ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC
10SB12G/A, 1999-08-03
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                                  UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                                   FORM 10-SB


                   GENERAL FORM FOR REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES
                 OF SMALL BUSINESS COMPANYS UNDER SECTION 12(B)
                 OR 12(G) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Commission file no.     0001082678
                        ---------

                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                 (NAME OF SMALL BUSINESS COMPANY IN ITS CHARTER)

             Nevada                                     Applied for
     --------------------                        -------------------------
   (State or Other Jurisdiction of          (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
   Incorporation or Organization)


    825-1200 West 73rd Avenue
    Vancouver, B.C., Canada                              V6P 6G5
     --------------------                        -------------------------
(Address of Principal Executive Officer)                (Zip Code)


                                 (604) 267-1100
                          ----------------------------
                          (Company's Telephone Number)

Securities registered under Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act:   None

Securities registered under Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act:


                    Common Stock, par value $0.001 per share
               ---------------------------------------------------
                                (Title of Class)

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<PAGE>

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

ITEM                                                                        PAGE
- ----                                                                        ----

                                     PART 1

Item 1     Description of Business                                             3


Item 2     Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan
                     of Operation                                             16

Item 3     Description of Property                                            19
Item 4     Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial
                     Ownership and Management                                 20

Item 5     Directors, Executive Officers, Promoters and
                     Control Persons                                          22

Item 6     Executive Compensation                                             23
Item 7     Certain Relationships and Related Transactions                     24
Item 8     Description of Securities                                          27

                                     PART 11

Item 1     Market Price of and Dividends on the Registrant's
                     Common Equity and Other Stockholders Matters             29
Item 2     Legal Proceedings                                                  29
Item 3     Disagreement With Accountants and Financial Disclosure             29
Item 4     Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities                            29
Item 5     Indemnification of Directors and Officers                          30

                                    PART F/S

           Financial Statements                                               31

                                    PART 111

Item 1     Index to Exhibits                                                  40
Item 2     Description of Exhibits                                            40


                         -----------------------------

                       DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE



         Documents incorporated by reference:        None

                                       2
<PAGE>
                                     PART 1

Zeb Oro  Explorations  Inc. (the  "Registrant"  or the "Company") is filing this
Form 10-SB on a voluntary basis to:

    1. provide current, public information to the investment community;

    2. to expand the availability of secondary trading exemptions under the Blue
       Sky laws and  thereby  expand  the  trading  market  in the  Registrant's
       securities, and

    3. to comply with  prerequisites for listing of the Registrant's  securities
       on NASDAQ.


ITEM 1.           DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS

HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF THE COMPANY

         The Registrant was incorporated on March 4, 1999. The Registrant has no
subsidiaries  and  no  affiliated  companies.   The  executive  offices  of  the
Registrant are located at Suite 825 - 1200 West 73rd Avenue, Vancouver,  British
Columbia, Canada, V6P 6G5, (Tel) 604-267-1100 (Fax) 604-267-1101.


         The  Registrant is engaged in the  exploration  of mineral  properties.
(see Part 1, "Exploration and Development of the Zeb Oro Mineral Property"). The
Registrant is not in the development stage with regards to any mineral claim. No
ore body has been discovered and no substantial exploration has been done on its
mineral  claim.  The Registrant is purely an  exploration  company.  There is no
assurance that any ore body will ever be found and that the Registrant will have
sufficient  funds to undertake the exploration  work required to identify an ore
body.

         Management  anticipates that the Registrant's  shares will be qualified
on the system of the National  Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc. ("NASD")
known as the Bulletin Board.


         The  Registrant  owns the mineral  rights to one mineral claim known as
the Zeb Oro claim . It has the  executive  rights to all minerals on the Zeb Oro
claim until  February 11, 2000. If the Registrant  does not perform  exploration
work or  pay-cash-in-lieu  in the amount of $1,000 (Cdn. $1,500) by February 11,
2000 the rights to the mineral claims will expire and can be staked by others.


         The  Registrant  has no  revenue  to date from the  exploration  of its
mineral property, and its ability to effect its plans for the future will depend
on the availability of financing. Such financing will be required to explore the
Registrant's  mineral  property  to a  stage  where  a  decision  can be made by
management as to whether an ore body exists and can be successfully brought into
production.  The Registrant  anticipates obtaining such funds from its directors
and officers,  financial institutions or by way of the sale of its capital stock
in the future (see Part 1, Item 2 - "Plan of  Operations"),  but there can be no
assurance that the Registrant will be successful in obtaining additional capital
for  exploration  activities  from the sale of its capital stock or in otherwise
raising substantial capital.

                                       3
<PAGE>
PLANNED BUSINESS



         In addition to  exploring  and, if  warranted,  developing  its mineral
property,  the Registrant plans to seek out additional mineral properties either
by way of purchase, staking or joint venturing of other mineral properties. (See
Part 1, Item 2 Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan of Operation").


         Much of the discussion  contained in this section is "forward  looking"
in that actual  results may  materially  differ from the  Registrant's  plans as
currently  contemplated.  Information concerning all the factors associated with
the  Registrant  is set forth in this  Item 1 and in Items 2 and 3 below.  FOR A
COMPLETE  UNDERSTANDING  OF SUCH FACTORS,  THIS ENTIRE  DOCUMENT,  INCLUDING THE
FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  AND  THEIR  ACCOMPANYING  NOTES,  SHOULD  BE  READ IN ITS
ENTIRETY.

         All  dollar  amounts  shown in this  document  are stated in US dollars
unless otherwise noted.

EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ZEB ORO MINERAL PROPERTY

         The Registrant  retained Calvin Church,  P. Geo. of Vancouver,  British
Columbia,  to summarize  the geology and mineral  potential on its mineral claim
near Zeballos, British Columbia. His report is dated April 30, 1999. The mineral
claim was staked  February 11, 1999 by Edward Skoda on behalf of the  Registrant
and named Zeb Oro.


         The claim  covers 15 metric  units  (13.2  miles)  located  within  the
Zeballos  Mining Camp near the town of  Zeballos on the West Coast of  Vancouver
Island,  British  Columbia,  Canada.  Gold bearing  quartz veins in the Zeballos
mining camp  produced over 287,811  ounces of gold and 124,700  ounces of silver
from ore averaging 0.44 ounces per ton during the period 1934 to 1948.


         Calvin Church's report  summarizes  geology and  mineralization  in the
Zeballos  mining camp and potential for  discoveries  on the Zeb Oro claim.  The
report is  summarized  under this section of Part 1. Mr.  Church has not visited
the  property,  which  was  covered  in snow at the time of his  writing  of the
report.


         Church's report gives the following  recommendations for an exploration
program:

o    Airphoto interpretation and reconnaissance mapping is required to determine
     structural  breaks and  intersecting  fault  structures  very  important to
     ground preparation and the formation of mineral deposits in the area.

o    Construction of a soil geochemical grid across structural  features sampled
     at 20 metre  intervals on lines spaced 100 metres  apart.  Major  northeast
     striking  stratigraphic  contacts and shear zones should be prospected  and
     the  grids  orientated  perpendicular  to them  should  they  appear  to be
     mineralized.  If terrain conditions  prohibit  establishing a grid, closely
     spaced contour sampling traverses should be considered.

o    Ground  geophysical  surveys using VLF-EM and  magnetometer  instruments to
     locate less  obvious  linear  features  (faults),  geological  contacts and
     mineralized horizons.


                                       4
<PAGE>


o    Prospecting and detailed  geological mapping at 1:2000 scale or better over
     the entire  claim  area.  Prospecting  could be  prioritized  according  to
     favorable geologic contacts especially where VLF-EM conductors have already
     been identified.

o    Providing  favorable results are obtained in the soil geochemical  sampling
     program additional  exploration  consisting of trenching and drilling would
     be recommended to target anomalies from that program.


 LOCATION, ACCESS AND TOPOGRAPHY

         The Zeb Oro  mineral is  situated  just north of the town of  Zeballos,
which is located on the West Coast of Vancouver Island about 300 kilometres (189
miles) northwest of Victoria, British Columbia. The geographic center of the Zeb
Oro property is located at 126(degree)49'55" West Longitude and 50(degree)02'28"
North Latitude on N.T.S. mapsheet 92 L/2. This location may also be described as
being in U.T.M.  zone 09 (Universal  Transverse  Mercantor grid system stated in
metric used by the military to determine a precise  location)  with  coordinates
Northing  5545200N and Easting 655300E.  The claim's  southeast corner is in the
Zeballos  river  valley  about two  kilometers  (1.2  miles)  downstream  of its
junction with the Nomash River.

         Access is by an all weather road which  follows the Zeballos  River and
connects  Zeballos to the Island  highway at Mukwilla Lake. The road crosses the
southeast  corner of the property seven kilometres (4.3 miles) north of the town
of Zeballos  from where steep  footpaths  follow  creeks to higher ground in the
northwest area of the claim.

         The terrain is mountainous and rugged.  Elevations range from 20 meters
(75  feet) in the  Zeballos  River  valley  to above  1,030  meters  (Mt.  Lukwa
3,749feet) at some of the local peaks within the mining camp. Many of the creeks
flow down  waterfalls  in narrow  canyons and there are many  unscalable  bluffs
which make foot traverses  difficult.  The area is considered coastal rainforest
and total annual  precipitation  is high,  rarely less than 500 centimeters (200
inches.).  Forests of yellow  cedar and hemlock  populate the  mountaintops  and
Douglas fir and red cedar grow well in the river valleys,  however,  much of the
main drainages were logged in the 1940's.


CLAIM STATUS

         The Zeb Oro claim was staked by Edward Skoda and sold to the Registrant
and is  registered  in the  Alberni  Mining  Division of British  Columbia.  The
Registrant owns the claim  outright.  Mineral tenure is secure for one year from
the date of staking as described below.

      Claim Name           Tenure No.       Units           Expiry Date___
      ----------           ----------       -----           --------------
        Zeb Oro             367925           15            February 11, 2000



Meaning of "staking" and how Mr. Skoda staked the Claim.

         The  word  "staking"  is used by the  Ministry  of  Energy,  Mines  and
Petroleum in Mineral Tenure Act to define work on the ground which means cutting
trees for posts,  setting up prepared  posts,  affixing  tags to existing  legal
posts and marking  lines.  The  requirement of the Mineral Tenure Act is that to
obtain the rights to minerals the ground must be staked.  The work  "staking" is
used to satisfy the  requirements  of the Mineral  Tenure Act whereby a "stake",
being a wooden post, must be driven into the ground at the corner of the claim.


                                       5
<PAGE>


To comply with the  requirements  of the Mineral Tenure Act Mr. Skoda  performed
the following:

    (a) Mr. Skoda checked the status of the land to be staked by a review of the
        records at the Gold Commissioner's Office prior to going to the Zeballos
        area.  This review  ensured Mr.  Skoda that the property in question was
        not recorded in the name of another  person or company.  It was free for
        staking.

    (b) With Mr.  Skoda's  Free Miner  Certificate  still in good  standing,  he
        acquired  title  and  topographical  maps  from the Gold  Commissioner's
        Office,  purchased several metal tags to be affixed to the stakes before
        traveling to the Zeballos area.

    (c) At the town of Zeballos Mr.  Skoda  purchased  the posts  (stakes) to be
        used as the  legal  and  identification  posts.  He used two  stakes  as
        required  in a four  post  claim;  one  legal  post  and  the  other  an
        identification  post.  Before going to the Claim Mr. Skoda  prepared the
        posts  (stakes) by cutting  the lower  bottom of each into a sharp point
        for ease of hammering  them into the ground.  The wooden posts  (stakes)
        have to meet certain size specifications as follows:

        a. it must be at least  one metre  (39.37  inches)  above the  ground in
           height;

        b. it must be  squared  and faced on four  sides for at least  25cm (9.8
           inches) from the top;

        c. the width of each of the four  facings at the top of the post must be
           at least:

           i. 89mm (3.5 inches) for legal posts; and

           ii. 38mm (1.5 inches) and 89mm (3.5 inches) for identification posts.

    (d) Due to heavy snow conditions,  Mr. Skoda rented a four-wheel truck and a
        driver to go to the area of the proposed staking of the claim.

    (e) At the area  identified  for staking Mr.  Skoda affix to the side of the
        post a metal tag embossed with the words "Legal  Corner Post",  and fill
        in the required information.

        a. the words  "identification  post";
        b. the name of the claim;
        c. the date that the post is placed.

         Mr. Skoda walked a line of 1,500 feet from the identification  post and
flared the surrounding  trees with paint on the side facing the post and cut the
underbrush  where the trees were not available for painting.  He returned to the
identification  post and did a similar walk at a 90 degree  angle.  Flagging the
trees with ribbon is also  acceptable  or pickets  placed in the ground if there
are no trees. These lines and the "identification"  post are necessary to ensure
there is adequate marking on the ground to identify the claim location.

         In  performing  his duties of  staking  the Zeb Oro  Claim,  Mr.  Skoda
adhered to the above  requirements and filed with the Ministry of Energy,  Mines
and  Petroleum  the  required  information  as contained in the Record of 4 Post
Claim - Mineral Tenure Act (Section 23)


                                       6
<PAGE>


         The  claim  was  staked  by Mr.  Skoda  prior to the  Registrant  being
incorporated.  The name of the Registrant was derived from the claim itself. The
Registrant will  concentrate its efforts in the exploration of the Zeb Oro claim
but will also consider other mineral properties of interest in the future.

