeds the issue price set for the share under Article 3.1.
 
3.5
Share Purchase Warrants and Rights
 
The Company may issue share purchase warrants, options and rights upon such terms and conditions as the directors determine, which share purchase warrants, options and rights may be issued alone or in conjunction with debentures, debenture stock, bonds, shares or any other securities issued or created by the Company from time to time.

 
4.          Share Registers
 
4.1
Central Securities Register
 
The Company must maintain in British Columbia a central securities register as required by the Business Corporations Act . The directors may appoint:
 
(1)           an agent to maintain the central securities register; and
 
(2)
one or more agents, including the agent which keeps the central securities register, as transfer agent for its shares or any class or series of its shares, as the case may be, and the same or another agent as registrar for its shares or such class or series of its shares.
 
The directors may terminate such appointment of any agent at any time and may appoint another agent in its place.
 
4.2
Closing Register
 
The Company must not at any time close its central securities register.

 
5.          Share Transfers
 
5.1
Registering Transfers
 
A transfer of a share of the Company must not be registered unless:
 
(1)
a duly signed instrument of transfer in respect of the share has been received by the Company;
 
(2)
if a share certificate has been issued by the Company in respect of the share to be transferred, that share certificate has been surrendered to the Company; and
 
(3)
if a non-transferable written acknowledgment of the shareholder’s right to obtain a share certificate has been issued by the Company in respect of the share to be transferred, that acknowledgment has been surrendered to the Company.
 
 
5

 
 
5.2
Form of Instrument of Transfer
 
The instrument of transfer in respect of any share of the Company must be either in the form, if any, on the back of the Company’s share certificates or in any other form that may be approved by the directors from time to time.
 
5.3
Transferor Remains Shareholder
 
Except to the extent that the Business Corporations Act otherwise provides, the transferor of shares is deemed to remain the holder of the shares until the name of the transferee is entered in a securities register of the Company in respect of the transfer.
 
5.4
Signing of Instrument of Transfer
 
If a shareholder, or their duly authorized attorney, signs an instrument of transfer in respect of shares registered in the name of the shareholder, the signed instrument of transfer constitutes a complete and sufficient authority to the Company and its directors, officers and agents to register the number of shares specified in the instrument of transfer or specified in any other manner, or, if no number is specified, all the shares represented by the share certificates or set out in the written acknowledgments deposited with the instrument of transfer:
 
(1)
in the name of the person named as transferee in that instrument of transfer; or
 
(2)
if no person is named as transferee in that instrument of transfer, in the name of the person on whose behalf the instrument is deposited for the purpose of having the transfer registered.
 
5.5
Enquiry as to Title Not Required
 
Neither the Company nor any director, officer or agent of the Company is bound to inquire into the title of the person named in the instrument of transfer as transferee or, if no person is named as transferee in the instrument of transfer, of the person on whose behalf the instrument is deposited for the purpose of having the transfer registered or is liable for any claim related to registering the transfer by the shareholder or by any intermediate owner or holder of the shares, of any interest in the shares, of any share certificate representing such shares or of any written acknowledgment of a right to obtain a share certificate for such shares.
 
5.6
Transfer Fee
 
There must be paid to the Company, in relation to the registration of any transfer, the amount, if any, determined by the directors.

 
6.          Transmission of Shares
 
6.1
Legal Personal Representative Recognized on Death
 
In case of the death of a shareholder, the legal personal representative, or if the shareholder was a joint holder, the surviving joint holder, will be the only person recognized by the Company as having any title to the shareholder’s interest in the shares. Before recognizing a person as a legal personal representative, the directors may require proof of appointment by a court of competent jurisdiction, a grant of letters probate, letters of administration or such other evidence or documents as the directors consider appropriate.
 
 
6

 
 
6.2
Rights of Legal Personal Representative
 
The legal personal representative has the same rights, privileges and obligations that attach to the shares held by the shareholder, including the right to transfer the shares in accordance with these Articles, provided the documents required by the Business Corporations Act and the directors have been deposited with the Company.
 
 
7.          Purchase of Shares
 
7.1
Company Authorized to Purchase Shares
 
Subject to Article 7.2 and the special rights and restrictions attached to the shares of any class or series, the Company, if authorized by the directors, may purchase or otherwise acquire any of its shares at the price and upon the terms specified in such resolution.
 
7.2
Purchase When Insolvent
 
The Company must not make a payment or provide any other consideration to purchase or otherwise acquire any of its shares if there are reasonable grounds for believing that:
 
(1)
the Company is insolvent; or
 
(2)
making the payment or providing the consideration would render the Company insolvent.
 
7.3
Sale and Voting of Purchased Shares
 
If the Company retains a share redeemed, purchased or otherwise acquired by it, the Company may sell, gift or otherwise dispose of the share, but, while such share is held by the Company, it:
 
(1)
is not entitled to vote the share at a meeting of its shareholders;
 
(2)
must not pay a dividend in respect of the share; and
 
(3)
must not make any other distribution in respect of the share.
 
 
8.          Borrowing Powers
 
The Company, if authorized by the directors, may:
 
(1)
borrow money in the manner and amount, on the security, from the sources and on the terms and conditions that they consider appropriate;
 
(2)
issue bonds, debentures and other debt obligations either outright or as security for any liability or obligation of the Company or any other person and at such discounts or premiums and on such other terms as they consider appropriate;
 
 
7

 
 
(3)
guarantee the repayment of money by any other person or the performance of any obligation of any other person; and
 
(4)
mortgage, charge, whether by way of specific or floating charge, grant a security interest in, or give other security on, the whole or any part of the present and future assets and undertaking of the Company.
 
 
9.          Alterations
 
9.1
Alteration of Authorized Share Structure
 
Subject to Article 9.2, the Company may by:
 
(1)
a resolution of its board of directors
 
 
(a)
increase, reduce or eliminate the maximum number of shares that the Company is authorized to issue out of any class or series of shares or establish a maximum number of shares that the Company is authorized to issue out of any class or series of shares for which no maximum is established;
 
 
(b)
change all or any of its unissued, or fully paid issued, shares with par value into shares without par value or any of its unissued shares without par value into shares with par value; and
 
 
(c)
alter the identifying name of any of its shares.
 
(2)
an ordinary resolution:
 
 
(a)
create one or more classes or series of shares or, if none of the shares of a class or series of shares are allotted or issued, eliminate that class or series of shares;
 
 
(b)
subdivide or consolidate all or any of its unissued, or fully paid issued, shares; and
 
 
(c)
if the Company is authorized to issue shares of a class of shares with par value:
 
 
  (i)
decrease the par value of those shares; and
 
 
  (ii)
if none of the shares of that class of shares are allotted or issued, increase the par value of those shares.
 
(3)
a special resolution, otherwise alter its shares or authorized share structure when required or permitted to do so by the Business Corporations Act .
 
9.2
Special Rights and Restrictions
 
The Company may by ordinary resolution:
 
(1)
create special rights or restrictions for, and attach those special rights or restrictions to, the shares of any class or series of shares, unless any of those shares have been issued in which case the Company may do so only by special resolution; or
 
 
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(2)
vary or delete any special rights or restrictions attached to the shares of any class or series of shares, unless any of those shares have been issued in which case the Company may do so only by special resolution.
 
9.3
Change of Name
 
The Company may by a resolution of its board of directors authorize an alteration of its Notice of Articles to change its name or adopt or change any translation of that name.
 
9.4
Other Alterations
 
If the Business Corporations Act does not specify the type of resolution and these Articles do not specify another type of resolution, the Company may by special resolution alter these Articles.

 
10.          Meetings of Shareholders
 
10.1
Annual General Meetings
 
The Company must, unless an annual general meeting is deferred or waived in accordance with the Business Corporations Act , hold its first annual general meeting following incorporation, amalgamation or continuation within 18 months after the date on which it was incorporated or otherwise created and recognized, and after that must hold an annual general meeting at least once in each calendar year and not more than 15 months after the last annual reference date at such time and place as may be determined by the directors; and
 
10.2
Resolution Instead of Annual General Meeting
 
If all the shareholders entitled to vote at an annual general meeting consent by a unanimous resolution under the Business Corporations Act   to all of the business required to be transacted at that annual general meeting, the meeting is deemed to have been held on the date of the unanimous resolution. The shareholders must, in any unanimous resolution passed under this Article 10.2, select as the Company’s annual reference date a date that would be appropriate for the holding of the applicable annual general meeting.
 
10.3
Calling and Location of Meetings of Shareholders
 
The directors may, whenever they think fit, call a meeting of shareholders to be held in British Columbia, Calgary, Alberta or Toronto, Ontario or at such other location as may be approved by the Registar of Companies at such time and place as may be determined by the directors.
 
10.4
Notice for Meetings of Shareholders
 
The Company must send notice of the date, time and location of any meeting of shareholders, in the manner provided in these Articles, or in such other manner, if any, as may be prescribed by ordinary resolution (whether previous notice of the resolution has been given or not), to each shareholder entitled to attend the meeting, to each director and to the auditor of the Company, unless these Articles otherwise provide, at least the following number of days before the meeting:
 
(1)
if and for so long as the Company is a public company, 21 days;
 
 
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(2)
otherwise, 10 days.
 
10.5
Record Date for Notice
 
The directors may set a date as the record date for the purpose of determining shareholders entitled to notice of any meeting of shareholders. The record date must not precede the date on which the meeting is to be held by more than two months or, in the case of a general meeting requisitioned by shareholders under the Business Corporations Act , by more than four months. The record date must not precede the date on which the meeting is held by fewer than:
 
(1)
if and for so long as the Company is a public company, 21 days;
 
(2)
otherwise, 10 days.
 
If no record date is set, it is 5:00 p.m. on the business day immediately preceding the first date on which the notice is sent or, if no notice is sent, the beginning of the meeting.
 