         Mr. Skoda was the staker of the Zeb Oro claim who sold the claim to the
Registrant for $376 (Cdn. $550) in March 1999. He is not an officer, director or
shareholder of the Registrant and has no responsibilities in any way with regard
to the Registrant.

REGIONAL GEOLOGY

         Vancouver  Island  is the  main  component  of the  Insular  Belt,  the
westernmost  major tectonic  subdivision of the Canadian  Cordillera;  being the
structure  associated  with the great  mountain  region of western North America
from the eastern face of the Rocky  Mountains to the Pacific Ocean.  The Insular
Belt,  an area where a marked or rather  steep  descent  occurs  towards  deeper
depths,  contains a middle Paleozoic and a Jurassic  volcanic-plutonic  complex,
which  relates to rocks formed at great depths during the Paleozoic and Jurassic
geological  periods,  both apparently  underlain by  gneiss-migmatite  terranes,
being  a  composite  rock  composed  of  igneous  or  igneous-appearing   and/or
metamorphic  material in which bands or lenticles of granular minerals alternate
with bands or lenticles in which  minerals  having flabby or elongate  prismatic
habits  predominate,   and  overlain  respectively  by  Permo-Pennsylvanian  and
Cretaceous  clastic  sediments,  which  are  composed  of  broken  fragments  of
sandstone.  A thick shield of Upper  Triassic  basalt,  which is a  dark-colored
limestone,  overlain by carbonate  clastic  sediments  (carbonated  fragments of
minerals and rock  sediments) , separates these two complexes in space and time.
The Vancouver Group, a defined  volcanoclastic  sequence, is intruded by various
bodies of the Coast  Plutonic  Complex which were emplaced from late Jurassic to
early Cretaceous time. Post orogenic  Tertiary clastic sediments fringe the West
Coast; relates to the era before the Cenozoic era which is known for wide-spread
geological changes where fragments of minerals and rocks were moved individually
from their places of origin.

STRATIGRAPHY

         The volcanic and  sedimentary  rocks of the Vancouver  Group comprise a
conformable series that strikes, in general, northerly to northwesterly and dips
westward to  southwestward.  Consequently the oldest rocks are found to the east
and the youngest to the west. Upper Triassic  Karmutsen  volcanics  (muTRK) form
the base of the  Vancouver  Group  and  consist  of a thick  series of medium to
basic,  highly  amygdaloidal   volcanic  flows,  with  very  little  interbedded
sedimentary  material.  Except in contact  zones with  granitic  intrusions  the
volcanics exhibit low-grade  metamorphism.  The basaltic  eruptions started with
pillow  lavas in a deep marine  rift basin,  continued  with  aquagene  tuff and
breccia,  being a pyroclastic  rock  consisting of more or less equal amounts of
ash,  lapille,  and  larger  fragments,  as  the  basin  became  shallower,  and
terminated with subareal basalt flows.

      Conformably  above  the  Karmutsen  Formation  is the  Quatsino  Formation
(uTRQ), which is composed of massive to thickly bedded white to blue crystalline
limestone.  Poorly  preserved  ammonite  fossils  from  the  Quatsino  limestone
indicates an Upper Triassic age. The succeeding  Parson Bay Formation (uTRPB) is
composed of interbedded  calcareous  black  argillite,  being a layer of calcium
carbonate  compact  rock  derived from  mudstone or shale  situated  between two


                                       7
<PAGE>


layers of rock  parallel to a  disposition  of  sedimentary  rocks),  calcareous
greywacke  (limestone  consisting of greywacke) and sandy to shaly limestone.  A
general  coarsening  of grain size is seen  moving  upward in the  stratigraphic
succession.  The Bonanza  Group (IJB) was  originally  named by H. C. Gunning in
1931 in his  preliminary  report on the Nimpkish  Lake  Quadrangle  on Vancouver
Island and included an upper unit  composed of mainly  rhyolitic  (granite)  and
basaltic tuffs and breccias (broken stones).  In 1977 J. E. Muller  reclassified
the lower calcareous  (calcium  carbonate)  sedimentary unit as belonging to the
Parsons Bay Formation.  The Bonanza  represents  several  eruptive  centres of a
volcanic arc and consequently its stratigraphy varies considerably.

INTRUSIVES

         Most of the intrusive rocks on Vancouver  Island form part of the Coast
Intrusions,  which range in composition from quartz diorite (a group of plutonic
rocks intermediate in composition  between acidic and basic,  characteristically
composed of dark-colored  amphibole (especially  hornblende),  acid plagioclase,
pryoxene and  sometimes a small  amount of quartz) to granite and were  emplaced
during Jurassic or Cretaceous time. On northern Vancouver Island these intrusive
rocks form regional  patterns of narrow  northwest  trending belts  separated by
slightly wider belts of Upper Triassic  volcanic and  sedimentary  rocks. On the
west side of the island the pattern is more pronounced  where a 3 kilometre wide
belt,  just west of Nimpkish Lake,  has been traced  southeast to Vernon Lake, a
distance  of  80  kilometres.  Within  the  Vancouver  and  Bonanza  Groups  the
intrusives  form  sills  (a  concordant  sheet  of  igneous  rock  lying  nearly
horizontal),  dykes  (being  similar  to an earthen  embankment)  and high level
stocks of  hornblende-quartz-feldspar  porphyry (a dark-colored  rock containing
fine grained particles of rock crystals containing pieces of feldspar, a mineral
which decomposes to form much of the clays in the soil) and there is an apparent
comagmatic  relationship between intrusions and volcanics.  Much of the economic
mineralization  within the  Zeballos  mining camp was  developed  in or in close
association  to  these  intruding  batholiths  (a  large,  generally  discordant
plutonic  mass that has more than 40 square  miles of  surface  exposure  and no
known floor) and stocks (chimneylike orebodies).

STRUCTURE

         The structures of northern Vancouver Island are probably due to several
periods of  deformation  occurring  from late Mesozoic to early  Tertiary  time.
Vancouver  Group  rocks are folded  into broad  regional  anticlinoria  (a fold,
generally  convex  upwards,  whose core contains older rocks) and synclinoria (a
fold in which the core  contains  stratagraphically  younger  rocks) that strike
northwesterly  and have average trough  (lowest point) to crest (highest  point)
distances of 11 to 16  kilometres.  A  well-developed  synclinal  structure  was
mapped  between  Bonanza and Nimpkish  lakes  however the fold  pattern  becomes
increasingly  disrupted  toward the  southwest.  The  regional  structure in the
Zeballos map area is complex due to the  predominance  of intrusive  bodies that
disrupt  the broad  folds.  In 1953,  J. W.  Hoadley  described , in his article
entitled "Geology and Mineral Deposits in the Zeballos-Nimpkish  Area, Vancouver
Island, British Columbia" these structures as follows:


        " In the  vicinity  of  major  batholithic  intrusive  bodies,  regional
        structures  have  been  largely   obliterated  or  masked  by  secondary
        structures  imposed during intrusion.  Where the intrusions have invaded
        volcanic  rocks,  general  upwarping  and  relatively  mild  folding are
        observed, and some of the smaller roof pendants have,  apparently,  been
        tilted  en masse  from  their  original  position.  However,  where  the
        intrusive bodies have invaded the Quatsino  limestone or the sedimentary
        part  of

                                       8
<PAGE>
        the  Bonanza  Group  (Parson  Bay  Formation),  the degree of  secondary
        folding is much more  pronounced.  The rocks are  intricately  folded or
        overturned, and, in places, recumbent folds are common."

        Several major north or northwest  trending fault zones are mapped in the
Zeballos  map area.  The most  pronounced  fault  follows  the North Fork of the
Zeballos  River and trends  slightly  west of north and dips  steeply east where
observed.  This  fault is  thought  to be later  than  steeply  dipping  east to
east-northeast striking cross faults.

PROPERTY GEOLOGY


         Detailed  geological  mapping of the Zeballos Mining Camp was completed
by J.S.  Stevenson in 1950.  Mesozoic (an era of geologic time,  from the end of
the Paleozoic to the beginning of the Cenozoic,  or from about 225 million years
to about 65 million years ago)  volcanics  and sediments of the Vancouver  Group
outcrop and are intruded by Coast intrusives of probable  Jurassic age over this
relatively  small  area (58  km(2)).  Geological  mapping by  Stevenson  did not
attempt to make regional  correlations  but instead used lithology (the basis of
describing in terms of its structure, color, mineral composition, grain size and
arrangement of its  individuality  of rocks) of the rocks to define the mappable
units.

         The volcanic and sedimentary  rocks comprise a conformable  series that
strikes north-northwest and dips south to southwesterly so that the oldest rocks
are  found  to the  east  and  the  youngest  to the  west.  Andesitic  lava  (a
dark-colored,  fine grained  extrusive rock) of the Karmutsen  volcanics outcrop
west of the North Fork of the Zeballos  river and  represent  the oldest  mapped
unit.  Massive limestone of the Quatsino Formation overlies the lava to the west
along Contact creek. A large  assemblage of volcanics,  mainly  pyroclastics  (a
rock formation  produced by explosive or aerial injection of ash,  fragments and
glassy material form a volcanic vent) and minor flows of the Bonanza  Formation,
overlies the limestone  conformably  to the west and outcrops over the southwest
quadrant of the mining  camp.  A  northwesterly  belt of Coast  intrusives  that
include,  from  oldest  to  youngest,  gabbro  (a group of  dark-colored,  basic
intrusive  igneous rocks  composed  principally of basic  plagioclase  [commonly
labradorite or bytownite] and  clinopyroxene  [augite],  with or without olivine
and   orthopyroxene)   and  hornblende   diorite,   granodiorite   (a  group  of
course-grained plutonic rocks intermediate in composition between quartz diorite
and quartz monzonite,  containing quartz,  plagioclase and potassium  feldspar),
quartz diorite, and several varieties of dykes, invade the stratified rocks. The
intrusives are a dominant  feature  within the Zeballos  mining camp and as most
mineral  deposits  are  associated  with it,  is of  considerable  economic  and
geological interest.

         The major structure of the area is a monoclinal  fold,  being a uniform
gentle dip,  that strikes  northwest and dips 40 to 60 degrees  southwest.  This
fold is modified by a major  northwest  trending  dragfold  (being a minor fold,
usually  one of a  series,  formed in an  incompetent  bed  lying  between  more
competite  beds,  produced  by  movement  of  the  competent  beds  in  opposite
directions relative to one another) between Lime and Contact creeks in which the
crest  follows  Lime  creek and the trough  follows  the ridge 600 metres to the
east.  Minor  dragfolds  occur near  contacts with the quartz  diorite.  A major
northerly trending fault of indeterminate displacement follows the North Fork of
the Zeballos River and appears to dip vertical or steeply east. About 800 metres
up Fault Creek from the junction  with the North Fork is a second fault of major
importance.  The fault strikes  east-southeast and dips steeply  north-northeast
offsetting the west dipping  contact  between  Quatsino  limestone and Karmutsen
volcanic rocks about 600 metres to the west on the south side of the fault.



                                       9
<PAGE>
MINERALIZATION AND ALTERATION


         Mineral deposits of the area include gold-bearing quartz veins and high
temperature  replacement (skarn) or contact metamorphic deposits in limestone or
calcareous  sedimentary rocks (containing  calcium  carbonate).  Deposits of the
latter type are confined to areas where Quatsino limestone and sedimentary parts
of the Karmutsen and Bonanza group rocks have been invaded by Coast  intrusions.
The  replacements  typically  contain  chiefly  magnetite with lesser amounts of
pyrrhotite  (a  monoclinic  and  hexagonal   mineral)  or  they  contain  mainly
chalcopyrite (a brass-yellow with  bluish-tarnish  mineral which is often softer
than  pyrite) and only minor  magnetite  and  pyrrhotite  (Maquinna  and Central
Zeballos) and sometimes appreciable gold (Beano). In the Ford skarn deposit a 21
metre thick tabular body of magnetite  follows a limestone-tuff  contact and has
been traced along 400 metres of strike.

         Auriferous    gold-bearing    veins   of   the   Zeballos    camp   are
characteristically  narrow, with widths less than one foot (30 cm), but commonly
contain gold in excess of one ounce to the ton (35  g/tonne).  Some of the veins
occur in sheeted  zones up to 4 feet (1.2 m) wide that may pinch and swell along
strike forming lenticular (curved  structure)  quartz-sulphide  zones (Goldfield
Vein). The veins follow fairly continuous fault fissures and are often banded by
an  alternation of quartz and sulphides  where the abundance of sulphide  varies
from 10 to 50 percent  and  averages  about 25 percent.  Sulphides,  in order of
abundance   are  pyrite,   sphalerite,   arsenopyrite,   chalcopyrite,   galena,
pyrrhotite, and occasionally marcasite.