10.6
Record Date for Voting
 
The directors may set a date as the record date for the purpose of determining shareholders entitled to vote at any meeting of shareholders. The record date must not precede the date on which the meeting is to be held by more than two months or, in the case of a general meeting requisitioned by shareholders under the Business Corporations Act , by more than four months. If no record date is set, the record date is 5 p.m. on the day immediately preceding the first date on which the notice is sent or, if no notice is sent, the beginning of the meeting.
 
10.7
Failure to Give Notice and Waiver of Notice
 
The accidental omission to send notice of any meeting to, or the non-receipt of any notice by, any of the persons entitled to notice does not invalidate any proceedings at that meeting. Any person entitled to notice of a meeting of shareholders may, in writing or otherwise, waive or reduce the period of notice of such meeting.
 
10.8
Notice of Special Business at Meetings of Shareholders
 
If a meeting of shareholders is to consider special business within the meaning of Article 11.1, the notice of meeting must:
 
(1)
state the general nature of the special business; and
 
(2)
if the special business includes considering, approving, ratifying, adopting or authorizing any document or the signing of or giving of effect to any document, have attached to it a copy of the document or state that a copy of the document will be available for inspection by shareholders:
 
 
(a)
at the Company’s records office, or at such other reasonably accessible location in British Columbia as is specified in the notice; and
 
 
(b)
during statutory business hours on any one or more specified days before the day set for the holding of the meeting.
 
 
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11.          Proceedings at Meetings of Shareholders
 
11.1
Special Business
 
At a meeting of shareholders, the following business is special business:
 
(1)
at a meeting of shareholders that is not an annual general meeting, all business is special business except business relating to the conduct of or voting at the meeting;
 
(2)
at an annual general meeting, all business is special business except for the following:
 
 
(a)
business relating to the conduct of or voting at the meeting;
 
 
(b)
consideration of any financial statements of the Company presented to the meeting;
 
 
(c)
consideration of any reports of the directors or auditor;
 
 
(d)
the setting or changing of the number of directors;
 
 
(e)
the election or appointment of directors;
 
 
(f)
the appointment of an auditor;
 
 
(g)
the setting of the remuneration of an auditor;
 
 
(h)
business arising out of a report of the directors not requiring the passing of a special resolution or an exceptional resolution; and
 
 
(i)
any other business which, under these Articles or the Business Corporations Act , may be transacted at a meeting of shareholders without prior notice of the business being given to the shareholders.
 
11.2
Special Majority
 
The majority of votes required for the Company to pass a special resolution at a meeting of shareholders is two-thirds of the votes cast on the resolution.
 
11.3
Quorum
 
Subject to the special rights and restrictions attached to the shares of any class or series of shares, the quorum for the transaction of business at a meeting of shareholders is two shareholders who are present in person or represented by proxy.
 
11.4
One Shareholder May Constitute Quorum
 
If there is only one shareholder entitled to vote at a meeting of shareholders:
 
(1)
the quorum is one person who is, or who represents by proxy, that shareholder, and
 
(2)
that shareholder, present in person or by proxy, may constitute the meeting.
 
 
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11.5
Other Persons May Attend
 
The directors, the president (if any), the secretary (if any), the assistant secretary (if any), any lawyer for the Company, the auditor of the Company and any other persons invited by the directors are entitled to attend any meeting of shareholders, but if any of those persons does attend a meeting of shareholders, that person is not to be counted in the quorum and is not entitled to vote at the meeting unless that person is a shareholder or proxy holder entitled to vote at the meeting.
 
11.6
Requirement of Quorum
 
No business, other than the election of a chair of the meeting and the adjournment of the meeting, may be transacted at any meeting of shareholders unless a quorum of shareholders entitled to vote is present at the commencement of the meeting, but such quorum need not be present throughout the meeting.
 
11.7
Lack of Quorum
 
If, within one-half hour from the time set for the holding of a meeting of shareholders, a quorum is not present:
 
(1)
in the case of a general meeting requisitioned by shareholders, the meeting is dissolved, and
 
(2)
in the case of any other meeting of shareholders, the meeting stands adjourned to the same day in the next week at the same time and place.
 
11.8
Lack of Quorum at Succeeding Meeting
 
If, at the meeting to which the meeting referred to in Article 11.7(2) was adjourned, a quorum is not present within one-half hour from the time set for the holding of the meeting, the person or persons present and being, or representing by proxy, one or more shareholders entitled to attend and vote at the meeting constitute a quorum.
 
11.9
Chair
 
The following individuals are entitled to preside as chair at a meeting of shareholders:
 
(1)
the chair of the board, if any; or
 
(2)
if the chair of the board is absent or unwilling to act as chair of the meeting, the first of the following individuals to agree to act as chair: the president, if any.
 
11.10
Selection of Alternate Chair
 
If, at any meeting of shareholders, the chair of the board or president are not present within 15 minutes after the time set for holding the meeting, or if the chair of the board and the president are unwilling to act as chair of the meeting, or if the chair of the board and the president have advised the secretary, if any, or any director present at the meeting, that they will not be present at the meeting, one of the chief executive officer, the chief financial officer, a vice-president, the secretary or the Company’s legal counsel may act as chair of the meeting and, failing them, the directors present must choose one of their number to be chair of the meeting or if all of the directors present decline to take the chair or fail to so choose or if no director is present, the shareholders entitled to vote at the meeting who are present in person or by proxy may choose any person present at the meeting to chair the meeting.
 
 
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11.11
Adjournments
 
The chair of a meeting of shareholders may, and if so directed by the meeting must, adjourn the meeting from time to time and from place to place, but no business may be transacted at any adjourned meeting other than the business left unfinished at the meeting from which the adjournment took place.
 
11.12
Notice of Adjourned Meeting
 
It is not necessary to give any notice of an adjourned meeting or of the business to be transacted at an adjourned meeting of shareholders except that, when a meeting is adjourned for 30 days or more, notice of the adjourned meeting must be given as in the case of the original meeting.
 
11.13
Decisions by Show of Hands or Poll
 
Every motion put to a vote at a meeting of shareholders will be decided on a show of hands unless a poll, before or on the declaration of the result of the vote by show of hands, is directed by the chair or demanded by at least one shareholder entitled to vote who is present in person or by proxy.
 
11.14
Declaration of Result
 
The chair of a meeting of shareholders must declare to the meeting the decision on every question in accordance with the result of the show of hands or the poll, as the case may be, and that decision must be entered in the minutes of the meeting. A declaration of the chair that a resolution is carried by the necessary majority or is defeated is, unless a poll is directed by the chair or demanded under Article 11.13, conclusive evidence without proof of the number or proportion of the votes recorded in favour of or against the resolution.
 
11.15
Motion Need Not be Seconded
 
No motion proposed at a meeting of shareholders need be seconded unless the chair of the meeting rules otherwise, and the chair of any meeting of shareholders is entitled to propose or second a motion.
 
11.16
Casting Vote
 
In case of an equality of votes, the chair of a meeting of shareholders does not, either on a show of hands or on a poll, have a second or casting vote in addition to the vote or votes to which the chair may be entitled as a shareholder.
 
11.17
Manner of Taking Poll
 
Subject to Article 11.18, if a poll is duly demanded at a meeting of shareholders:
 
(1)
the poll must be taken:
 
 
(a)
at the meeting, or within seven days after the date of the meeting, as the chair of the meeting directs; and
 
 
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(b)
in the manner, at the time and at the place that the chair of the meeting directs;
 
(2)
the result of the poll is deemed to be the decision of the meeting at which the poll is demanded; and
 
(3)
the demand for the poll may be withdrawn by the person who demanded it.
 
11.18
Demand for Poll on Adjournment
 
A poll demanded at a meeting of shareholders on a question of adjournment must be taken immediately at the meeting.
 
11.19
Chair Must Resolve Dispute
 
In the case of any dispute as to the admission or rejection of a vote given on a poll, the chair of the meeting must determine the dispute, and their determination made in good faith is final and conclusive.
 
11.20
Casting of Votes
 
On a poll, a shareholder entitled to more than one vote need not cast all the votes in the same way.
 
11.21
Demand for Poll
 
No poll may be demanded in respect of the vote by which a chair of a meeting of shareholders is elected.
 
11.22
Demand for Poll Not to Prevent Continuance of Meeting
 
The demand for a poll at a meeting of shareholders does not, unless the chair of the meeting so rules, prevent the continuation of a meeting for the transaction of any business other than the question on which a poll has been demanded.
 
11.23
Retention of Ballots and Proxies
 
The Company must, for at least three months after a meeting of shareholders, keep each ballot cast on a poll and each proxy voted at the meeting at its records office, and, during that period, make them available for inspection during normal business hours by any shareholder or proxyholder entitled to vote at the meeting. At the end of such three month period, the Company may destroy such ballots and proxies.
 
 
12.          Votes of Shareholders
 
12.1
Number of Votes by Shareholder or by Shares
 
Subject to any special rights or restrictions attached to any shares and to the restrictions imposed on joint shareholders under Article 12.3:
 
(1)
on a vote by show of hands, every person present who is a shareholder or proxy holder and entitled to vote on the matter has one vote; and
 
 
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(2)
on a poll, every shareholder entitled to vote on the matter has one vote in respect of each share entitled to be voted on the matter and held by that shareholder and may exercise that vote either in person or by proxy.
 
12.2
Votes of Persons in Representative Capacity
 
A person who is not a shareholder may vote at a meeting of shareholders, whether on a show of hands or on a poll, and may appoint a proxy holder to act at the meeting, if, before doing so, the person satisfies the chair of the meeting, or the directors, that the person is a legal personal representative or a trustee in bankruptcy for a shareholder who is entitled to vote at the meeting.
 
12.3
Votes by Joint Holders
 
If there are joint shareholders registered in respect of any share:
 
(1)
any one of the joint shareholders may vote at any meeting, either personally or by proxy, in respect of the share as if that joint shareholder were solely entitled to it; or
 
(2)
if more than one of the joint shareholders is present at any meeting, personally or by proxy, and more than one of them votes in respect of that share, then only the vote of the joint shareholder present whose name stands first on the central securities register in respect of the share will be counted.
 
12.4
Legal Personal Representatives as Joint Shareholders
 
Two or more legal personal representatives of a shareholder in whose sole name any share is registered are, for the purposes of Article 12.3, deemed to be joint shareholders.
 
12.5
Representative of a Corporate Shareholder
 
If a corporation, that is not a subsidiary of the Company, is a shareholder, that corporation may appoint a person to act as its representative at any meeting of shareholders of the Company, and:
 
(1)
for that purpose, the instrument appointing a representative must:
 
 
(a)
be received at the registered office of the Company or at any other place specified, in the notice calling the meeting, for the receipt of proxies, at least the number of business days specified in the notice for the receipt of proxies, or if no number of days is specified, two business days before the day set for the holding of the meeting; or
 
 
(b)
be provided, at the meeting, to the chair of the meeting or to a person designated by the chair of the meeting;
 
(2)
if a representative is appointed under this Article 12.5:
 
 
(a)
the representative is entitled to exercise in respect of and at that meeting the same rights on behalf of the corporation that the representative represents as that corporation could exercise if it were a shareholder who is an individual, including, without limitation, the right to appoint a proxy holder; and
 
 
(b)
the representative, if present at the meeting, is to be counted for the purpose of forming a quorum and is deemed to be a shareholder present in person at the meeting.
 
 
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Evidence of the appointment of any such representative may be sent to the Company by written instrument, fax or any other method of transmitting legibly recorded messages.
 
12.6
Proxy Provisions Do Not Apply to All Companies
 
Articles 12.9 and 12.12 do not apply to the Company if and for so long as it is a public company or a pre-existing reporting company which has the Statutory Reporting Company Provisions as part of its Articles or to which the Statutory Reporting Company Provisions apply.
 
12.7
Appointment of Proxy Holders
 
Every shareholder of the Company, including a corporation that is a shareholder but not a subsidiary of the Company, entitled to vote at a meeting of shareholders of the Company may, by proxy, appoint one or more (but not more than five) proxy holders to attend and act at the meeting in the manner, to the extent and with the powers conferred by the proxy.
 
12.8
Alternate Proxy Holders
 
A shareholder may appoint one or more alternate proxy holders to act in the place of an absent proxy holder.
 
12.9
When Proxy Holder Need Not Be Shareholder
 
Subject to Article 12.6, a person must not be appointed as a proxy holder unless the person is a shareholder, although a person who is not a shareholder may be appointed as a proxy holder if:
 
(1)
the person appointing the proxy holder is a corporation or a representative of a corporation appointed under Article 12.5;
 
(2)
the Company has at the time of the meeting for which the proxy holder is to be appointed only one shareholder entitled to vote at the meeting; or
 
(3)
the shareholders present in person or by proxy at and entitled to vote at the meeting for which the proxy holder is to be appointed, by a resolution on which the proxy holder is not entitled to vote but in respect of which the proxy holder is to be counted in the quorum, permit the proxy holder to attend and vote at the meeting.
 
12.10
Deposit of Proxy
 
A proxy for a meeting of shareholders must:
 
(1)
be received at the registered office of the Company or at any other place specified, in the notice calling the meeting, for the receipt of proxies, at least the number of business days specified in the notice, or if no number of days is specified, two business days before the day set for the holding of the meeting; or
 
(2)
unless the notice provides otherwise, be provided, at the meeting, to the chair of the meeting or to a person designated by the chair of the meeting.
 
A proxy may be sent to the Company by written instrument, fax or any other method of transmitting legibly recorded messages.
 
 
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12.11
Validity of Proxy Vote
 
A vote given in accordance with the terms of a proxy is valid notwithstanding the death or incapacity of the shareholder giving the proxy and despite the revocation of the proxy or the revocation of the authority under which the proxy is given, unless notice in writing of that death, incapacity or revocation is received:
 
(1)
at the registered office of the Company, at any time up to and including the last business day before the day set for the holding of the meeting at which the proxy is to be used; or
 
(2)
by the chair of the meeting, before the vote is taken.
 
12.12
Form of Proxy
 
Subject to Article 12.6, a proxy, whether for a specified meeting or otherwise, must be either in the following form or in any other form approved by the directors or the chair of the meeting:
 
[name of company]
(the “Company”)
 
The undersigned, being a shareholder of the Company, hereby appoints [name] or, failing that person, [name] , as proxy holder for the undersigned to attend, act and vote for and on behalf of the undersigned at the meeting of shareholders of the Company to be held on [month, day, year] and at any adjournment of that meeting.
 
Number of shares in respect of which this proxy is given (if no number is specified, then this proxy if given in respect of all shares registered in the name of the shareholder): _____________________
 
 
  Signed [month, day, year]
   
  [Signature of shareholder]
   
  [Name of shareholder—printed]
 
12.13
Revocation of Proxy
 
Every proxy may be revoked by an instrument in writing that is:
 
(1)
received at the registered office of the Company at any time up to and including the last business day before the day set for the holding of the meeting at which the proxy is to be used; or
 
(2)
provided, at the meeting, to the chair of the meeting.
 
12.14
Revocation of Proxy Must Be Signed
 
An instrument referred to in Article 12.13 must be signed as follows:
 
(1)
if the shareholder for whom the proxy holder is appointed is an individual, the instrument must be signed by the shareholder or their legal personal representative or trustee in bankruptcy;
 
 
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(2)
if the shareholder for whom the proxy holder is appointed is a corporation, the instrument must be signed by the corporation or by a representative appointed for the corporation under Article 12.5.
 
12.15
Production of Evidence of Authority to Vote
 
The chair of any meeting of shareholders may, but need not, inquire into the authority of any person to vote at the meeting and may, but need not, demand from that person production of evidence as to the existence of the authority to vote.

 
13.          Directors
 
13.1
First Directors; Number of Directors
 
The directors, or the first directors after the Company being incorporated, amalgamated or continued, are the persons designated as directors of the Company in the Notice of Articles that applies to the Company when it is recognized under the Business Corporations Act . The number of directors, excluding additional directors appointed under Article 14.8, is set at:
 
(1)
subject to paragraphs (2) and (3), the number of directors that is equal to the number of the Company’s first directors;
 
(2)
if the Company is a public company, the greater of three and the most recently set of:
 
 
(a)
the number of directors set by ordinary resolution (whether or not previous notice of the resolution was given); and
 
 
(b)
the number of directors set under Article 14.4;
 
(3)
if the Company is not a public company, the most recently set of:
 
 
(a)
the number of directors set by ordinary resolution (whether or not previous notice of the resolution was given); and
 
 
(b)
the number of directors set under Article 14.4.
 
13.2
Change in Number of Directors
 
If the number of directors is set under Articles 13.1(2)(a) or 13.1(3)(a):
 
(1)
the shareholders may elect or appoint the directors needed to fill any vacancies in the board of directors up to that number;
 
(2)
if the shareholders do not elect or appoint the directors needed to fill any vacancies in the board of directors up to that number contemporaneously with the setting of that number, then the directors may appoint, or the shareholders may elect or appoint, directors to fill those vacancies.
 
 
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13.3
Directors’ Acts Valid Despite Vacancy
 
An act or proceeding of the directors is not invalid merely because fewer than the number of directors set or otherwise required under these Articles is in office.
 
13.4
Qualifications of Directors
 
A director is not required to hold a share in the capital of the Company as qualification for their office but must be qualified as required by the Business Corporations Act to become, act or continue to act as a director.
 
13.5
Remuneration of Directors
 
The directors are entitled to the remuneration for acting as directors, if any, as the directors may from time to time determine. If they so decide, the remuneration, if any, of the directors will be determined by the shareholders. That remuneration may be in addition to any salary or other remuneration paid to any officer or employee of the Company as such, who is also a director.
 
13.6
Reimbursement of Expenses of Directors
 
The Company must reimburse each director for the reasonable expenses they may incur in and about the business of the Company.
 
13.7
Special Remuneration for Directors
 
If any director performs any professional or other services for the Company that in the opinion of the directors are outside the ordinary duties of a director, or if any director is otherwise specially occupied in or about the Company’s business, they may be paid remuneration fixed by the directors, or, at the option of that director, fixed by ordinary resolution, and such remuneration may be either in addition to, or in substitution for, any other remuneration that they may be entitled to receive.
 
13.8
Gratuity, Pension or Allowance on Retirement of Director
 
Unless otherwise determined by ordinary resolution, the directors on behalf of the Company may pay a gratuity or pension or allowance on retirement to any director who has held any salaried office or place of profit with the Company or to their spouse or dependants and may make contributions to any fund and pay premiums for the purchase or provision of any such gratuity, pension or allowance.
 
 
14.          Election and Removal of Directors
 
14.1
Election at Annual General Meeting
 
At every annual general meeting and in every unanimous resolution contemplated by Article 10.2:
 
(1)
the shareholders entitled to vote at the annual general meeting for the election of directors must elect, or in the unanimous resolution appoint, a board of directors consisting of the number of directors for the time being set under these Articles; and
 
 
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(2)
all the directors cease to hold office immediately before the election or appointment of directors under paragraph (1), but are eligible for re-election or re-appointment.
 