         The  producing  mines in the camp were located at the  northwest end or
nose of the quartz diorite intrusive body and related to structural  deformation
and mineralization  there. It has been found that veins, or parts of veins, that
follow the direction of tension in any fracture  pattern are the most favourable
for the  localization of ore. A study of fracture  patterns in the Zeballos camp
by J. S. Stevenson in 1950  determined  that veins that strike close to north 62
degrees east and dip  vertically  were formed by tension and thus most likely to
contain  higher grade  oreshoots.  This  discovery  has been proven by practical
experience where several high grade veins (Privateeer No.3,  Goldfield Vein) and
gash veins in the Zeballos camp are orientated in this direction.

         On the Zeb Oro claim there are more than six  sheared-vein  showings of
limited  extent  containing  minor  amounts of gold and base metals.  The shears
zones are generally less than one metre wide, strike 052 to 090 degrees, and dip
steeply  north or south.  The quartz veins within the shears are usually 5 to 30
centimetres wide and mineralized with  pyrite-arsenopyrite and lesser amounts of
pyrrhotite,   sphalerite  and  galena.   Coast  intrusive  phases,   ranging  in
composition from diorite to granodiorite, host most of the veins on the property
or are spatially  related to gold-quartz  veining in intruded  volcanic rocks of
the Bonanza Group.


         The Maquinna Vein is one of the more developed showings on the property
and has been traced on surface and underground for over 640 metres.  Locally the
vein is  ribboned  and  ranges  up to 1 metre in width  with  values  up to 21.3
grams/tonne.  Many of the veins on the property are  oriented in  directions  of
maximum shear stress (090(degree)) and as such there is a predominance of broken
quartz  fragments  and  gouge  (being  a  layer  of  soft,  earthly  or  clayey,
fault-comminuted  rock  material  along a vein - so  named  because  miners  can
"gouge" it out to facilitate  the mining of the vein itself)  within the shears.
Directly  south  (250  m),  chalcopyrite-magnetite  mineralization  hosted  in a
silicified lens of Quatsino limestone has been explored by a series of open cuts
and a short adit. These showings,  formerly known as the Blackbird/Jack O'Spades
property, represent skarn replacement mineralization.

                                       10
<PAGE>


         The Registrant has not yet undertaken any exploration activities on its
mineral claim either in identifying  areas for  establishing a grid or in taking
soil samples.


CONCLUSIONS MADE BY CALVIN CHURCH IN THIS REPORT.

o    The Zeb Oro  property  is  situated  within the  Zeballos  mining camp that
     includes  a number  of  former  producing  lode gold  mines  including  the
     Privateer  and Spud Valley mines.  Together  these mines  produced  287,811
     ounces of gold and 124,700  ounces of silver from 651,000 tons of ore mined
     giving an over all grade for the camp of 0.44 ounces gold per ton.

o    Most of the  production  came from  gold-bearing  veins  less than one foot
     (30cm) wide and because the veins were much  narrower  than stoping  widths
     dilution of the ore was quite high  especially  in areas of highly  sheared
     wall rock. Thus the actual grade of many of the producing veins in the camp
     are commonly higher than one ounce per ton.

o    Auriferous  quartz veins occur in the border phases of the intrusive  rocks
     and in the adjacent host rocks although  there are isolated  occurrences of
     gold-bearing  veins up to one  mile  (1.6  km)  from  any  known  intrusive
     contact.

o    The veins are commonly  banded by an  alternation  of sulphides  and quartz
     indicating several episodes of mineralization. Sulphides are common in most
     of the  Zeballos  veins  comprising  10 to 50% of  the  vein  material.  In
     quartz-sulphide  ores the gold content  increases in proportion to sulphide
     content and the  presence of galena or  sphalerite  probably  due to a late
     pulse of mineralization.

o    Studies of structural  deformation in the quartz diorite intrusive indicate
     that   veins   which   developed   parallel   to  the   plane  of   tension
     (062(degree)/90) contain the highest grade oreshoots.  Veins that developed
     along planes of maximum shearing stress (035(degree)/90 and 090(degree)/90)
     tend to be lower grade and contain abundant rock fragments and gouge.

o    High  temperature  replacement  deposits  (skarns) are found along contacts
     between Coast intrusive rocks and limestone or calcareous  sediments within
     the Zeballos mining camp. The Ford deposit produced 1,282,233,396 kilograms
     of iron  concentrate  from  1,681,283  tonnes  of ore  mined  from  massive
     replacement bodies of massive fine-grained magnetite.

RECOMMENDATIONS

o    Airphoto   interpretation  and  reconnaissance  mapping  is
     required to determine  structural  breaks and  intersecting
     fault  structures very important to ground  preparation and
     the formation of mineral deposits in the area.                      $ 2,500
                                                                         -------

o    Construction of a soil geochemical  grid across  structural
     features  sampled at 20 metre intervals on lines spaced 100
     metres  apart.  Major  northeast   striking   stratigraphic
     contacts and shear zones should be prospected and the grids
     orientated  perpendicular  to them should they appear to be
     mineralized.  If terrain conditions prohibit establishing a
     grid,  closely spaced contour sampling  traverses should be
     considered.                                                           7,500
                                                                           -----


                               12
<PAGE>
o    Ground  geophysical  surveys using VLF-EM and  magnetometer
     instruments   to  locate  less  obvious   linear   features
     (faults),  geological  contacts and  mineralized  horizons.           1,000
                                                                           -----

o    Prospecting and detailed geological mapping at 1:2000 scale
     or better over the entire claim area.  Prospecting could be
     prioritized   according  to  favorable   geologic  contacts
     especially  where  VLF-EM   conductors  have  already  been
     identified.                                                           1,000
                                                                           -----

o    Providing  favorable  results  are  obtained  in  the  soil
     geochemical   sampling   program   additional   exploration
     consisting of trenching and drilling  would be  recommended
     to target anomalies from that program.                              150,000
                                                                         -------
     Estimated cost of exploration program                           $   162,000
                                                                         =======

The estimated cost of doing the above noted  exploration  work was determined by
Calvin Church. Presently the Registrant does not have the funds to undertake all
of Church's  recommendations.  The first four  recommendations can be undertaken
since the  directors  and officers are  prepared to advance the  Registrant  the
funds  required  to  complete  them.  The  Registrant  will not  have the  funds
available to start the  trenching and drilling  recommendation.  It will have to
seek these funds from either institutional lenders (none have been identified to
date) or from the sale of its  capital  stock.  There is no  certainty  that any
funds can be raised for trenching and drilling.


REGISTRANT'S MAIN PRODUCT

         The Registrant's primary product will be the exploration of its mineral
property which might  eventually  result in the sale of minerals,  both precious
and  commercial.  The  Registrant  is not at the  stage of  exploration  whereby
minerals can be mined and sold thereby giving the Registrant a cash flow.

REGISTRANT'S EXPLORATION FACILITIES

         The Registrant  will be exploring its mineral  claims  initially in the
Zeballos area of British Columbia and does not plan to build any mill or smelter
until such time as a  production  decision is made.  This will be several  years
into the future  before the need to build a  permanent  facility  is  warranted.
During the exploration  period, the Registrant will use tent facilities to house
its  geological  workers  since  this  will be by far the most  economic  way to
proceed.

RISK INHERENT IN MINERAL PROPERTIES

         There are certain inherent risks with mineral properties from the point
of view of the Registrant and its shareholders as follows:

    1.   No Commercial Ore Body Exists

         The Zeb Oro claim does not contain a known body of commercial  ore and,
         therefore,  any  program  conducted  on  these  properties  would be an
         exploratory search of ore.

                               12
<PAGE>

    2.   Expenditures on Exploration  Might Not Result in a Commercial  Quantity
         of Ore

         There is no certainty that any expenditures  made in the exploration of
         the  Zeb  Oro  property  will  result  in   discoveries  of  commercial
         quantities  of ore.  Most  exploration  projects  do not  result in the
         discovery of commercially mineable deposits of ore.

    3.   Future Funding Might Not be Available

         Resource  exploration and  development is a speculative  business since
         there is no  assurance  after the  initial  funds are  raised  that the
         Registrant can raise any further funds from the market place.

    4.   Ore Body Discovered Which is Not Commercial Viable

         The Registrant might discover a mineral deposit which,  though present,
         is insufficient in size or grade to return a profit from production.

    5.   Market Factors Beyond the Control of the Registrant


         The  marketability  of  any  minerals  acquired  or  discovered  may be
         affected by numerous factors which are beyond the Registrant's  control
         and which cannot be accurately predicted,  such as market fluctuations,
         the proximity and capacity of milling  facilities,  mineral markets and
         processing equipment, and such other factors as government regulations,
         including  regulations  relating to  royalties,  allowable  production,
         importing and exporting of minerals, and environmental protection.


    6.   Competition with Other Companies

         The  mineral  industry  is  intensely  competitive  and the  Registrant
         competes with other companies that have greater resources.  Not only is
         the competition for mineral  properties of merit extremely  competitive
         but the search  for funds to develop  existing  mineral  properties  is
         competitive.  The  Registrant  might not be able to  compete as well as
         larger and more well known mineral companies.

    7.   High Degree of Risk in Exploring the Zeb Oro mineral claim

         Mining operations generally involve a high degree of risk. Hazards such
         as unusual or unexpected  formations and other conditions are involved.
         The Registrant may become subject to liability for pollution,  cave-ins
         or hazards  against which it cannot insure or which it may not elect to
         insure.  The payment of such  liabilities may have a material,  adverse
         effect on the Registrant's financial position.

    8.   Environmental Requirements

         Prior to commencing  mining  operations on any of its  properties,  the
         Registrant  must meet certain  environmental  requirements.  Compliance
         with these  requirements  may prove to be difficult and expensive.  The
         Province  of British  Columbia  has  enacted  statutory  provisions  to
         protect the Crown's  property;  being the claim that the Registrant has
         the rights to the mineral thereon.  The Acts that the Registrant has to
         adhere to are the "Timber Harvesting  Practices  Regulations",  Mineral
         Tenure  Act,  Coal Act and  Forestry  Act.  Each of the formed Acts has
         their own  environmental  concerns which the Registrant must adhere to.
         The  Registrant  might be liable for pollution if it does not


                                       13
<PAGE>


         adhere to the  requirements of the various Acts.  Environment  concerns
         relate to the use and  supply of water,  the  animal  life in the area,
         fish  live in the  streams,  the  need to cut  timber  and  removal  of
         overburden; being the soil above the hard rock. No building or fixtures
         of any nature can be erected without the prior approval of the district
         inspector  for the  Province.  To  undertake  any form of work  program
         beyond grid preparation and soil sampling,  the Registrant will have to
         prepare a "Mineral  & Coal  Notice of Work and  Reclamation"  form that
         requires the  Registrant to indicate its expected  exploration  program
         and how it will affect water and soil concerns.  The cost and effect of
         adhering to the  environment  requires are unknown to the Registrant at
         this time and cannot be reasonably estimated.


         9. Undisclosed Claims Against the Zeb Oro Mineral Claim

         While the  Registrant  has obtained the usual  industry  standard title
         reports with respect to the Zeb Oro claim, this should not be construed
         as a  guarantee  of  title.  This  property  may be  subject  to  prior
         unregistered  agreements  or  transfers or native land claims and title
         may be affected  by  undetected  defects.  Certain of the claims may be
         under  dispute and  resolutions  of a dispute may result in the loss of
         all of  such  property  or a  reduction  in the  Registrant's  interest
         therein.

         10. No Survey has been Performed

         The Zeb Oro claim has never been surveyed and, accordingly, the precise
         location of the  boundaries  of the property  and  ownership of mineral
         rights on specific  tracts of land  comprising  the  property may be in
         doubt.

         11. Going Concern Qualification by the Registrant's Auditors

         The Registrant's auditors have qualified their opinion as follows:

             "The accompanying  financial statements have been prepared assuming
             that the Company will continue as a going  concern.  The Company is
             in the exploration  stage and will need additional  working capital
             for its planned activity,  which raises substantial doubt about its
             ability to continue as a going concern.  Management's plans in this
             regard to these  matters are  described in Note 5. These  financial
             statements  do not include any  adjustments  that might result from
             the outcome of this uncertainty".

         In Note 5 to the financial statements,  the Registrant acknowledges the
         fact that it is dependent upon additional financing in order to develop
         its claim. If the Registrant is unable to raise additional financing it
         will not be able to continue and may  eventually  cease to operate as a
         company.  The  auditor  wishes to alert the  readers  of the  financial
         statements  that  he  agrees  with  the  Registrant  that  there  is  a
         possibility that without  additional funding the Registrant will not be
         able to complete its goals and might cease to be an operating entity.

         12. Concentration of Ownership in the Registrant by Management


         Out of the  11,025,000  shares  issued and  outstanding,  Steven Bruce,
         President of the Registrant,  and Michael Kennaugh,  each own 2,500,000
         shares of the Registrant representing 45.35% of the stock issued. There
         is very little chance that any individual or group of  individuals  can
         exercise  their  shareholders'  voting right to replace either of these
         two


                                       14
<PAGE>


         directors.  Therefore,  these two  directors  effectively  control  the
         Registrant and can dedicate policy as they determine it.

         13. Management's Limited Experience in the Mining Industry

         The executive officers of the Registrant do not have past experience in
         the mining industry. None of the executive officers have been officers,
         directors or employees of any company in the mining industry. This lack
         of  experience  might  cause  the  Registrant  to make  decisions  that
         otherwise  would not be warranted and cause  hardship on the Registrant
         and its ability to fulfill its objectives.

         14. Conflict of Interest of the Directors and Officers

         Some of the Directors of the Registrant are also directors and officers
         of other  companies.  and conflicts of interest may arise between their
         duties as directors of the  Registrant  and as  directors,  officers of
         other  companies.  Even with full  disclosure  by all the directors and
         officers,  the  Registrant  cannot insure that it will receive fair and
         equitable treatment in every transaction.

L.       OTHER MINERAL PROPERTIES

         The Registrant has not identified any other mineral  properties  either
for staking or purchasing.

EMPLOYEES

         As at April 30, 1999, the Registrant did not have any employees  either
part  time or full  time.  Initially  the  Registrant  will not wish to bear the
burden of carrying  full time  employees  especially  during  periods when it is
difficult to work on the property due to weather  conditions.  Nevertheless  the
executive  officers  undertook  the  responsibility  of initially  identifying a
mineral  property  of  merit,   incorporating  the  Registrant,   obtaining  the
assistance  of  professionals  as needed,  identifying  potential  investors  to
contribute the initial "seed capital",  coordinating various filing requirements
and other matters normally  performed by the executive  officers.  They were not
paid for these  services in cash by the  Registrant but the Registrant has given
recognition in the financial statements to this contribution by expensing $1,000
for services of the  President  and  crediting  capital  contribution  of a like
amount.

         The Registrant is not a party to any employment contracts or collective
bargaining agreements.  The British Columbia area has a relatively large pool of
people experienced in exploration and development of mineral  properties;  being
mainly  geologists  and mining  consultants.  In  addition,  there is no lack of
people who have experience in working on mineral  properties  either as laborers
or  prospectors.  The Registrant  will use  independent  workers and consultants
initially on a part time basis.

COMPETITION

         In Canada there are numerous mining and exploration companies, both big
and small. All of these mining and exploration  companies are seeking properties
of merit and  availability of funds. The Registrant will have to compete against
such  companies  to  acquire  the  funds to  develop  its  mineral  claims.  The
availability  of funds for  exploration is sometimes  limited and the Registrant
might find it difficult to compete with larger and more well-known companies for
capital.  Even though the Registrant has the rights to the mineral on its claims
there is no guarantee it will be able to raise sufficient funds in the future to
maintain its mineral claims in good standing. Therefore, if the


                                       15

<PAGE>

situation  occurs that it does not have  sufficient  funds for  exploration  the
claims might lapse and be staked by other mining interests. The Registrant might
be forced to seek a joint venture  partner to assist in the  development  of its
mineral claims. In this case, there is the possibility that the Registrant might
not be able to pay its proportionate share of the exploration costs and might be
diluted to an insignificant carried interest.

         Even  when a  commercial  viable  ore body is  discovered,  there is no
guarantee  competition in refining the ore will not exist.  Other  companies may
have  long  term  contracts  with  refining  companies  thereby  inhibiting  the
Registrant's  ability to process its ore and eventually market it. At this point
in time the Registrant  does not have any  contractual  agreements to refine any
potential ore it might discover on its mineral claims.

         The  exploration  and  development  business is highly  competitive and
highly fragmented,  dominated by both large and small mining companies.  Success
will largely be dependent on the Registrant's ability to attract talent from the
mining field.  There is no assurance  that the  Registrant's  mineral  expansion
plans will be realized.

ITEM 2.           MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
                  OR PLAN OF OPERATION

         The  discussion  contained in this Item 2 is "forward  looking" in that
actual work performed on the  Registrant's  mineral property may differ from the
recommended  work program as set forth in the geological  report dated April 30,
1999  prepared  by Calvin  Church,  P.Geo..  Factors  that could  cause the work
program to differ are described throughout this Form.

PLAN OF OPERATION


         To date the  Registrant  has  concentrated  on the Zeb Oro  claim.  The
Registrant is hoping to undertake an exploration program on its claim during the
fall of 1999.  It  expects  to  construct  a grid on the claim  after a detailed
mapping program has been done to determine the structure breaks and intersecting
fault structures on the claim. A grid is a geological method whereby two sets of
uniform spaced  parallel  lines  intercept at right angles by means of which the
surface of the area is divided  into squares  like a  checkerboard.  At the same
location in each square,  for example the upper left hand side of the square,  a
soil sample is taken.  All the soil samples are set to a laboratory for analysis
and  subsequently  the results are posted to a chart of the grid to determine if
there is a trend. By visually  examining the  checkerboard  chart, the geologist
will  determine  when  additional   samples  should  be  taken  and  assayed.  A
concentration  of positive grade values of ore as defined by the assays from the
laboratory  in one  direction  on the  checkerboard  chart  will  indicate  that
additional  soil  samples  are  warranted.  This stage  will cost  approximately
$10,000. After the additional samples are assayed the geologist will decide on a
ground survey using VLF-EM and magnetometer instruments in the area of interest.
There is the  distinct  possibility  that no values  will be  obtained  from the
Registrant's  grid and soil sampling  program.  It is estimated that the cost of
performing  the VLF-EM  and  magnetometer  is  estimated  to cost  approximately
$1,000.  If  this  stage  proves  success,   the  Registrant  will  undertake  a
prospecting and detailed geological mapping over the entire Zeb Oro claims. This
latter stage will cost  approximately  $1,000.  The next stage of trenching  and
drilling which may be several years into the future.  The cost is expected to be
approximately  $150,000.  There is no guarantee  that the  Registrant  will ever
reach this stage since the early exploration stages might prove that there is no
commercially  viable ore body on the Zeb Oro claim and the Registrant  will have
to abandon it.

         In the future,  the Registrant  will seek to  investigate  other mining
properties  to  determine  which  ones are of merit and are of  interest  to the
Registrant.  Subject to the availability of financing,  the Registrant will seek
to  increase  its  inventory  of  mineral   properties  and,  if  acceptable  to
management,

                                       16
<PAGE>

enter into joint venture  agreements to develop various other mineral properties
of merit.  (See Part 1, Item 1 - "Description of the Business").  The Registrant
will  seek  to  generate  such  funds  through  the  sale of  securities  and/or
institutional  financing.  If an underwriter  can be found, a public offering of
common stock will be considered; alternatively the Registrant will seek to raise
funds  through a private  offering of securities  to an  institutional  buyer or
through a registered  broker dealer.  The Registrant does not presently have any
financing arranged for nor has any underwriter yet expressed interest in such an
offering,  and there can be no  assurance  that an  underwriter  can be found on
terms  acceptable  to the  Registrant.  In the  absence of such  financing,  the
Registrant may be unable to put its plans into effect.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

         As at April 30, 1999, the  Registrant had $9,811 of assets,  and $3,345
of liabilities. The cash equivalent as at April 30, 1999 was $9,811.

         The  Registrant  has  no  contractual   obligations  for  either  lease
premises, employment agreements or work commitments on the Zeb Oro claim and has
made no commitments to acquire any asset of any nature.


         Operational and administrative  expenses of the Registrant for 1999 are
projected to be approximately $4,500 which will comprise audit ($1,500),  filing
fees with regulatory authorities -Edgar ($1,200), transfer agent's fees ($1,000)
and miscellaneous  ($750).  The Zeb Oro claim is in good standing until February
2000 and if warranted the Registrant need not spend any money on its claim until
that date.  The cost to maintain the claim in good  standing  for an  additional
year after  February  11,  2000 is $1,000.  The  Registrant  can either  perform
exploration  work on the claim in this amount or pay the Ministry of Finance the
equivalent sum. The latter payment is known as cash-in-lieu. To maintain the Zeb
Oro claim in good standing for the year commencing  February 11, 2001 the amount
would be $2,000. There is no increase in amount to be spent on the mineral claim
after the second year; it will remain at $2,000.


         The current cash position is sufficient to pay the above noted expenses
and if required the officers and directors can advance  additional  funds to the
Registrant.

         Since March 4, 1999, the date of inception, the Registrant has incurred
the following expenses:

     Accounting and audit                      (1)       $   2,250
     Bank charges                              (2)              75
     Geology report                            (3)           1,200
     Incorporation costs written-off           (4)             670
     Management fee                            (5)           1,000
     Office and miscellaneous                  (6)             175
     Rent                                      (7)             600
     Staking costs                             (8)             368
     Telephone                                 (9)             200
     Transfer agent's fees                    (10)           2,296
              Total expenses for the period              $   8,834
                                                            ======

     (1)      Audit fee - $2,250

     The Registrant had its financial  statements  audited as at April 30, 1999,
     as  attached  to  this  Form  10-SB,  for a fee  of  $1,500.  In  addition,
     accounting  services  in the  preparation  of a working  paper file and the
     accounting records of the Registrant resulted in an invoice of $750.

                                       17
<PAGE>
     (2)      Bank changes - $75

     Monthly service charges for operating the account as charged by the Bank of
     Montreal.

     (3)    Geology report - $1,200

     The Registrant  engaged the services of Calvin Church,  P. Geo., to write a
     report to the Registrant  detailing the mineralization on the Zeb Oro claim
     and recommending a future work program.  This report was completed on April
     30, 1999 and has been  summarized in part in this Form under the heading of
     "Exploration and Development of Zeb Oro Mineral Property."

     (4)      Incorporation costs written-off - $670

     The Registrant has treated the costs of  incorporation  as period costs and
     has  written  them off as an  expense in the  current  period  rather  than
     capitalize them and amortize them over a period of time.

     (5) Management fee - $1,000

     The  Registrant  has not paid any fees to its directors or officers  during
     the current period.  Nevertheless,  the Registrant realizes that there is a
     cost involved in the directors and officers devoting time and effort to the
     affairs of the Registrant.  Therefore,  a management fee of $1,000 has been
     expensed and credited to capital contribution during the current period.

     (6)      Office and miscellaneous - $175

     Office and miscellaneous  represents the printing of cheques for use by the
     Registrant, photocopying, courier and fax charges for the period.

     (7) Rent  -  $600

     The  Registrant  uses  the  personal  residence  of  the  President  of the
     Registrant  as an office.  No charge has been  incurred by the  Registrant.
     Nevertheless,  the Registrant  recognizes  that there is a cost to using an
     office and therefore has expensed $600 and credited to capital contribution
     a similar amount.

     (8)      Staking costs - $368

     The  Registrant  engaged the  services of Edward Skoda to stake the Zeb Oro
     claim in the Zeballos  area of British  Columbia.  Mr.  Skoda  invoiced the
     Registrant for his staking and recording costs.

     (9) Telephone - $200

     The   Registrant   has  not  incurred  any   telephone   charges  to  date.
     Nevertheless,  the Registrant recognizes the fact that there is a telephone
     cost to  operating  a business  and  therefore  has  expensed  $200 with an
     offsetting credit to capital  contribution.  This expense was determined on
     the fair market value of  obtaining a telephone  line and  operating  for a
     three month period.

     (10) Transfer agent's fees - $2,296

     Transfer agent's fees comprise $1,200 as the annual fee paid to maintain an
     account with the transfer agent and $1,096 for  preparation and issuance of
     share certificates.  The Registrant has treated for accounting purposes the
     annual fee of $1,200 as a period cost and has written it off in the current
     period rather than amortizating it over the entire year.

                                       18
<PAGE>
         Management  feels that its present cash  position  after the payment of
all outstanding  accounts  payable is sufficient to meet its present needs other
than  undertaking any exploration  program on the Zeb Oro claim. To maintain the
Zeb Oro claims in good standing for an additional  year, being to February 2001,
would  result in cash been spent in the amount of  approximately  $1,000.  Other
expenses  required  by the  Registrant  in the  immediate  future  would  be for
accounting, transfer agent charges, office expenses and audit. If the Registrant
wishes to explore  the Zeb Oro claim it will  require  additional  funds.  These
funds might be provided by the directors and officers,  by way of bank financing
or the selling of the  Registrant's  capital stock.  No  consideration,  at this
time, has been given to the raising of additional funds.

         Management  does  not  believe  the  Company's   operations  have  been
materially affected by inflation.

ITEM 3.           DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY


         The Zeb Oro claim  consists  of one 15 unit metric  claim (13.2  miles)
situated  within the  Zeballos  mining camp near the town of Zeballos  about 300
kilometres (186 miles) northwest of Victoria,  British Columbia. The property is
100 percent owned by Zeb Oro Explorations Inc.

         The following is a description  of the past  exploration  activities on
the Zeb Oro claim.

         Several  prospects lie within or on the claim boundaries of the Zeb Oro
claim and can be seen on Exhibit  99 (a).  These  prospects  were all staked and
explored  initially  between 1936 and 1939 and have seen little  activity since.
Most of this early work consisted of surface stripping and a number of open cuts
or short adits driven on high-grade gold veins.  The entrances to most adits are
now caved and covered by debris and the open cuts are sloughed.