14.2
Consent to be a Director
 
No election, appointment or designation of an individual as a director is valid unless:
 
(1)
that individual consents to be a director in the manner provided for in the Business Corporations Act ;
 
(2)
that individual is elected or appointed at a meeting at which the individual is present and the individual does not refuse, at the meeting, to be a director; or
 
(3)
with respect to first directors, the designation is otherwise valid under the Business Corporations Act .
 
14.3
Failure to Elect or Appoint Directors
 
If:
 
(1)
the Company fails to hold an annual general meeting, and all the shareholders who are entitled to vote at an annual general meeting fail to pass the unanimous resolution contemplated by Article 10.2, on or before the date by which the annual general meeting is required to be held under the Business Corporations Act ; or
 
(2)
the shareholders fail, at the annual general meeting or in the unanimous resolution contemplated by Article 10.2, to elect or appoint any directors;
 
then each director then in office continues to hold office until the earlier of:
 
(3)
the date on which their successor is elected or appointed; and
 
(4)
the date on which they otherwise cease to hold office under the Business Corporations Act or these Articles.
 
14.4
Places of Retiring Directors Not Filled
 
If, at any meeting of shareholders at which there should be an election of directors, the places of any of the retiring directors are not filled by that election, those retiring directors who are not re-elected and who are asked by the newly elected directors to continue in office will, if willing to do so, continue in office to complete the number of directors for the time being set pursuant to these Articles until further new directors are elected at a meeting of shareholders convened for that purpose. If any such election or continuance of directors does not result in the election or continuance of the number of directors for the time being set pursuant to these Articles, the number of directors of the Company is deemed to be set at the number of directors actually elected or continued in office.
 
14.5
Directors May Fill Casual Vacancies
 
Any casual vacancy occurring in the board of directors may be filled by the directors.
 
 
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14.6
Remaining Directors Power to Act
 
The directors may act notwithstanding any vacancy in the board of directors, but if the Company has fewer directors in office than the number set pursuant to these Articles as the quorum of directors, the directors may only act for the purpose of appointing directors up to that number or of summoning a meeting of shareholders for the purpose of filling any vacancies on the board of directors or for any other purpose.
 
14.7
Shareholders May Fill Vacancies
 
If the Company has no directors or fewer directors in office than the number set pursuant to these Articles as the quorum of directors, the shareholders may elect or appoint directors to fill any vacancies on the board of directors.
 
14.8
Additional Directors
 
Notwithstanding Articles 13.1 and 13.2, between annual general meetings or unanimous resolutions contemplated by Article 10.2, the directors may appoint one or more additional directors, but the number of additional directors appointed under this Article 14.8 must not at any time exceed:
 
(1)
one-third of the number of first directors, if, at the time of the appointments, one or more of the first directors have not yet completed their first term of office; or
 
(2)
in any other case, one-third of the number of the current directors who were elected or appointed as directors other than under this Article 14.8.
 
Any director so appointed ceases to hold office immediately before the next election or appointment of directors under Article 14.1(1), but is eligible for re-election or re-appointment.
 
14.9
Ceasing to be a Director
 
A director ceases to be a director when:
 
(1)
the term of office of the director expires;
 
(2)
the director dies;
 
(3)
the director resigns as a director by notice in writing provided to the Company or a lawyer for the Company; or
 
(4)
the director is removed from office pursuant to Articles 14.10 or 14.11.
 
14.10
Removal of Director by Shareholders
 
The Company may remove any director before the expiration of their term of office by special resolution. In that event, the shareholders may elect, or appoint by ordinary resolution, a director to fill the resulting vacancy. If the shareholders do not elect or appoint a director to fill the resulting vacancy contemporaneously with the removal, then the directors may appoint or the shareholders may elect, or appoint by ordinary resolution, a director to fill that vacancy.
 
 
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14.11
Removal of Director by Directors
 
The directors may remove any director before the expiration of their term of office if the director is convicted of an indictable offence, convicted by a court of an offence under or found in breach  and sanctioned by a securities regulatory authority of any Canadian or United States securities legislation, or if the director ceases to be qualified to act as a director of a company and does not promptly resign, and the directors may appoint a director to fill the resulting vacancy.

 
15.          Alternate Directors
 
15.1
Appointment of Alternate Director
 
Any director (an “ appointor ”) may by notice in writing received by the Company appoint any person (an “ appointee ”) who is qualified to act as a director to be their alternate to act in their place at meetings of the directors or committees of the directors at which the appointor is not present unless (in the case of an appointee who is not a director) the directors have reasonably disapproved the appointment of such person as an alternate director and have given notice to that effect to the appointor within a reasonable time after the notice of appointment is received by the Company.
 
15.2
Notice of Meetings
 
Every alternate director so appointed is entitled to notice of meetings of the directors and of committees of the directors of which their appointor is a member and to attend and vote as a director at any such meetings at which their appointor is not present.
 
15.3
Alternate for More Than One Director Attending Meetings
 
A person may be appointed as an alternate director by more than one director, and an alternate director:
 
(1)
will be counted in determining the quorum for a meeting of directors once for each of their appointors and, in the case of an appointee who is also a director, once more in that capacity;
 
(2)
has a separate vote at a meeting of directors for each of their appointors and, in the case of an appointee who is also a director, an additional vote in that capacity;
 
(3)
will be counted in determining the quorum for a meeting of a committee of directors once for each of their appointors who is a member of that committee and, in the case of an appointee who is also a member of that committee as a director, once more in that capacity;
 
(4)
has a separate vote at a meeting of a committee of directors for each of their appointors who is a member of that committee and, in the case of an appointee who is also a member of that committee as a director, an additional vote in that capacity.
 
 
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15.4
Consent Resolutions
 
Every alternate director, if authorized by the notice appointing them, may sign in place of their appointor any resolutions to be consented to in writing.
 
15.5
Alternate Director Not an Agent
 
Every alternate director is deemed not to be the agent of their appointor.
 
15.6
Revocation of Appointment of Alternate Director
 
An appointor may at any time, by notice in writing received by the Company, revoke the appointment of an alternate director appointed by them.
 
15.7
Ceasing to be an Alternate Director
 
The appointment of an alternate director ceases when:
 
(1)
their appointor ceases to be a director and is not promptly re-elected or re-appointed;
 
(2)
the alternate director dies;
 
(3)
the alternate director resigns as an alternate director by notice in writing provided to the Company or a lawyer for the Company;
 
(4)
the alternate director ceases to be qualified to act as a director; or
 
(5)
their appointor revokes the appointment of the alternate director.
 
15.8
Remuneration and Expenses of Alternate Director
 
The Company must reimburse an alternate director for the reasonable expenses that would be properly reimbursed if they were a director, and the alternate director is entitled to receive from the Company such proportion, if any, of the remuneration otherwise payable to the appointor as the appointor may from time to time direct.

 
16.          Powers and Duties of Directors
 
16.1
Powers of Management
 
The directors must, subject to these Articles, manage or supervise the management of the business and affairs of the Company and have the authority to exercise all such powers of the Company as are not, by the Business Corporations Act or by these Articles, required to be exercised by the shareholders of the Company.
 
16.2
Appointment of Attorney of Company
 
The directors may from time to time, by power of attorney or other instrument, under seal if so required by law, appoint any person to be the attorney of the Company for such purposes, and with such powers, authorities and discretions (not exceeding those vested in or exercisable by the directors under these Articles and excepting the power to fill vacancies in the board of directors, to remove a director, to change the membership of, or fill vacancies in, any committee of the directors, to appoint or remove officers appointed by the directors and to declare dividends) and for such period, and with such remuneration and subject to such conditions as the directors may think fit. Any such power of attorney may contain such provisions for the protection or convenience of persons dealing with such attorney as the directors think fit. Any such attorney may be authorized by the directors to sub-delegate all or any of the powers, authorities and discretions for the time being vested in them.
 
 
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17.          Disclosure of Interest of Directors
 
17.1
Obligation to Account for Profits
 
A director or senior officer who holds a disclosable interest (as that term is used in the Business Corporations Act ) in a contract or transaction into which the Company has entered or proposes to enter is liable to account to the Company for any profit that accrues to the director or senior officer under or as a result of the contract or transaction only if and to the extent provided in the Business Corporations Act .
 
17.2
Restrictions on Voting by Reason of Interest
 
A director who holds a disclosable interest in a contract or transaction into which the Company has entered or proposes to enter is not entitled to vote on any directors’ resolution to approve that contract or transaction, unless all the directors have a disclosable interest in that contract or transaction, in which case any or all of those directors may vote on such resolution.
 
17.3
Interested Director Counted in Quorum
 
A director who holds a disclosable interest in a contract or transaction into which the Company has entered or proposes to enter and who is present at the meeting of directors at which the contract or transaction is considered for approval may be counted in the quorum at the meeting whether or not the director votes on any or all of the resolutions considered at the meeting.
 
17.4
Disclosure of Conflict of Interest or Property
 
A director or senior officer who holds any office or possesses any property, right or interest that could result, directly or indirectly, in the creation of a duty or interest that materially conflicts with that individual’s duty or interest as a director or senior officer, must disclose the nature and extent of the conflict as required by the Business Corporations Act .
 
17.5
Director Holding Other Office in the Company
 
A director may hold any office or place of profit with the Company, other than the office of auditor of the Company, in addition to their office of director for the period and on the terms (as to remuneration or otherwise) that the directors may determine.
 
17.6
No Disqualification
 
No director or intended director is disqualified by their office from contracting with the Company either with regard to the holding of any office or place of profit the director holds with the Company or as vendor, purchaser or otherwise, and no contract or transaction entered into by or on behalf of the Company in which a director is in any way interested is liable to be voided for that reason.
 
 
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17.7
Professional Services by Director or Officer
 
A director or officer, or any person in which a director or officer has an interest, may act in a professional capacity for the Company, except as auditor of the Company, and the director or officer or such person is entitled to remuneration for professional services as if that director or officer were not a director or officer.
 