         The most extensive workings were developed on the Maquinna vein where a
total of six adits and numerous surface workings traced the vein over 670 meters
(2,630 feet). West Zeballos Gold Mines Ltd., who owned the claims,  now owned by
the  Registrant,  from 1938  until  1943,  did all the  development  work on the
Maquinna property.  The vein is ribboned with sulphides and quartz,  varying 2.5
to 27  centimeters  in width with assays up to 21.3 grams per tonne gold however
assays  long the vein are  generally  less than 7.0 grams  per tonne  gold.  The
Blackbird  occurrence is considered part of the Maquinna property and is located
220 meters south of the main adit. A silicified  lens of limestone is exposed at
the Blackbird over 25 meters and contains pods of magnetite and  chalcopyrite in
contact with hornfelsed tuffs to the north.

         The Cordova  shear-vein  occurrence was staked initially by R.V. Murphy
in 1937. He explored gold  mineralized  quartz lenses in the shear drifting a 15
meter (46 feet) adit and  opening  working  three open cuts.  The only  recorded
production  from the Zeb Oro  property  comes from the Cordova vein in 1939 when
156 grams gold,  31 grams silver and 4 kilograms of copper were  recovered  from
1.0 tonnes of ore.

         Three  other  shear-vein  occurrences  are  located  within the Zeb Oro
property  however  limited  exploration  work was  completed on them due to poor
initial results.  The Pandora vein occurs in a narrow  mineralized shear (10 cm)
and was  staked and worked in the 1939 by Jack  Crossan of  Zeballos.  The Omega
vein was  staked  by John  Hagmo and C.J.  Heaney in 1937 and later  transferred
ownership to Torres-Zeballos  Mines Ltd. who drove one short adit on the vein in
1939. No  production  was ever  recorded  from the Omega  showing.  The Peerless
occurrence is a gold mineralized  quartz vein (5.0 cm) which follows the contact
of the feldspar-porphyry dyke.

                                       19
<PAGE>


The vein was  prospected  and  exposed on surface by Pioneer  Gold Mines Ltd. in
1937 and 1938 however no further work has ever been recorded.

         The  Registrant's  geologist  has not taken any soil  samples  from the
property due to the snow conditions  being present when the Registrant  acquired
the claim.

OFFICES

         The Registrant's  executive offices are located at 825 - 1200 West 73rd
Avenue,  Vancouver,  British  Columbia,  Canada.  The  office is  located in the
offices of the President of the Registrant  which are used to transact  business
of his other business interests. There is no charge to the Registrant for office
but an imputed  charge of $600 has been expensed  during the current period with
an offsetting  entry to capital  contribution.  The Registrant  realizes it will
eventually  be  required  to  contribute  its fair  share  to  office  rent.  No
discussions  between  the  directors  has taken place to date to decide upon the
terms and conditions of the office rent.

INCORPORATION IN THE STATE OF NEVADA

         The Registrant  incorporated in the State of Nevada rather than British
Columbia mainly due to the tax reasons.  In British  Columbia the province has a
capital tax based on the issued and outstanding  shares.  This is an annual tax.
In  addition  both the  Federal  and  Provincial  Governments  impose tax on any
profits  made.  This tax could range as high as 51% of net  income.  By having a
Nevada based company the  Registrant  will only be subject to a 15%  withholding
tax as set forth in the  Canada/  US Tax  Treaty.  The  State of  Nevada  has no
corporate tax.

OTHER PROPERTY

The  Registrant  does not own any other  property  other  than the rights to the
minerals located on the Zeb Oro claim.

ITEM 4.           SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN
                  BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT

SECURITIES OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS

         The following table sets forth certain  information with respect to the
beneficial  ownership  of each person who is known to the  Registrant  to be the
beneficial owner of more than 5% of the Registrant's Common Stock as of June 30,
1999.

  (1)              (2)                             (3)              (4)
 TITLE      NAME AND ADDRESS                AMOUNT AND NATURE      PERCENT
   OF         OF BENEFICIAL                   OF BENEFICIAL          OF
 CLASS           OWNER                      OWNERSHIP (1),(2)     CLASS (2)
 -----           ------                     -----------------     ---------
Common      STEVEN BRUCE                       2,500,000 (i)       22.68%
Shares      825 - 1200 West 73rd Avenue
            Vancouver, B.C.
            Canada, V6P 6G7

Common      MICHAEL J. KENNAUGH                2,500,000 (ii)      22.68%
Shares      42 - 2951 Panorama Drive
            Coquitlam, British Columbia
            Canada, V3E 2W3


                                       20
<PAGE>
- -------
(1) As of June 30, 1999 there were 11,025,000 common shares outstanding.  Unless
    otherwise noted, the security ownership disclosed in this table is of record
    and beneficial.

(2) Under Rule 13-d under the Exchange Act,  shares not  outstanding but subject
    to options,  warrants,  rights, conversion privileges pursuant to which such
    shares may be acquired in the next 60 days are deemed to be outstanding  for
    the purpose of computing the percentage of  outstanding  shares owned by the
    persons having such rights,  but are not deemed  outstanding for the purpose
    of computing the percentage for such other persons.

     (i) Steven Bruce,  the President and Director of the Registrant,  purchased
         for cash 2,500,000 shares at a price of $0.001 per share.  These shares
         were issued pursuant to the exemption from  registration  under Section
         4(2) of the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as  amended.  Each of the  share
         certificates  has the  appropriate  legend  restricting  its  sale  and
         transfer.

     (ii)Michael J. Kennaugh,  a director of the Registrant,  purchased for cash
         2,500,000  shares at a price of $0.001 per  share.  These  shares  were
         issued pursuant to the exemption from  registration  under Section 4(2)
         of  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended.  Each  of  the  share
         certificates  has the  appropriate  legend  restricting  its  sale  and
         transfer.

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT

         The following table sets forth certain  information with respect to the
beneficial  ownership of each officer and  director,  and of all  directors  and
executive officers as a group as of June 30, 1999.

     (1)               (2)                         (3)                 (4)
    TITLE       NAME AND ADDRESS             AMOUNT AND NATURE        PERCENT
      OF          OF BENEFICIAL                OF BENEFICIAL            OF
    CLASS            OWNER                   OWNERSHIP (1),(2)       CLASS (2)
    -----            ------                  -----------------       ---------
Common       STEVEN BRUCE                       2,500,000(3)          22.68%
Shares       825 - 1200 West 73rd Avenue
             Vancouver, B.C.
             Canada, V6P 6G5

Common       MICHAEL J. KENNAUGH                2,500,000(3)          22.68%
Shares       42 - 2951 Panorama Drive
             Coquitlam, British Columbia
             Canada, V3E 2W3

Common      CAROL KRUSHNISKY                         NIL (3)           0.00%
Shares      1070 Eden Crescent
            Delta, B.C.
            Canada, V4L 1W7

             All officers and directors as a    5,000,000             45.36%
                    group (three persons)

- ---------
(1) As of June 30, 1999, there were 11,025,000 common shares outstanding. Unless
    otherwise noted, the security ownership disclosed in this table is of record
    and beneficial.

(2) Under Rule 13-d under the Exchange Act,  shares not  outstanding but subject
    to options,  warrants,  rights, conversion privileges pursuant to which such
    shares may be acquired in the next 60 days are deemed to be outstanding  for
    the purpose of computing the percentage of

                                       21
<PAGE>
    outstanding  shares  owned by the persons  having such  rights,  but are not
    deemed  outstanding  for the purpose of computing  the  percentage  for such
    other persons. None of the directors or officers have any options, warrants,
    rights or conversion privileges outstanding.

(3) Mr.  Bruce is  President  and a Director  of the  Registrant  and one of the
    controlling  shareholders.  This stock is restricted  since it was issued in
    compliance with the exemption form registration provided by Section 4 (2) of
    the Securities  Act of 1933, as amended.  After this stock has been held for
    one (1) year,  Mr. Bruce could sell a  percentage  of his shares every three
    months based on 1% of the outstanding stock. Therefore, this stock cannot be
    sold except in compliance with the provisions of Rule 144. Mr. Kennaugh is a
    Director of the Registrant  and one of the  controlling  shareholders.  This
    stock is  restricted  since it was issued in  compliance  with the exemption
    form  registration  provided by Section 4 (2) of the Securities Act of 1933,
    as amended.  After this stock has been held for one (1) year,  Mr.  Kennaugh
    could sell a percentage  of his shares every three months based on 1% of the
    outstanding stock. Therefore, this stock cannot be sold except in compliance
    with the provisions of Rule 144.

ITEM 5.           DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, PROMOTERS AND CONTROL PERSONS

DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         The following table identifies the Registrant's directors and executive
officers as of June 30, 1999.  Directors are elected at the Registrant's  annual
meeting of stockholders  and hold office until their  successors are elected and
qualified.  The  Registrant's  officers are  appointed  annually by the Board of
Directors and serve at the pleasure of the Board.

                                                                  TERM AS
                                                                  DIRECTOR
               NAME                 POSITION HELD                 EXPIRES
               ----                 -------------                 -------

    Steven Bruce                President and Director              2000

    Michael J. Kennaugh         Director                            2000

   Carol Krushnisky             Secretary Treasurer                  -


         STEVEN BRUCE, 41, graduated from Simon Fraser University in 1981 with a
Bachelor of Commerce degree in Economics.  Since graduation he has been employed
with New Generation Power Corp. as Vice-President and Chief Operational Officer.
While  employed with New  Generation  Power his duties  included  power contract
negotiation,  project  financing  and  administration  over all  aspects  of the
accounting and financial functions. Subsequently Mr. Bruce became Vice-President
and Chief  Financial  officer of Newgen  Environmental  Systems  Inc., a company
listed on the Alberta Stock Exchange ("Exchange") in Calgary,  Alberta,  Canada,
and  specialized  in all  aspects  of the  development  of  the  company  and in
compliance reporting with the Exchange.  Mr. Bruce has been employed with Newgen
Environmental Systems Inc. for the past 10 years.


         CAROL  KRUSHNISKY,  59,  graduated  on the  Dean's  List  from  Quesnel
Secondary High School before working for two years in Quesnel,  British Columbia
as a secretarial  assistant to a group of lawyers.  Subsequent to this position,
Ms.  Krushnisky  became assistant  secretary to the Regional Engineer of British
Columbia before becoming private secretary to the Minister of Highway of British
Columbia, Phil Galaradi. She was employed in these two positions for a period of
five years  starting in 1960.  After  ceasing  work for  several  years due to a
family,  Ms.  Krushnisky  incorporated and became president of Dixie Secretarial
Services Ltd., a company supplying office assistance to various

                                       22
<PAGE>


businesses.  In conjunction with operating this company, Ms. Krushnisky accepted
a position at Swinton & Company  where she was personal  secretary to the senior
partners.  During  this  time her  main  duties  were  reviewing  of  contracts,
incorporating  both private and public companies and communications as requested
with various  clients.  For the past ten years,  since 1989, she has managed her
own business being a distributor  for Mary Kay  cosmetics.  During this time she
has served as a director of two public  companies  listed on the Vancouver Stock
Exchange;  British Pacific Investments and Amca Industries Inc. She has assisted
in the formation of other companies both public and private.

         MICHAEL J.  KENNAUGH,  57,  graduated  from the  University  of British
Columbia in 1978 with a degree in real estate  appraisal after having obtained a
Bachelor of Science  degree from the  University of Victoria where he majored in
Urban Land Geology.  In 1979 he became a salesperson  for DFH Realty  Limited in
Victoria,  British  Columbia  and in  1982  moved  to  Vancouver  to  work  as a
commercial  and  residential  sales  agent for Royal  Trust.  In 1987 he jointed
Realty World and a year later  became an  appraiser  for Kerr & Kerr Real Estate
Appraisers.  In 1990 he became head of the appraisal  department before starting
his own appraisal firm,  Canwest  Appraisals  Services Ltd. He was president and
sole director of Canwest which specialized in commercial  appraisals of land and
businesses.  In 1996 he joined  Windermere  Real Estate Services as a commercial
salesperson  before it merged in 1997 with Kennington  Green Real Estate Ltd. He
is still employed with Kennington Green Real Estate Services.


         None of the  Directors  or  Executive  Officers  work full time for the
Registrant,  but intend to devote such time as their  responsibilities  require.
None of the  Registrant's  Directors are currently  directors of other companies
registered under the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934.

         There are no family  relationships  between  the  directors,  executive
officers or with any person under  consideration for nomination as a director or
appointment as an executive officer of the Registrant.

ITEM 6.           EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         None of the Registrant's  executive officers have received compensation
since the Registrant's inception.

         The  following  table  sets forth  compensation  paid or accrued by the
Registrant  during the period ended June 30, 1999 to the Registrant's  President
and shows compensation paid to any other officers or directors.