17.8
Director or Officer in Other Corporations
 
A director or officer may be or become a director, officer or employee of, or otherwise interested in, any person in which the Company may be interested as a shareholder or otherwise, and the director or officer is not accountable to the Company for any remuneration or other benefits received by them as director, officer or employee of, or from their interest in, such other person.

 
18.          Proceedings of Directors
 
18.1
Meetings of Directors
 
The directors may meet together for the conduct of business, adjourn and otherwise regulate their meetings as they think fit, and meetings of the directors held at regular intervals may be held at the place, at the time and on the notice, if any, as the directors may from time to time determine.
 
18.2
Voting at Meetings
 
Questions arising at any meeting of directors are to be decided by a majority of votes and, in the case of an equality of votes, the chair of the meeting does not have a second or casting vote.
 
18.3
Chair of Meetings
 
The following individual is entitled to preside as chair at a meeting of directors:
 
(1)
the chair of the board, if any;
 
(2)
in the absence of the chair of the board, the president, if any, if the president is a director; or
 
(3)
any other director chosen by the directors if:
 
 
(a)
neither the chair of the board nor the president, if a director, is present at the meeting within 15 minutes after the time set for holding the meeting;
 
 
(b)
neither the chair of the board nor the president, if a director, is willing to chair the meeting; or
 
 
(c)
the chair of the board and the president, if a director, have advised the secretary, if any, or any other director, that they will not be present at the meeting.
 
 
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18.4
Meetings by Telephone or Other Communications Medium
 
A director may participate in a meeting of the directors or of any committee of the directors in person or by telephone if all directors participating in the meeting, whether in person or by telephone or other communications medium, are able to communicate with each other. A director may participate in a meeting of the directors or of any committee of the directors by a communications medium other than telephone if all directors participating in the meeting, whether in person or by telephone or other communications medium, are able to communicate with each other and if all directors who wish to participate in the meeting agree to such participation. A director who participates in a meeting in a manner contemplated by this Article 18.4 is deemed for all purposes of the Business Corporations Act and these Articles to be present at the meeting and to have agreed to participate in that manner .
 
18.5
Calling of Meetings
 
A director may, and the secretary or an assistant secretary of the Company, if any, on the request of a director must, call a meeting of the directors at any time.
 
18.6
Notice of Meetings
 
Other than for meetings held at regular intervals as determined by the directors pursuant to Article 18.1, reasonable notice of each meeting of the directors, specifying the place, day and time of that meeting must be given to each of the directors and the alternate directors by any method set out in Article 24.1.
 
18.7
When Notice Not Required
 
It is not necessary to give notice of a meeting of the directors to a director or an alternate director if:
 
(1)
the meeting is to be held immediately following a meeting of shareholders at which that director was elected or appointed, or is the meeting of the directors at which that director is appointed; or
 
(2)
the director or alternate director, as the case may be, has waived notice of the meeting.
 
18.8
Meeting Valid Despite Failure to Give Notice
 
The accidental omission to give notice of any meeting of directors to, or the non-receipt of any notice by, any director or alternate director, does not invalidate any proceedings at that meeting.
 
18.9
Waiver of Notice of Meetings
 
Any director or alternate director may send to the Company a document signed by them waiving notice of any past, present or future meeting or meetings of the directors and may at any time withdraw that waiver with respect to meetings held after that withdrawal. After sending a waiver with respect to all future meetings and until that waiver is withdrawn, no notice of any meeting of the directors need be given to that director and, unless the director otherwise requires by notice in writing to the Company, to their alternate director, and all meetings of the directors so held are deemed not to be improperly called or constituted by reason of notice not having been given to such director or alternate director.
 
 
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18.10
Quorum
 
The quorum necessary for the transaction of the business of the directors may be set by the directors and, if not so set, is deemed to be set at two directors or, if the number of directors is set at one, is deemed to be set at one director, and that director may constitute a meeting.
 
18.11
Validity of Acts Where Appointment Defective
 
An act of a director or officer is not invalid merely because of an irregularity in the election or appointment or a defect in the qualification of that director or officer.
 
18.12
Consent Resolutions in Writing
 
A resolution of the directors or of any committee of the directors may be passed without a meeting:
 
(1)
in all cases, if each of the directors entitled to vote on the resolution consents to it in writing; or
 
(2)
in the case of a resolution to approve a contract or transaction in respect of which a director has disclosed that they have or may have a disclosable interest, if each of the other directors who are entitled to vote on the resolution consents to it in writing.
 
A consent in writing under this Article may be by signed document, fax, e-mail or any other method of transmitting legibly recorded messages. A consent in writing may be in two or more counterparts which together are deemed to constitute one consent in writing. A resolution of the directors or of any committee of the directors passed in accordance with this Article 18.12 is effective on the date stated in the consent in writing or on the latest date stated on any counterpart and is deemed to be a proceeding at a meeting of directors or of the committee of the directors and to be as valid and effective as if it had been passed at a meeting of the directors or of the committee of the directors that satisfies all the requirements of the Business Corporations Act and all the requirements of these Articles relating to meetings of the directors or of a committee of the directors.

 
19.          Executive and Other Committees
 
19.1
Appointment and Powers of Executive Committee
 
The directors may, by resolution, appoint an executive committee consisting of the director or directors that they consider appropriate, and this committee has, during the intervals between meetings of the board of directors, all of the directors’ powers, except:
 
(1)
the power to fill vacancies in the board of directors;
 
(2)
the power to remove a director;
 
(3)
the power to change the membership of, or fill vacancies in, any committee of the directors; and
 
(4)
such other powers, if any, as may be set out in the resolution or any subsequent directors’ resolution.
 
 
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19.2
Appointment and Powers of Other Committees
 
The directors may, by resolution:
 
(1)
appoint one or more committees (other than the executive committee) consisting of the director or directors that they consider appropriate;
 
(2)
delegate to a committee appointed under paragraph (1) any of the directors’ powers, except:
 
 
(a)
the power to fill vacancies in the board of directors;
 
 
(b)
the power to remove a director;
 
 
(c)
the power to change the membership of, or fill vacancies in, any committee of the directors; and
 
 
(d)
the power to appoint or remove officers appointed by the directors; and
 
(3)
make any delegation referred to in paragraph (2) subject to the conditions set out in the resolution or any subsequent directors’ resolution.
 
19.3
Obligations of Committees
 
In the exercise of the powers delegated to a committee appointed under Articles 19.1 or 19.2, the committee must:
 
(1)
conform to any rules that may from time to time be imposed on it by the directors; and
 
(2)
report every act or thing done in exercise of those powers at such times as the directors may require.
 
19.4
Powers of Board
 
The directors may, at any time, with respect to a committee appointed under Articles 19.1 or 19.2:
 
(1)
revoke or alter the authority given to the committee, or override a decision made by the committee, except as to acts done before such revocation, alteration or overriding;
 
(2)
terminate the appointment of, or change the membership of, the committee; and
 
(3)
fill vacancies in the committee.
 
19.5
Committee Meetings
 
Subject to Article 19.3(1) and unless the directors otherwise provide in the resolution appointing the committee or in any subsequent resolution, with respect to a committee appointed under Articles 19.1 or 19.2:
 
(1)
the committee may meet and adjourn as it thinks proper;
 
(2)
the committee may elect a chair of its meetings but, if no chair of a meeting is elected, or if at a meeting the chair of the meeting is not present within 15 minutes after the time set for holding the meeting, the directors present who are members of the committee may choose one of their number to chair the meeting;
 
 
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(3)
a majority of the members of the committee constitutes a quorum of the committee; and
 
(4)
questions arising at any meeting of the committee are determined by a majority of votes of the members present, and in case of an equality of votes, the chair of the meeting does not have a second or casting vote.
 
 
20.          Officers
 
20.1
Directors May Appoint Officers
 
The directors may, from time to time, appoint such officers, if any, as the directors determine and the directors may, at any time, terminate any such appointment.
 
20.2
Functions, Duties and Powers of Officers
 
The directors may, for each officer:
 
(1)
determine the functions and duties of the officer;
 
(2)
entrust to and confer on the officer any of the powers exercisable by the directors on such terms and conditions and with such restrictions as the directors think fit; and
 
(3)
revoke, withdraw, alter or vary all or any of the functions, duties and powers of the officer.
 
20.3
Qualifications
 
An officer is not required to hold a share in the capital of the Company as qualification for their office but must be qualified as required by the Business Corporations Act to become, act or continue to act as an officer. One person may hold more than one position as an officer of the Company. Any person appointed as the chair of the board or as a managing director must be a director. Any other officer need not be a director.
 
20.4
Remuneration and Terms of Appointment
 
All appointments of officers are to be made on the terms and conditions and at the remuneration (whether by way of salary, fee, commission, participation in profits or otherwise) that the directors think fit and are subject to termination at the pleasure of the directors, and an officer, in addition to such remuneration, may receive, after they cease to hold such office or leaves the employment of the Company, a pension or gratuity.
 
 
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21.          Indemnification
 
21.1
Definitions
 
In this Article 21:
 
(1)
eligible penalty ” means a judgment, penalty or fine awarded or imposed in, or an amount paid in settlement of, an eligible proceeding;
 
(2)
eligible proceeding ” means a legal proceeding or investigative action, whether current, threatened, pending or completed, in which a director, former director or alternate director of the Company (an “ eligible party ”) or any of the heirs and legal personal representatives of the eligible party, by reason of the eligible party being or having been a director or alternate director of the Company:
 
 
(a)
is or may be joined as a party; or
 
 
(b)
is or may be liable for or in respect of a judgment, penalty or fine in, or expenses related to, the proceeding;
 
(3)
expenses ” has the meaning set out in the Business Corporations Act .
 