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE (1999)

                                                                     LONG TERM COMPENSATION (US DOLLARS)
                                                                     -----------------------------------
                          ANNUAL COMPENSATION                        AWARDS              PAYOUTS
                          -------------------                        ------              -------
           (a)               (b)       (c)         (e)          (f)           (g)          (h)          (i)
                                                  OTHER      RESTRICTED                              ALL OTHER
                                                 ANNUAL        STOCK       OPTIONS/       LTIP        COMPEN-
   NAME AND PRINCIPAL                             COMP.        AWARDS         SAR        PAYOUTS      SATION
        POSITION            YEAR      SALARY       ($)          ($)           (#)          ($)          ($)
        --------            ----      ------       ---          ---           ---          ---          ---

<S>                         <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>           <C>          <C>          <C>
Steven Bruce,               1999       -0-         -0-          -0-           -0-          -0-          -0-
 President and
 Director

Michael Kennaugh,           1999       -0-         -0-          -0-           -0-          -0-          -0-
 Director

Carol Krushnisky,           1999       -0-         -0-          -0-           -0-          -0-          -0-
 Secretary Treasurer
</TABLE>
                                       23

<PAGE>
There has been no compensation  given to any of the Directors or Officers during
1999. There are no stock options  outstanding as at June 30, 1999 and no options
have been granted in 1999, but it is contemplated  that the Registrant may issue
stock  options  in the  future  to  officers,  directors,  advisers  and  future
employees.

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

         Members of the Board of Directors do not receive cash  compensation for
their services as Directors. Directors are not presently reimbursed for expenses
incurred in attending Board meetings.

ITEM 7.           CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

         The  Registrant  has never before filed a  prospectus  specified  under
Section 10(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 at this time. The Registrant  raised
funds from its officers and directors relatives, friends and business associates
as more fully described below.

Shares issued to Directors

         On March  16,  1999 the  directors  of the  Registrant  subscribed  for
5,000,000  shares at $0.001 per share for cash  consideration.  The breakdown of
the shares is as follows:

              Steven Bruce                       2,500,000 shares
              Michael J. Kennaugh                2,500,000 shares

         This stock is  restricted  since it was issued in  compliance  with the
exemption  from  registration  provided by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of
1933,  as amended.  After this stock has been held for one year,  the holders of
these shares of the  Registrant  could sell a  percentage  of their shares every
three months based on 1% of the outstanding stock in the Registrant.  Therefore,
this stock can be sold after the  expiration of one year in compliance  with the
provisions of Rule 144. There are "stop  transfer"  instructions  placed against
this stock and a legend is imprinted on each stock certificate.

Shares issued at $0.001 to non-directors and officers

         On March 20, 1999 the Registrant accepted subscription  agreements from
12 individual  corporations for a total number of 6,000,000 shares at a price of
$0.001 per share.  All shares were paid for in cash. These shares were issued in
accordance  with  the  exemption  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504 of
Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended and an appropriate Form D
was filed in  connection  with the  issuance of these  shares.  The names of the
corporation,  the principal  officer and the number of shares purchased for each
corporation is listed below:


          NAME OF CORPORATION             PRINCIPAL            NUMBER OF SHARES
          -------------------             ---------            ----------------
    Portsail Overseas Ltd.                Maria Scott                550,000
    Aquitaine Investments S.A.            Ronald Lui                 390,000
    Longford Ventures Ltd.                Jessica Garbutt            500,000
    Principal Corp.                       Amir Sosa                  545,000
    Girot Compagnie S.A.                  Richard Smith              450,000
    Kingmoor Capital Ltd.                 Tracey Williams            525,000
    Waterloo Investments Inc.             Clifford Wilkins           455,000
    Ravensburg Kapital GmbH               Marie Gabb                 540,000
    Camaret Freres S.A.                   Joy Vernon-Godfrey         530,000
    First Lincoln Holdings Inc.           Keith King                 500,000
    Blue Dolphin Capital Inc.             David Finzer               480,000
    Maurice International Inc.            Michael Laidlaw            535,000


                                       24
<PAGE>
Shares issued at $0.10 per share to other shareholders

         On or about March 26, 1999, the Registrant  issued the following shares
to individuals  listed for the consideration of $0.10 per share. All shares were
paid for in cash. These shares were issued in accordance with the exemption from
registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended and an appropriate  Form D was filed in connection  with the issuance
of these shares.

              NUMBER OF
             SHAREHOLDER                           SHARES
             -----------                           ------
            Nikolas Krushnisky                        500
            Jako Krushnisky                         1,000
            Gordon Krushnisky                       1,000
            Carrie Lee Page                           500
            Colleen Watalla                           750
            David Bruce                             1,000
            James D. Bruce                          1,500
            Sandra Bruce                            1,000
            Robin Hethey                            1,250
            Carsten Mide                              500
            Glyn Hethey                             1,000
            John W. Walker                          1,000
            Carol Finley                            1,000
            Charles Hethey                          1,800
            James Hethey                            1,800
            Rebekah Krushnisky                        750
            Carrie Thachuk                            750
            E. Del Thachuk                          1,000
            Stacey Bligh                            1,000
            Mary Hethey                             2,000
            Ray Levesque                              500
            Maryanne Thachuk                        1,200
            Philip Yee                                900
            Raymond Miller                            500
            Michael Thachuk                           800

         Certain parties interested in the Registrant's success have contributed
and continue to contribute time,  office space,  telephone,  and other expenses,
without  compensation or reimbursement.  The Registrant has given recognition to
this  contribution  by including in expenses and crediting  capital  surplus the
following amounts:

            Management fees                    $  1,000
            Rent                                    600
            Telephone                               200
                                                 ------
                                               $  1,800
                                                 ======
         There is no lease  arrangement  for office space between the Registrant
and its President.

                                       25
<PAGE>
         Certain   directors  of  the  Registrant   are   directors,   officers,
stockholders and/or employees of other companies,  and conflicts of interest may
arise  between  their duties as directors of the  Registrant  and as  directors,
officers of other companies.  All such possible  conflicts will be disclosed and
the directors concerned will govern themselves in respect thereof to the best of
their ability in accordance with the obligations  imposed on them under the laws
of the State of Nevada.

         All   officers   and   directors   are   aware   of   their   fiduciary
responsibilities  under corporate law,  especially  insofar as taking advantage,
directly  or  indirectly,  of  information  or  opportunities  acquired in their
capacities as officers and directors of the  Registrant.  Any  transaction  with
officers or directors will only be on terms  consistent with industry  standards
and sound  business  practice in accordance  with the fiduciary  duties of those
persons to the Registrant,  and depending upon the magnitude of the transactions
and the absence of any  disinterested  board members,  the  transactions  may be
submitted  to  the  shareholders  for  their  approval  in  the  absence  of any
independent board members.

REPORTS TO SECURITIES HOLDERS

         Prior to filing this Form 10-SB,  the  Registrant has not been required
to deliver  annual  reports.  To the extent that the  Registrant  is required to
deliver  annual  reports to security  holders  through its status of a reporting
company,  the Registrant  shall deliver annual reports.  Also, to the extent the
Registrant is required to deliver  annual reports by the rules or regulations of
any exchange upon which the Registrant's shares are traded, the Registrant shall
deliver  annual  reports.  If the  Registrant is not required to deliver  annual
reports,  the Registrant  will not go to the expense of producing and delivering
such reports. If the Registrant is required to deliver annual reports, they will
contain audited financial statements as required.

         Prior to the filing of this Form 10-SB,  the  Registrant  has not filed
reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Once the Registrant becomes
a reporting company,  management anticipates that Forms 3, 4, 5, 10K-SB, 10Q-SB,
8-K and Schedules 13D along with the appropriate  proxy material will have to be
filed  as they  come  due.  If the  Registrant  issues  additional  shares,  the
Registrant may file additional registration statements for those shares.

         The public may read and copy any material  which the  Registrant  files
with the Securities and Exchange Commission at the Commission's Public Reference
Room at 450 Fifth Street,  N.W.,  Washington,  D.C. 20549. The public may obtain
information  on the  operation  of the  Public  Reference  Room by  calling  the
Commission at  1-800-SEC-0330.  The  Commission  maintains an Internet site that
contains  reports,  proxy and  information  statements,  and  other  information
regarding the issuers that file electronically with the Commission. The Internet
address of the Commission's site is (http://www.sec.gov).

YEAR 2000 COMPUTER PROBLEMS


         The  Registrant is engaged in and  dependent on computer  technology in
its business operations.  Many existing computer programs use only two digits to
identify a year in the date field; i.e., "98" instead of "1998".  These programs
were  designed  and  developed  without  considering  the impact of the upcoming
change in the century,  i.e., Year 2000. The Registrant  uses computer  software
programs and systems that are essential to its business operations.  In addition
to the computer  software  programs,  all computer  equipment  contains embedded
computer  chips.  The  Registrant  is  dependent  upon  equipment  used  by  its
suppliers, geologists and other professional bodies; all of which are themselves
dependent upon computer software and

                                       26
<PAGE>


computer  equipment.  It is  difficult  for the  Registrant  to ensure  that its
suppliers, geologists and other professional bodies have addressed the Year 2000
problem.

         The Registrant has determined  that the  consequences  of its Year 2000
issues are likely to be material,  in that a breakdown in the economy due to the
Year 2000 problem might  endanger its chances of having  meaningful  information
from its exploration results. If not corrected, many computer applications could
fail or create erroneous results by or at the Year 2000. The Registrant has:

         1. The  Registrant  will be  acquiring  before the year 2000  Pentium 3
            computers using Microsoft Windows 98 which are Year 2000 compatible.
            The Registrant will undertake a review of the computer equipment and
            software  available to it and determine if the Year 2000 problem has
            been addressed.  This review should be completed by the last fall of
            1999.

         2. incurred no cost, as yet, to address the Year 2000 issue but expects
            its cost in the  future  will be for the  purchase  of the  computer
            equipment and software mentioned in (1) above.

         3. acknowledged  the risk it faces  with the Year 2000  issue  from its
            suppliers, geologists and professional bodies who have not addressed
            the Year 2000  issue and hence can no longer  operate  once the Year
            2000 is upon the business community.

         4. a  contingent  plan  in that it will  discuss  with  its  suppliers,
            geologists and other professional  bodies their contingent plans and
            if they do not address the Year 2000  problem  the  Registrant  will
            switch to other suppliers,  geologists and professional  bodies that
            have  done  so.  There  is  no  guarantee  the  Registrant  will  be
            successful  in   identifying   those   suppliers,   geologists   and
            professionals who have addressed the Year 2000 problem.


         However,  there may be untold  numbers of unforeseen  circumstances  or
unknown  factors  which the  Registrant  has not yet  identified,  determined or
anticipated  regarding the Year 2000 computer problems,  and such problems could
have a material  adverse  affect on the  Registrant's  business  operations  and
financial condition. Consequently, the Registrant can give no assurance that the
Year 2000 compliance can be fully achieved without costs and uncertainties  that
may seriously and substantially adversely affect the Registrant's operations and
financial results.

     In  summary,  the  problem is a  massive,  pervasive,  complex,  world-wide
phenomena that could,  in a worst-case  scenario,  totally shut down and destroy
the Registrant's business operations.

ITEM 8.           DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES

         The Registrant's  articles of incorporation  currently provide that the
Registrant is authorized to issue 200,000,000  shares of common stock, par value
$0.001 per share. As at June 30, 1999, 11,025,000 shares were outstanding.

                                       27
<PAGE>
COMMON STOCK

         Each holder of record of the  Registrant's  common stock is entitled to
one vote per share in the election of the  Registrant's  directors and all other
matters  submitted to the Registrant's  stockholders for a vote.  Holders of the
Registrant's  common stock are also  entitled to share  ratably in all dividends
when,  as, and if declared by the  Registrant's  Board of  Directors  from funds
legally  available  therefore,  and to share ratably in all assets available for
distribution to the Registrant's  stockholders  upon liquidation or dissolution,
subject  in  both  cases  to  any  preference  that  may  be  applicable  to any
outstanding  preferred stock. There are no preemptive rights to subscribe to any
of the  Registrant's  securities,  and no  conversion  rights  or  sinking  fund
provisions applicable to the common stock.

         Neither  the  Registrant's  articles  of  incorporation  nor its bylaws
provide  for  cumulative  voting.  Accordingly,  persons  who own or  control  a
majority of the shares outstanding may elect all of the Board of Directors,  and
persons owning less than a majority could be foreclosed from electing any.

OPTIONS OUTSTANDING

         There are no outstanding  options.  It is the intention of the Board of
Directors to grant stock options to directors,  officers and future employees at
some time in the future.  At the present time no consideration has been given to
the granting of stock options.


                                       28
<PAGE>
                                     PART 11

ITEM 1.           MARKET PRICE OF AND DIVIDENDS ON THE REGISTRANT'S
                  COMMON EQUITY AND OTHER STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

MARKET INFORMATION

         The Registrant's  stock is not presently traded or listed on any public
market. Upon effectiveness of the Registrant's  registration statement under the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, it is  anticipated  one or more broker dealers
may make a market in its securities over the counter, with quotations carried on
the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.'s "OTC Bulletin Board".

         There is no  established  market  price  for the  shares.  There are no
common  shares  subject  to  outstanding   options  or  warrants  or  securities
convertible  into common equity of the Registrant.  The number of shares subject
to Rule 144 is 5,000,000.  Each share  certificate  has the  appropriate  legend
affixed  thereto.  There are no shares being offered to the public and no shares
have been offered pursuant to an employee benefit plan or dividend  reinvestment
plan.