21.2
Mandatory Indemnification of Directors and Officers and Former Directors and Officers
 
The Company must indemnify a director, officer, former director or officer or alternate director of the Company and their heirs and legal personal representatives, as set out in the Business Corporations Act , against all eligible penalties to which such person is or may be liable, and the Company must, after the final disposition of an eligible proceeding, pay the expenses actually and reasonably incurred by such person in respect of that proceeding. Each director, officer, former director and officer and alternate director is deemed to have contracted with the Company on the terms of the indemnity contained in this Article 21.2.
 
21.3
Mandatory Advancement of Expenses
 
The Company must pay, as they are incurred in advance of the final disposition of an eligible proceeding, the expenses actually and reasonably incurred by an eligible party in respect of that proceeding but the Company must first receive from the eligible party a written undertaking that, if it is ultimately determined that the payment of expenses is prohibited by the Business Corporations Act , the eligible party will repay the amounts advanced.
 
21.4
Indemnification of Other Persons
 
The Company may indemnify any other person in accordance with the Business Corporations Act .
 
21.5
Non-Compliance with Business Corporations Act
 
The failure of a director, alternate director or officer of the Company to comply with the Business Corporations Act or these Articles does not invalidate any indemnity to which they are entitled under this Part.
 
 
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21.6
Company May Purchase Insurance
 
The Company may purchase and maintain insurance for the benefit of any person (or their heirs or legal personal representatives) who:
 
(1)
is or was a director, alternate director, officer, employee or agent of the Company;
 
(2)
is or was a director, alternate director, officer, employee or agent of a corporation at a time when the corporation is or was an affiliate of the Company;
 
(3)
at the request of the Company, is or was a director, alternate director, officer, employee or agent of a corporation or of a partnership, trust, joint venture or other unincorporated entity;
 
(4)
at the request of the Company, holds or held a position equivalent to that of a director, alternate director or officer of a partnership, trust, joint venture or other unincorporated entity;
 
against any liability incurred by them as such director, alternate director, officer, employee or agent or person who holds or held such equivalent position.

 
22.          Dividends
 
22.1
Payment of Dividends Subject to Special Rights
 
The provisions of this Article 22 are subject to the rights, if any, of shareholders holding shares with special rights as to dividends.
 
22.2
Declaration of Dividends
 
The directors may from time to time declare and authorize payment of such dividends as they may deem advisable.
 
22.3
No Notice Required
 
The directors need not give notice to any shareholder of any declaration under Article 22.2.
 
22.4
Record Date
 
The directors may set a date as the record date for the purpose of determining shareholders entitled to receive payment of a dividend. The record date must not precede the date on which the dividend is to be paid by more than two months. If no record date is set, the record date is 5:00 p.m. on the date on which the directors pass the resolution declaring the dividend.
 
22.5
Manner of Paying Dividend
 
A resolution declaring a dividend may direct payment of the dividend wholly or partly by the distribution of specific assets or of fully paid shares or of bonds, debentures or other securities of the Company, or in any one or more of those ways.
 
 
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22.6
Settlement of Difficulties
 
If any difficulty arises in regard to a distribution under Article 22.5, the directors may settle the difficulty as they deem advisable, and, in particular, may:
 
(1)
set the value for distribution of specific assets;
 
(2)
determine that cash payments in substitution for all or any part of the specific assets to which any shareholders are entitled may be made to any shareholders on the basis of the value so fixed in order to adjust the rights of all parties; and
 
(3)
vest any such specific assets in trustees for the persons entitled to the dividend.
 
22.7
When Dividend Payable
 
Any dividend may be made payable on such date as is fixed by the directors.
 
22.8
Dividends to be Paid in Accordance with Number of Shares
 
All dividends on shares of any class or series of shares must be declared and paid according to the number of such shares held.
 
22.9
Receipt by Joint Shareholders
 
If several persons are joint shareholders of any share, any one of them may give an effective receipt for any dividend, bonus or other money payable in respect of the share.
 
22.10
Dividend Bears No Interest
 
No dividend bears interest against the Company.
 
22.11
Fractional Dividends
 
If a dividend to which a shareholder is entitled includes a fraction of the smallest monetary unit of the currency of the dividend, that fraction may be disregarded in making payment of the dividend and that payment represents full payment of the dividend.
 
22.12
Payment of Dividends
 
Any dividend or other distribution payable in cash in respect of shares may be paid by cheque, made payable to the order of the person to whom it is sent, and mailed to the address of the shareholder, or in the case of joint shareholders, to the address of the joint shareholder who is first named on the central securities register, or to the person and to the address the shareholder or joint shareholders may direct in writing. The mailing of such cheque will, to the extent of the sum represented by the cheque (plus the amount of the tax required by law to be deducted), discharge all liability for the dividend unless such cheque is not paid on presentation or the amount of tax so deducted is not paid to the appropriate taxing authority.
 
22.13
Capitalization of Surplus
 
Notwithstanding anything contained in these Articles, the directors may from time to time capitalize any surplus of the Company and may from time to time issue, as fully paid, shares or any bonds, debentures or other securities of the Company as a dividend representing the surplus or any part of the surplus.
 
 
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23.          Documents, Records and Reports
 
23.1
Recording of Financial Affairs
 
The directors must cause adequate accounting records to be kept to record properly the financial affairs and condition of the Company and to comply with the Business Corporations Act .
 
23.2
Inspection of Accounting Records
 
Unless the directors determine otherwise, or unless otherwise determined by ordinary resolution, no shareholder of the Company is entitled to inspect or obtain a copy of any accounting records of the Company.
 
 
24.          Notices
 
24.1
Method of Giving Notice
 
Unless the Business Corporations Act or these Articles provides otherwise, a notice, statement, report or other record required or permitted by the Business Corporations Act or these Articles to be sent by or to a person may be sent by any one of the following methods:
 
(1)
prepaid mail addressed to the person at the applicable address for that person as follows:
 
 
(a)
for a record mailed to a shareholder, the shareholder’s registered address;
 
 
(b)
for a record mailed to a director or officer, the prescribed address for mailing shown for the director or officer in the records kept by the Company or the mailing address provided by the recipient for the sending of that record or records of that class;
 
 
(c)
in any other case, the mailing address of the intended recipient;
 
(2)
delivery at the applicable address for that person as follows, addressed to the person:
 
 
(a)
for a record delivered to a shareholder, the shareholder’s registered address;
 
 
(b)
for a record delivered to a director or officer, the prescribed address for delivery shown for the director or officer in the records kept by the Company or the delivery address provided by the recipient for the sending of that record or records of that class;
 
 
(c)
in any other case, the delivery address of the intended recipient;
 
(3)
fax to the fax number provided by the intended recipient for the sending of that record or records of that class;
 
(4)
e-mail to the e-mail address provided by the intended recipient for the sending of that record or records of that class; or
 
 
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(5)
physical delivery to the intended recipient.
 
24.2
Deemed Receipt of Mailing
 
A record that is mailed to a person by ordinary mail to the applicable address for that person referred to in Article 24.1 is deemed to be received by the person to whom it was mailed on the day, Saturdays, Sundays and holidays excepted, following the date of mailing. A record that is delivered to a person or their applicable address is deemed to be received by the person on receipt by that person or delivery to that address. A record that is sent to a person by fax or e-mail is deemed to be received by the person on transmission if sent during business hours at the place of intended receipt by that person and, if not sent during their business hours, on the next business day of the place of intended receipt of that person.
 
24.3
Certificate of Sending
 
A certificate signed by the secretary, if any, or other officer of the Company or of any other corporation acting in that behalf for the Company stating that a notice, statement, report or other record was addressed as required, and sent as permitted, by Article 24.1 is conclusive evidence of that fact.
 
24.4
Notice to Joint Shareholders
 
A notice, statement, report or other record may be provided by the Company to the joint shareholders of a share by providing the notice to the joint shareholder first named in the central securities register in respect of the share.
 
24.5
Notice to Trustees
 
A notice, statement, report or other record may be provided by the Company to the persons entitled to a share in consequence of the death, bankruptcy or incapacity of a shareholder by:
 
(1)
mailing the record, addressed to them:
 
 
(a)
by name, by the title of the legal personal representative of the deceased or incapacitated shareholder, by the title of trustee of the bankrupt shareholder or by any similar description; and
 
 
(b)
at the address, if any, supplied to the Company for that purpose by the persons claiming to be so entitled; or
 
(2)
if an address referred to in paragraph (1)(b) has not been supplied to the Company, by giving the notice in a manner in which it might have been given if the death, bankruptcy or incapacity had not occurred.
 
 
25.          Seal
 
25.1
Who May Attest Seal
 
Except as provided in Articles 25.2 and 25.3, the Company’s seal, if any, must not be impressed on any record except when that impression is attested by the signatures of:
 
 
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(1)
any two directors;
 
(2)
any officer, together with any director;
 
(3)
if the Company only has one director, that director; or
 
(4)
any one or more directors or officers or persons as may be determined by the directors.
 
25.2
Sealing Copies
 
For the purpose of certifying under seal a certificate of incumbency of the directors or officers of the Company or a true copy of any resolution or other document, despite Article 25.1, the impression of the seal may be attested by the signature of any director or officer.
 
25.3
Mechanical Reproduction of Seal
 
The directors may authorize the seal to be impressed by third parties on share certificates or bonds, debentures or other securities of the Company as they may determine appropriate from time to time. To enable the seal to be impressed on any share certificates or bonds, debentures or other securities of the Company, whether in definitive or interim form, on which facsimiles of any of the signatures of the directors or officers of the Company are, in accordance with the Business Corporations Act or these Articles, printed or otherwise mechanically reproduced, there may be delivered to the person employed to engrave, lithograph or print such definitive or interim share certificates or bonds, debentures or other securities one or more unmounted dies reproducing the seal and the chair of the board or any senior officer together with the secretary, treasurer, secretary-treasurer, an assistant secretary, an assistant treasurer or an assistant secretary-treasurer may in writing authorize such person to cause the seal to be impressed on such definitive or interim share certificates or bonds, debentures or other securities by the use of such dies. Share certificates or bonds, debentures or other securities to which the seal has been so impressed are for all purposes deemed to be under and to bear the seal impressed on them.
 
 
26.          PROHIBITIONS
 
26.1
Definitions
 
In this Article 26:
 
(1)
designated security ” means:
 
 
(a)
a voting security of the Company;
 
 
(b)
a security of the Company that is not a debt security and that carries a residual right to participate in the earnings of the Company or, on the liquidation or winding up of the Company, in its assets; or
 
 
(c)
a security of the Company convertible, directly or indirectly, into a security described in paragraph (a) or (b);
 
(2)
security ” has the meaning assigned in the Securities Act (British Columbia);
 
(3)
voting security ” means a security of the Company that:
 
 
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(a)
is not a debt security, and
 
 
(b)
carries a voting right either under all circumstances or under some circumstances that have occurred and are continuing.
 
26.2
Application
 
Article 26.3 does not apply to the Company if and for so long as it is a public company or its designated securities are beneficially owned, directly or indirectly, by more than 50 persons or companies, counting any two or more joint registered owners as one beneficial owner, and not counting employees and former employees of the Company or its affiliates.
 
26.3
Consent Required for Transfer of Shares or Designated Securities
 
No share or designated security may be sold, transferred or otherwise disposed of without the consent of the directors and the directors are not required to give any reason for refusing to consent to any such sale, transfer or other disposition.

 
27.          Special Rights And Restrictions

27.1           Common Shares

(1)
The registered holders of the Common shares shall be entitled to receive notice of and to attend at all general meetings of the shareholders of the Company and shall have the right to vote at any such meeting on the basis of one vote for each Common share held.

(2)
The registered holders of the Common shares are entitled to receive dividends if and when declared by the Directors out the funds or assets of the Company properly applicable to the payment of dividends.  The Directors may at any time declare and authorize the payment of such dividends exclusively to the registered holders of Common shares without declaring any corresponding dividends to the registered holders of Preferred shares.

(3)
In the event of the liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company or other distribution of the assets of the Company among its shareholders for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the Company, whether voluntary or involuntary, subject to the rights of the holders of the Preferred shares, the registered holders of the Common shares shall be entitled to receive the remaining property and assets of the Company.

27.2           Preferred Shares

(1)
The holders of the Preferred shares shall not, as such, be entitled to receive notice of or to attend or vote at any meetings of shareholders of the Company other than meetings of the holders of the Preferred shares.

(2)
The Preferred shares may include one or more series of shares.  Subject to the Business Corporations Act , the Directors may from time to time, by resolution, if none of the Preferred shares of the particular series are issued, alter the Articles of the Company and authorize the alteration of the Notice of Articles of the Company, as the case may be, to do one or more of the following:
 
 
36

 
 
 
(a)
Determine the maximum number of shares of any of those series of shares that the Company is authorized to issue, determine that there is no such maximum number, or alter any determination made under this Article 27.2(2) or otherwise in relation to a maximum number of those shares;

 
(b)
Create an identifying name by which the shares of any of those series of shares may be identified or alter any identifying name created for those shares; and

 
(c)
Attach special rights and restrictions to the shares of any of those series of shares or to alter any special rights or restrictions attached to those shares.

(3)
The registered holders of the Preferred shares are entitled to receive dividends if and when declared by the Directors out the funds or assets of the Company properly applicable to the payment of dividends.  The Directors may at any time declare and authorize the payment of such dividends exclusively to the registered holders of the Preferred shares without declaring any corresponding dividends to the registered holders of the Common shares.

(4)
In the event of the liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company or other distribution of the assets of the Company among its members for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the Company, whether voluntary or involuntary, the registered holders of the Preferred shares shall be entitled to receive the amount paid up with respect to each Preferred share together with an amount equal to all declared and unpaid dividends on such shares in priority of the Common shares.  After payment to the registered holders of the Preferred shares of the amount payable to them as provided for above, they shall not, as such, be entitled to share in any further distribution of the property or assets of the Company.
 

The Company has adopted as its Articles the foregoing provisions:
 
Full name and Signature of Director
Date
 
 
/s/ Ralph Biggar                                                                                  
RALPH BIGGAR
 
 
 
April 14, 2011
 
 
37
Exhibit 5.1
 
 
 
File #0487
June 8, 2012

VENZA GOLD CORP.
Suite 610, 1100 Melville Street
Vancouver, BC  V6E 4A6

Dear Sirs/Mesdames:

RE:           VENZA GOLD CORP. (the "Company")
 
-
Registration Statement on Form S-1


We have acted as counsel for the Company, in connection with the preparation of the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 (the "Registration Statement") to be filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, relating to the offering of 6,443,328 common shares of the Company (the "Shares"), of which up to 1,500,000 Shares will be sold directly by the Company and up to 4,943,328 Shares will be sold by the selling shareholders named in the Registration Statement (the "Selling Shareholders").

In rendering the opinions set forth below, we have reviewed: (a) the Registration Statement; (b) the Company's Certificate of Continuation; (c) the Company's Notice of Articles; (d) the Company’s Articles; (e) certain records of the Company's corporate proceedings; and (f) such corporate and other documents, records, papers and certificates as we have deemed necessary for the purposes of rendering the opinions expressed herein. We have also relied, without investigation, upon an Officer’s Certificate executed by Ralph Biggar, the Company’s President, and Denis Zyrianov, the Company’s Chief Financial Officer.

Our opinions expressed herein are subject in all respects to the following assumptions, limitations and qualifications:

(i)
Our opinions are limited to the laws of the Province of British Columbia and the federal laws of the Canada applicable thereto;

(ii)
We have assumed (a) the genuineness of all signatures on documents examined by us, (b) the legal capacity of the officers and directors of the Company, (c) the authenticity of all documents submitted to us as originals, (d) the conformity to authentic originals of all documents submitted to us as certified, conformed, photostatic or other copies, and (e) that the documents, in the forms submitted to us for our review, have not been and will not be altered or amended in any respect; and
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
N ORTHWEST LAW GROUP
June 8, 2012
Page 2

 
(iii)
We have assumed that each of the statements made and certified in the Certificate provided by the Company’s President and the Company’s Chief Financial Officer were true and correct when made, have at no time since being made and certified become untrue or incorrect and remains true and correct on the date hereof.

Based upon the foregoing, we are of the opinion that (1) the Shares to be sold and issued by the Company have been duly authorized and, when such Shares are issued and paid for in the manner provided for in the Registration Statement, the Shares will be validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable common shares in the capital of the Company, and (2) the Shares to be sold by the Selling Shareholders have been duly authorized and are validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable common shares in the capital of the Company.

We consent to the use of this opinion as an exhibit to the Registration Statement and further consent to the use of our name wherever appearing in the Registration Statement and in any amendment thereto.

Yours truly,

/s/ O’Neill Law Corporation

O'NEILL LAW CORPORATION*

* O’Neill Law Corporation is a member of Northwest Law Group



BON/dml
Exhibit 10.1
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
 
CONSULTING AGREEMENT
 

 
 THIS AGREEMENT is made effective as of the 1 st day of October, 2011.

 
BETWEEN :
 
Denis Zyrianov , an individual with an address of
703-1552 Esquimalt Ave., West Vancouver, BC
V7V1R3
(the "Consultant")

 
OF THE FIRST PART AND:
 
Venza Gold Corp.   a company incorporated under
the laws of British Columbia, having its office at
610 -1100 Melville Street, Vancouver, BC
V6E 4A6
(the "Company")

OF THE SECOND PART
 
WHEREAS :
 
A.           The Company wishes to contract for the services of the Consultant; and
 
B.           The Consultant has agreed to accept such contract for services upon the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
 
NOW THEREFORE THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSES THAT in consideration of the mutual covenants herein contained, the parties hereto agree as follows:
 
 
1.                ENGAGEMENT
 
1.1           The Company hereby contracts for the services of the Consultant and the Consultant hereby agrees with the Company to perform services for the Company in accordance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
 
1.2           The Consultant will provide the Company with the services of Chief Financial Officer of the Company (the "Consulting Services").
 
1.3           The Consultant warrants and represents to the Company as follows and acknowledges that the Company is relying upon these warranties and representations in entering into this Agreement:
 
(a)            the Consultant has the necessary expertise to effectively provide the Consulting Services;
 
(b)            the Consultant will spend a required amount of time and attention on the affairs and business of the Company; and
 
 
 

 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
 
(c)            the Consultant has a relationship with the Company that enables the Consultant to be knowledgeable about the business and affairs of the Company.
 
1.4           The Consultant shall at all times be an independent contractor and shall not at any time be or be deemed to be an employee of the Company. The Consultant acknowledges that he is not an employee of the Company and that the execution of this Agreement shall not give rise to any employment with the Company.
 
2                 CONSULTANT SERVICES
 
2.1           During the term of this Agreement, the Consultant shall provide the time needed to complete the Consulting Services. In consideration of the Consulting Services, the Company will pay the Consultant a consulting fee of $1,000 per month (the "Consultant Fee").
 
2.2           The Consulting Fee shall be payable by the Company to the Consultant on the last business day of each month during the term of this Agreement.
 