HOLDERS

         The  approximate  number of record holders of the  Registrant's  common
stock as at June 30, 1999 is 39 of which two are directors of the Registrant.

DIVIDENDS

         The  Registrant  has never paid cash  dividends on its common stock and
does not intend to do so in the  foreseeable  future.  The Registrant  currently
intends to retain any earnings for the operation and expansion of its business.

TRANSFER AGENT

         The  Registrant's  transfer agent is Nevada Agency & Trust Co., 50 West
Liberty Street, Suite 880, Reno, Nevada, 89501.

ITEM 2.           LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

         There are no legal proceedings to which the Registrant is a party or to
which its property is subject, nor to the best of management's knowledge are any
material legal proceedings contemplated.

ITEM 3.           DISAGREEMENT WITH ACCOUNTANTS AND
                  FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

         From  inception  to date,  the  Registrant's  principal  accountant  is
Andersen Andersen & Strong,  L.C. of Salt Lake City, Utah. The firm's report for
the period from inception to April 30, 1999 did not contain any adverse  opinion
or  disclaimer,  nor were there any  disagreements  between  management  and the
Registrant's accountants.

ITEM 4.           RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES

         From inception  through to June 30, 1999, the Registrant has issued and
sold the following unregistered shares of its common stock (the aggregated value
of all such offerings did not exceed US$1,000,000):


                                       29
<PAGE>
(i)      Subscription for 5,000,000 shares by the Directors of the Registrant

         On March 16,1999 the Registrant  approved the issuance to its directors
of 5,000,000 shares at a price per share of $0.001. Mr. Bruce,  President of the
Registrant,  purchased for cash 2,500,000 shares and Mr.  Kennaugh,  Director of
the Registrant,  purchased for cash 2,500,000  shares.  This stock is restricted
since it was issued in compliance with the exemption from registration  provided
by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.  After this stock has
been held for one year,  the Directors  could sell within a three month period a
percentage  of  their  shares  based  on 1% of  the  outstanding  stock  in  the
Registrant.  Therefore,  this stock can be sold after the expiration of one year
in  compliance  with the  provisions  of Rule 144.  There  are  "stop  transfer"
instructions  placed against this certificate and a legend has been imprinted on
the stock certificate itself.

(ii)     Subscription for 6,000,000 shares at a price of $0.001 per share

         On March 21, 1999, the Registrant  accepted  share  subscriptions  from
twelve  corporate  investors of a total of 6,000,000 shares at a price of $0.001
per share.  All shares  were paid for in cash which  result in  proceeds  to the
Registrant of $6,000.  These shares were issued in accordance with the exemption
from registration  provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended,  and an  appropriate  Form D was filed in connection  with the
issuance of these shares.  All of these  corporation  reside  outside the United
States  and none of the  principals  are  residents  or  citizens  of the United
States.

(iii)    Subscriptions for 25,000 shares at a price of $0.10 per share

         On  March  27,  1999,  the  Registrant   accepted   subscriptions  from
twenty-five  investors  in the  amount of 25,000  shares at a price of  $0.10per
share.  In all cases the  consideration  was cash.  These  shares were issued in
accordance  with  the  exemption  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504 of
Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and an appropriate Form
D  was  filed  in  connection  with  the  issuance  of  these  shares.  All  the
shareholders live outside the United States and none are US citizens.

ITEM 5.           INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

         Section  78.751  of the  Nevada  General  Corporation  Law  allows  the
Registrant  to indemnify  any person who was or is threatened to be made a party
to any threatened,  pending, or completed action, suit, or proceeding, by reason
of the fact that he or she is or was a director,  officer,  employee or agent of
the  Registrant,  or is or was  serving at the  request of the  Registrant  as a
director,  officer,  employee, or agent of any corporation,  partnership,  joint
venture,  trust, or other enterprise.  The Registrant's bylaws provide that such
person shall be indemnified and held harmless to the fullest extent permitted by
Nevada law.

         Nevada law permits the  Registrant  to advance  expenses in  connection
with defending any such proceedings,  provided that the indemnitee undertakes to
repay any such  advances  if it is later  determined  that such  person  was not
entitled to be indemnified by the Registrant.  The  Registrant's  bylaws require
that the Registrant  advance such funds upon receipt of such an undertaking with
respect to repayment.

         Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities
Act may be permitted to  directors,  officers,  and  controlling  persons of the
Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions or otherwise, the Registrant has
been advised that,  in the opinion of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission,
such  indemnification  is against public policy as expressed in such act, and is
therefore unenforceable.

                                       30
<PAGE>
                                    PART F/S

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

         The following financial statements are filed with this Form 10-SB:

                                                                            Page

Report of Independent Certified Public Accountants                            32

Financial Statements of Zeb Oro Explorations Inc.

   Balance Sheet as at April 30, 1999                                         33

   Statement of Operations for the Period from March 4, 1999 (Date
        of Inception) to April 30, 1999                                       34

   Statement of Changes in Stockholders' Equity for the Period from
        March 4, 1999 (Date of Inception) to April 30, 1999                   35

  Statement of Cash Flows for the Period from March 4, 1999 (Date
        of Inception) to April 30, 1999                                       36

  Notes to Financial Statements                                               37




                                       31

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                   <C>
ANDERSEN ANDERSEN & STRONG, L.C.                                     941 East 3300 South, Suite 220
Certified Public Accountants and Business Consultants Board             Salt Lake City, Utah, 84106
Member SEC Practice Section of the AICPA                                     Telephone 801-486-0096
                                                                                   Fax 801-486-0098
                                                                         E-mail Kandersen @ msn.com
</TABLE>

Board of Directors
Zeb Oro Explorations Inc.
Vancouver B. C. Canada

               REPORT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

We have audited the accompanying  balance sheet of Zeb Oro Explorations  Inc. (a
development  stage  company) at April 30, 1999 and the statement of  operations,
stockholders'  equity, and cash flows for the period from March 4, 1999 (date of
inception) to April 30, 1999. 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  generally   accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the accounting  principles used and financial statement  presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material  respects,  the financial  position of Zeb Oro Explorations Inc. at
April 30, 1999 and the results of operations, and cash flows for the period from
March 4, 1999 (date of inception) to April 30, 1999 in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles.


The  accompanying  financial  statements  have been  prepared  assuming that the
Company  will  continue as a going  concern.  The Company is in the  exploration
stage and will need additional  working capital for its planned activity,  which
raises  substantial  doubt about its  ability to  continue  as a going  concern.
Management's  plans in regard to these  matters are  described  in Note 5. These
financial  statements do not include any adjustments  that might result from the
outcome of this uncertainty.


Salt Lake City, Utah                           /s/  "Andersen Andersen & Strong"
May 28, 1999

         A member of ACF International with affiliated offices worldwide



                                       32
<PAGE>
                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                                     BALANCE
                                 APRIL 30, 1999
================================================================================
ASSETS

CURRENT ASSETS

     Cash                                                         $   9,811
                                                                     ------

           Total Current Assets                                       9,811
                                                                     ------
OTHER ASSETS

     Mineral claims - Note 3                                              -
                                                                    -------
                                                                  $   9,811
                                                                    =======
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

CURRENT LIABILITIES

      Accounts payable                                            $   3,345
                                                                     ------

            Total Current Liabilities                                 3,345
                                                                     ------
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

Common stock

      200,000,000 shares authorized, at $0.001 par
      value; 11,025,000 shares issued and outstanding                11,025

Capital in excess of par value                                        4,275

Deficit accumulated during the development stage                    (8,824)
                                                                    -------

Total Stockholders' Equity                                            6,466
                                                                     ------

                                                                   $  9,811
                                                                     ======

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

                                       33
<PAGE>
                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                             STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                        FOR THE PERIOD FROM MARCH 4, 1999
                      (DATE OF INCEPTION) TO APRIL 30, 1999
================================================================================

SALES                                                          $            -

EXPENSES                                                                8,834
                                                                        -----
NET LOSS                                                        $      (8,834)
                                                                       ======

NET LOSS PER COMMON SHARE

     Basic                                                      $       (.001)
                                                                        =======

AVERAGE OUTSTANDING SHARES

     Basic                                                         11,025,000
                                                                   ==========
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.


                                       34
<PAGE>
                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                  STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
              FOR THE PERIOD FROM MARCH 4, 1999 (DATE OF INCEPTION)
                                TO APRIL 30, 1999


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      COMMON STOCK                CAPITAL IN
                                                   -----------------               EXCESS OF        ACCUMULATED
                                                  SHARES         AMOUNT            PAR VALUE         DEFICIT
                                                  ------         ------            ---------         -------
<S>                                             <C>               <C>
BALANCE MARCH 4, 1999 (date of inception)               -       $      -         $       -          $      -

Issuance of common stock for cash
  at $.001 - March 14, 1999                      5,000,000         5,000                 -                 -

Issuance of common stock for cash
   at $0.001 - March 16, 1999                    6,000,000         6,000                 -                -

Issuance of common stock for cash
    At $0.10 - March 27, 1999                       25,000            25             2,475                -

Capital contribution - expenses                          -             -             1,800                -

Net operating loss for the period from
    March 4, 1999 to April 30, 1999                      -             -                -            (8,834)

BALANCE APRIL 30, 1999                          11,025,000      $ 11,025         $  4,275           $(8,824)
                                               ===========        ======            =====          =======
</TABLE>



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

                                       35
<PAGE>
                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                             STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                        FOR THE PERIOD FROM MARCH 4, 1999
                      (DATE OF INCEPTION) TO APRIL 30, 1999

CASH FLOWS FROM
     OPERATING ACTIVITIES:

Net loss                                                    $ (8,834)

Adjustments to reconcile net loss to
    net cash provided by operating

    activities:

    Change in accounts payable                                 3,345
    Capital contributions - expenses                           1,800
                                                             -------

Net Cash From Operations                                      (3,689)


CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING
    ACTIVITIES:                                                    -
                                                             -------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING
    ACTIVITIES:

       Proceeds from issuance of common stock                 13,500
                                                             -------

Net Increase in Cash                                           9,811

Cash at Beginning of Period                                        -

Cash at End of Period                                     $    9,811
                                                               =====

SCHEDULE OF NONCASH INVESTING AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES

Capital contributions - expenses                         $    1,800
                                                             ======



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


                                       36
<PAGE>

                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                          NOTES TO FINANCLAL STATEMENTS

================================================================================

1. ORGANIZATION

The Company was  incorporated  under the laws of the State of Nevada on March 4,
1999 with authorized common stock of 200,000,000 shares at $0.001.


The Company was organized for the purpose of acquiring  and  developing  mineral
properties.  At the report date mineral claims, with unknown reserves,  had been
acquired.  The Company  has not  established  the  existence  of a  commercially
minable ore reserve and therefore has not reached the  development  stage and is
considered to be in the exploration stage. (Note 3).


Since its  inception  the Company  has  completed a  Regulation  D offerings  of
11,025,000 shares of its capital stock for cash.

2. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICILES

Accounting Methods

The  Company  recognizes  income and  expenses  based on the  accrual  method of
accounting.

Dividend Policy

The Company has not yet adopted a policy regarding payment of dividends.

Income Taxes


The Company has elected a fiscal year ending  December 31, and has not completed
an operating  period and therefore has not filed an income tax return,  however,
the Company may incur an operating  loss for the period ended  December 31, 1999
which will be available for carryover and applied  against future taxable income
resulting  in a tax  benefit.  The  potential  tax  benefit  from any loss carry
forward  has been fully  offset by a  valuation  reserve  because the use of any
future tax benefit is doubtful since the Company has no operations.

Any loss  carryforward  from the year ended December 31, 1999 will expire in the
year 2020.


Earning (Loss) Per Share

Earnings  (loss) per share  amounts are computed  based on the weighted  average
number of shares actually outstanding.

                                       37
<PAGE>
                           ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC..
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                    NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

================================================================================


2.       SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIIES - CONTINUED

Cash and Cash Equivalents

The Company considers all highly liquid  instruments  purchased with a maturity,
at the time of purchase, of less than three months, to be cash equivalents.

Capitalization of Mining Claim Costs


Cost of acquisition, exploration, carrying, and retaining uproven properties are
expensed as incurred.  Cost  incurred in proving and  developing a  commercially
minable ore reserve ready for production are  capitalized and amortized over the
life of the mineral deposit or over a shorter period if the property is shown to
have an impairment in value. Expenditures for mine equipment are capitalized and
depreciated over their useful lives.


Environmental Requirements

At the report date  environmental  requirements  related to the  mineral  claims
acquired  (note 3) are  unknown  and  therefore  an  estimate of any future cost
cannot be made.

Financial Instruments

The carrying amounts of financial  instruments,  including cash, mineral leases,
and accounts  payable,  are considered by management to be their  estimated fair
values.  These  values are not  necessarily  indicative  of the amounts that the
Company could realize in a current market exchange.

Estimates and Assumptions

Management uses estimates and assumptions in preparing  financial  statements in
accordance with generally accepted  accounting  principles.  Those estimates and
assumptions  affect the  reported  amounts of the  assets and  liabilities,  the
disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities,  and the reported revenues and
expenses.  Actual  results  could vary from the  estimates  that were assumed in
preparing these financial statements.