3                 CONFIDENTIALITY
 
3.1           The Consultant acknowledges and agrees that all information connected with the Company's business, including without limitation, all information, data, inventions, discoveries, improvements, modifications, developments, technical manuals, or process-flow manuals, data, customer information and pricing information is confidential, and the Consultant covenants and agrees with the Company to use his best efforts to ensure that such information does not become public knowledge and undertakes not to disclose such information or any part thereof to any other person except as may be necessary to carry out his obligations under this Agreement.
 
3.2            The Consultant hereby expressly acknowledges that any breach or threatened breach by the Consultant of any of the terms set forth in Section 3.1 of this Agreement may result in significant and continuing injury to the Company, the monetary value of which would be impossible to establish, and any such breach or threatened breach will provide the Company with any and all rights and remedies to which it may be entitled under the law, including but not limited to injunctive relief or other equitable remedies.
 
4                 TERM
 
4.1           The initial term of this Agreement shall be one (1) year, commencing on the date of first written above, subject to earlier termination as hereinafter provided.
 
4.2           This Agreement shall be renewed for further terms of such duration and upon such terms and conditions as the Consultant and the Company may mutually agree upon in writing.
 
5                 STOCK OPTIONS
 
5.1 The Consultant may be granted, subject to the approval of the Company's directors, stock options to purchase shares of the Company's common shares in such amounts and at such times as the Company's directors, in their absolute discretion, may from time to time determine.
 
6                 TERMINATION
 
6.1           The Company may terminate this Agreement:
 
  (i) at any time with ninety (90) days notice; and
 
  (ii) for just cause.
 
6.2           The Consultant may terminate this Agreement for just cause at any time without notice to the Company, or without just cause by providing thirty (30) days' notice in writing to the Company.
 
 
 

 
 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
 
6.3 The consultant will have 180 days from the date of termination to exercise all stock options granted to the consultant 
 
7                 OTHER PROVISIONS
 
7.1           Time is of the essence of this Agreement.
 
7.2           Any notice required or permitted to be given under this Agreement shall be in writing and may be delivered personally or by facsimile, or by prepaid registered post addressed to the parties at the above- mentioned addresses or at such other address of which notice may be given by either of such parties. Any notice shall be deemed to have been received, if personally delivered or by facsimile, on the date of delivery and, if mailed as aforesaid, then on the seventh business day after and excluding the day of mailing.
 
7.3           This Agreement supersedes any previous agreement, arrangement or understanding, whether written or oral between the parties hereto.
 
7.4           This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties and may only be amended in writing.
 
7.5           This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of British Columbia and the federal laws of Canada applicable therein.
 
7.6           This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which so executed shall constitute an original and all of which together shall constitute one and the same agreement.
 
 
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties have executed this Agreement as of the day first above written.
 

/s/ Denis Zyrianov
Denis Zyrianov
 

 

 
VENZA GOLD CORP.
by its authorized signatory:
 
 
/s/ Ralph Biggar
Ralph Biggar, Director
Exhibit 10.2
 
PURCHASE AGREEMENT


THIS AGREEMENT dated as of the 11 day of April, 2012.

BETWEEN:

GERALD DIAKOW , an individual with an address of 1537 54 th
Street, Delta, BC, V4M3H6, Canada
(the “Vendor”)
OF THE FIRST PART

AND:

VENZA GOLD CORP. , a British Columbia company having an address at Suite 610, 1100 Melville Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6E 4A6

(the “Purchaser”)
OF THE SECOND PART

WHEREAS:

A.           The Vendor is the sole recorded and beneficial owner of the mineral claims described in Schedule “A” hereto (the “Property”); and

B.           The Vendor wishes to sell an undivided 100% interest in and to the Property to the Purchaser and the Purchaser wishes to acquire such interest pursuant to the terms and conditions set out in this Agreement.

NOW THEREFORE THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSES that in consideration of the premises and of the mutual covenants and agreements hereinafter contained, the parties hereto agree as follows:

VENDOR’S REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

1.           The Vendor represents and warrants to the Purchaser that:

 
(a)
it is the sole recorded and beneficial owner of an undivided l00% interest in and to the Property;

 
(b)
the claims comprising the Property have been, to the best of the information and belief of the Vendor, properly located and staked and recorded in compliance with the laws of the jurisdiction in which they are situate, are accurately described in Schedule “A” and are valid and subsisting mineral claims as at the date of this Agreement;
 
 
(c)
the Property is in good standing under all applicable laws and regulations, all assessment work required to be performed and filed has been performed and filed, all taxes and other payments have been paid and all filings have been made;
 
 
 

 
 
 
(d)
the Property is free and clear of any encumbrances, liens or charges and neither the Vendor nor, to the best of the Vendor’s knowledge, any of its predecessors in interest or title, have done anything whereby the Property may be encumbered;

 
(e)
it has the right to enter into this Agreement and to deal with the Property in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, there are no disputes over the title to the Property, and no other party has any interest in the Property or the production therefrom or any right to acquire any such interest;

 
(f)
there are no obligations or commitments for reclamation, closure or other environmental corrective, clean-up or remediation action directly or indirectly relating to the Property; and

 
(g)
no proceedings are pending for, and the Vendor is unaware of any basis for the institution of any proceedings leading to, the placing of the Vendor in bankruptcy.

PURCHASER’S REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

2.           The Purchaser represents and warrants to the Vendor that:

 
(a)
it has been duly incorporated, amalgamated or continued and validly exists as a corporation in good standing under the laws of its jurisdiction of incorporation, amalgamation or continuation;

 
(b)
it has duly obtained all corporate authoriza­tions for the execution of this Agreement and for the performance of this Agreement by it, and the consummation of the transactions herein contemplated will not conflict with or result in any breach of any covenants or agreements contained in, or constitute a default under, or result in the creation of any encumbrance under the provisions of the Articles or the constating documents of the Purchaser or any shareholders’ or directors’ resolution, indenture, agreement or other instrument whatsoever to which the Purchaser is a party or by which it is bound or to which it or the Property may be subject;

 
(c)
no proceedings are pending for, and the Purchaser is unaware of any basis for the institution of any proceedings leading to, the dissolution or winding up of the Purchaser or the placing of the Purchaser in bankruptcy or subject to any other laws governing the affairs of insolvent corporations; and

 
(d)
the shares issued under section 4 will, at the time of delivery to the Vendor, be duly authorized and validly allotted and issued as fully paid and non-assessable, free and clear of all liens, charges or encumbrances.
 
 
 

 
 
SURVIVAL OF REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

3.           The representations and warranties in this Agreement shall survive the closing of this transaction and shall apply to all assignments, conveyances, transfers and documents delivered in connection with this Agreement and there shall not be any merger of any representations and warranties in such assignments, conveyances, transfers or documents notwithstanding any rule of law, equity or statute to the contrary and all such rules are hereby waived.  The Vendor shall have the right to waive any representation and warranty made by the Purchaser in the Vendor’s favour without prejudice to any of its rights with respect to any other breach by the Purchaser and the Purchaser shall have the same right with respect to any of the Vendor’s representations in the Purchaser’s favour.

PURCHASE AND SALE

4.           The Vendor hereby sells and assigns and the Purchaser hereby purchases an undivided 100% interest in and to the Property for the following consideration

 
·
the issuance of 200,000 common shares of the Purchaser to the Vendor,

 
 
on closing of the Agreement.
 
FURTHER ASSURANCES

5.           The Vendor shall execute or cause to be executed a Bill of Sale or such other documents as the Purchaser may reasonable require transferring a 100% interest in and to the Property to the Purchaser, which the Purchaser shall be at liberty to record forthwith. The parties shall execute all further documents or assurances as may be required to carry out the full intent of this Agreement.

NOTICE

6.                      Each notice, demand or other communication required or permitted to be given under this Agreement shall be in writing and shall be delivered, telegraphed or telecopied to such party at the address for such party specified above. The date of receipt of such notice, demand or other communication shall be the date of delivery thereof if delivered or telegraphed or, if given by telecopier, shall be deemed conclusively to be the next business day. Either party may at any time and from time to time notify the other party in writing of a change of address and the new address to which notice shall be given to it thereafter until further change.

 
 

 

ENTIRE AGREEMENT

7.           This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties and replaces and supercedes all agreements, memoranda, correspondence, communications, negotiations and representations, whether verbal or express or implied, statutory or otherwise, between the parties with respect to the subject matter herein.

GENDER

8.           Wherever the singular or neuter are used herein the same shall be deemed to include the plural, feminine or masculine.

ENUREMENT

9.           This Agreement shall enure to the benefit of and be binding upon the parties hereto and their respective successors and permitted assigns.

COUNTERPART EXECUTION

10.           This Agreement may be executed in several parts in the same form and such parts as so executed shall together constitute one original agreement, and such parts, if more than one, shall be read together and construed as if all the signing parties hereto had executed one copy of this Agreement.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF this Agreement has been executed by the parties hereto as of the day and year first above written.



/s/ Gerry Diakow
GERRY DIAKOW


VENZA GOLD CORP.
by its authorized signatory:

By:    /s/ Ralph Biggar                                 
       Authorized Signatory

 
 

 
 
SCHEDULE “A”

List of Mineral Claims

Tenure Number
Claim Name
Owner
Expiry Date
Area
978304
OS GOLD
Gerry Diakow
April 5, 2013
523.07 Ha.
978305
QUAD GOLD
Gerry Diakow
April 5, 2013
165.49 Ha.

All minerals claims are located in British Columbia, Canada.
 
Exhibit 23.1
 

 
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM


We consent to the use in this Registration Statement on Form S-1 of our report dated June 8, 2012 relating to the financial statements of Venza Gold Corp. appearing in the Prospectus which is part of this Registration Statement and to the reference to our firm under the caption "Experts" in such Prospectus.

“DMCL”

DALE MATHESON CARR-HILTON LABONTE LLP
Chartered Accountants
Vancouver, Canada
June 8, 2012