3.       MINERAL CLAIMS

The Company has acquired one 15 unit metric  mineral  claim known as the Zeb Oro
Claim claims located in the Zeballos mining area near the town of Zeballos about
300 kilometres

                                       38
<PAGE>
                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           (EXPLORATION STAGE COMPANY)
                    NOTES TO FINANCLAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

================================================================================

3. MINERAL CLAIMS - CONTINUED

northwest of Victoria,  British Columbia with an expiration date of February 11,
2000. The cost of staking and filing have been expensed.


The claims have not been proven to have a  commercially  minable ore reserve and
therefore  all costs for  exploration  and retaining  the  properties  have been
expensed.

The claims may be retained by the Company by payment of yearly  lease  amount of
$1,000 in February 2000 and $2,000 in February 2001 and thereafter.


4.   RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Related parties have acquired 45% of the common stock issued .


Officers and  directors  have paid expenses for the Company which are shown as a
contribution to capital amounting to $1,800.


The  officers  and  directors  of the  Company are  involved  in other  business
activities and they may, in the future,  become involved in additional  business
ventures  which  also  may  require  their  attention.  If a  specific  business
opportunity  becomes  available,  such  persons may face a conflict in selecting
between the Company and their other  business  interests.  The risk  factors for
this  possibility  are unknown and the Company has  formulated no policy for the
resolution of such conflicts.

5. GOING CONCERN


The  Company  does  not have the  working  capital  necessary  to  complete  the
exploration of the minerals claims in note 3.


The Company will need additional working capital to be successful in its planned
activities and  continuation of the Company as a going concern is dependent upon
obtaining  additional  working  capital  and the  management  of the Company has
developed a strategy,  which it believes will accomplish this objective  through
additional  equity  funding,  and long term  financing,  which  will  enable the
Company to operate in the future.

Management  recognizes  that, if it is unable to raise additional  capital,  the
Company cannot be successful in its efforts.

                                       39
<PAGE>

                                                               PART 111

ITEM 1.           INDEX TO EXHIBITS


EXHIBIT
   NO.
- --------

(2)      Charter and By-Laws


         (a)      Certificate of Incorporation of Zeb Oro Explorations Inc.
                  (filed herewith, page 42)

         (b)      Bylaws (filed herewith, page 46)

(3)      Instruments Defining Rights of Securities Holders

         (a)      Text of stock certificates for common stock (filed herewith,
                   page 57)

(5)      Voting Trust Agreements

                  None

(6)      Material Contracts

         (a)      Not made in the ordinary course of business

                  (i)      Transfer  Agent  and  Registrar   Agreement   between
                           Registrant and Nevada Agency & Trust Co., dated March
                           10, 1999 (filed herewith, page 58)

(10)     Consent of experts and counsel

         (i)      Consent  of  Andersen  Andersen  & Strong,  L.C.,  independent
                  certified public accountants (filed herewith, page 61)

(11)     Statement re computation of per share earnings
                  Not applicable

(16)     Letter of change in certifying accountant

                  Not applicable

(21)     Subsidiaries of the Registrant

                  Not applicable

(24)     Power of Attorney

                  None

(99)     Addition Exhibits

                  (a)  Claim Map - Zeb Oro Explorations Inc. (filed herewith,
                        page 62)


ITEM 2.           DESCRIPTIONS OF EXHIBITS


                         [Attached, pages 42 through 62]


                                       40
<PAGE>
                                   SIGNATURES

         In accordance  with Section 12 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
the registrant has caused this registration statement to be signed on its behalf
by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

                                 ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                                        (Registrant)

                                 By       /s/   "STEVEN BRUCE"
                                        -----------------------------------
                                                 Steven Bruce
                                            President and  Director

                                 By    /s/   "CAROL KRUSHNIKSY"
                                        -----------------------------------
                                                Carol Krushnisky
                                             Secretary Treasurer

                                         Dated:    July 28, 1999







                                                               EXHIBIT NO. 2 (A)

                            ARTICLES OF INCORORATION

                                       OF

                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.

                                                               * * * * *

               The  undersigned,   acting  as  incorporator,   pursuant  to  the
provisions of the laws of the State of Nevada relating to private  corporations,
hereby adopts the following Articles of Incorporation:

               ARTICLE ONE. [NAME]. The name of the corporation is:

                          ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.

               ARTICLE TWO.  [RESIDENT AGENT].  The initial agent for service of
process is Nevada Agency and Trust Company,

50 West Liberty  Street,  Suite 880,  City of Reno,  County of Washoe,  State of
Nevada 89501.

               ARTICLE THREE. [PURPOSES]. The purposes for which the corporation
is organized  are toengage in any activity or business not in conflict  with the
laws of the State of Nevada or of the  United  States of  America,  and  without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, specifically:

            1.  [OMNIBUS] . To have to exercise  all the powers now or hereafter
         conferred  by the  laws  of  the  State  of  Nevada  upon  corporations
         organized pursuant to the laws under which the corporation is organized
         and any and all acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto.

           11. [CARRYING ON BUSINESS OUTSIDE STATE). To conduct and carry on its
         business or any branch  thereof in any state or territory of the United
         States or in any foreign  country in  conformity  with the laws of such
         state,  territory,  or foreign country, and to have and maintain in any
         state, territory, or foreign country a business office, plant, store or
         other facility.

            111.  [PURPOSES TO BE CONSTRUED AS POWERS] . The purposes  specified
         herein shall be  construed  both as purposes and powers and shall be in
         no wise limited or restricted by reference to, or inference  from,  the
         terms  of any  other  clause  in this  or any  other  article,  but the
         purposes and powers  specified  in each of the clauses  herein shall be
         regarded as  independent  purposes and powers,  and the  enumeration of
         specific  purposes  and  powers  shall  not be  construed  to  limit or
         restrict in any manner the  meaning of general  terms or of the general
         powers of the  corporation;  nor shall

                                       42
<PAGE>

the expression of one thing be deemed to exclude another, although it be of like
nature not expressed.

               ARTICLE  FOUR.   [CAPITAL  STOCK].  The  corporation  shall  have
authority  to issue an  aggregate of TWO HUNDRED  MILLION  (200,000,000)  Common
Capital Shares, PAR VALUE ONE MILL ($0.001) per share for a total capitalization
OF TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS ($200,000.00).

               The holders of shares of capital stock of the  corporation  shall
not be  entitled to  pre-emptive  or  preferential  rights to  subscribe  to any
unissued  stock  or any  other  securities  which  the  corporation  may  now or
hereafter be authorized to issue.

               The corporation's  capital stock may be issued and sold from time
to time  for such  consideration  as may be  fixed  by the  Board of  Directors,
provided that the consideration so fixed is not less than par value.

               The stockholders  shall not possess  cumulative  voting rights at
all  shareholders  meetings  called  for the  purpose  of  electing  a Board  of
Directors.

               ARTICLE FIVE.  [DIRECTORS].  The affairs of the corporation shall
be governed by a Board of  Directors of no more than eight (8) nor less than one
(1) person. The names and addresses of the first Board of Director are:

         NAME                                        ADDRESS
         -----                                       --------
         Michael J. Kennaugh                         42 - 2951 Panorama Drive
                                                     Coquitlam, British Columbia
                                                     Canada, V3E 2W3

               ARTICLE  SIX.  [ASSESSMENT  OF STOCK].  The capital  stock of the
corporation,  after the amount of the  subscription  price or par value has been
paid in,  shall not be subject to pay debts of the  corporation,  and no paid up
stock and no stock issued as fully paid up shall ever be assessable or assessed.

               ARTICLE  SEVEN.  [INCORPORATOR].  The  name  and  address  of the
incorporator of the corporation is as follows:

         NAME                                   ADDRESS
        ------                               -------------
         Amanda Cardinalli                   50 West Liberty Street, Suite 880
                                             Reno, Nevada 89501

               ARTICLE EIGHT. [PERIOD OF EXISTENCE].  The period of existence of
the corporation shall be perpetual.


                                       43
<PAGE>


               ARTICLE NINE.  [BY-LAWS].  The initial By-laws of the corporation
shall be adopted by its Board of Directors. The power to alter, amend, or repeal
the By-laws, or to adopt new By-laws, shall be vested in the Board of Directors,
except as otherwise may be specifically provided in the By-laws.

               ARTICLE TEN.  [STOCKHOLDERS'  MEETINGS].  Meeting of stockholders
shall be held at such  place  within  or  without  the State of Nevada as may be
provided by the By-laws of the corporation. Special meetings of the stockholders
may  be  called  by  the  President  or  any  other  executive  officer  of  the
corporation,  the  Board  of  Directors,  or  any  member  thereof,  or  by  the
recordholder  or holders of at least ten percent (10%) of all shares entitled to
vote at the meeting.  Any action otherwise  required to be taken at a meeting of
the stockholders,  except election of directors,  may be taken without a meeting
if a consent in writing,  setting forth the action so taken,  shall be signed by
stockholdershaving at least a majority of the voting power.

               ARTICLE ELEVEN . [CONTRACTS OF CORPORATION]. No contract or other
transaction between the corporation and any other corporation,  whether or not a
majority of the shares of the capital stock of such other  corporation  is owned
by this corporation, and no act of this corporation shall in any way be affected
or  invalidated  by the fact that any of the directors of this  corporation  are
pecuniarily  or otherwise  interested  in, or are  directors or officers of such
other corporation. Any director of this corporation,  individually,  or any firm
of which such director may be a member, may be a party to, or may be pecuniarily
or otherwise  interested  in any  contract or  transaction  of the  corporation;
provided,  however, that the fact that he or such firm is so interested shall be
disclosed  or  shall  have  been  known  to  the  Board  of  Directors  of  this
corporation,  or a majority thereof; and any director of this corporation who is
also a director or officer of such other  corporation,  or who is so interested,
may be counted in  determining  the  existence of a quorum at any meeting of the
Board of Directors of this  corporation  that shall  authorize  such contract or
transaction,  and may vote thereat to authorize  such  contract or  transaction,
with like  force and effect as if he were not such  director  or officer of such
other corporation or not so interested.

               ARTICLE.TWELVE.   [LIABILITY  OF  DIRECTORS  AND  OFFICERS].   No
director or officer shall have any personal  liability to the corporation or its
stockholders  for damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director or officer,
except that this Article  Twelve shall not eliminate or limit the liability of a
director  or  officer  for  (i)  acts or  omissions  which  involve  intentional
misconduct,  fraud  or a  knowing  violation  of law,  or (ii)  the  payment  of
dividends in violation of the Nevada Revised Statutes.

               IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the undersigned  incorporator  has hereunto
affixed her signature at Reno, Nevada this 3rd day of March, 1999.

                                                    by  /s/  "Amanda Cardinalli"
                                                        ------------------------
                                                            AMANDA CARDINALLI

STATE OF NEVADA            }
                           : SS.
COUNTY OF WASHOE           }

                                       44
<PAGE>


                   On the 3rd day of March, 1999, before me, the undersigned,  a
NOTARY  PUBLIC  in and for the  State  of  Nevada,  personally  appeared  AMANDA
CARDINALLI,  known to me to be the  person  described  in and who  executed  the
foregoing  instrument,  and who  acknowledged  to me that she  executed the same
freely and voluntarily for the uses and purposes therein mentioned.

               IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  I have  hereunto set my hand and affixed my
official seal the day and year first above written.

                                                     by  /s/   "Margaret Oliver"
                                                        ------------------------
                                                         NOTARY PUBLIC

Residing in Reno, Nevada
My Commission Expires:
October 10, 2000

                                       45
<PAGE>



                                                               EXHIBIT NO. 2 (B)

                                     BY LAWS

                                       OF

                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.

                              A NEVADA CORPORATION

                                    ARTICLE I

                                     OFFICES

SECTION 1. The  registered  office of this  corporation  shall be in the City of
Reno, State of Nevada.

SECTION 2. The  Corporation  may also have  offices at such  other  places  both
within and without the State of Nevada as the Board of  Directors  may from time
to time determine or the business of the corporation may require.

                                    ARTICLE 2

                            MEETINGS OF STOCKHOLDERS

SECTION  1.  All  annual  meetings  of the  stockholders  shall  be  held at the
registered  office of the  corporation  or at such other place within or without
the State of Nevada as the Directors shall  determine.  Special  meetings of the
stockholders  may be held at such time and place  within or without the State of
Nevada as shall be stated in the notice of the  meeting,  or in a duly  executed
waiver of notice thereof.

 SECTION 2. Annual meetings of the stockholders shall be held on the anniversary
date of  incorporation  each  year if not a legal  holiday  and,  and if a legal
holiday, then on the next secular day following, or at such other time as may be
set by the Board of Directors from time to time, at which the stockholders shall
elect by vote a Board of  Directors  and  transact  such other  business  as may
properly be brought before the meeting.

SECTION 3. Special  meetings of the  stockholders,  for any purpose or purposes,
unless otherwise prescribed by statute or by the Articles of Incorporation,  may
be called by the  President  or the  Secretary,  by  resolution  of the Board of
Directors  or at the  request in writing of  stockholders  owning a majority  in
amount of the entire capital stock of the corporation issued and outstanding and
entitled to vote. Such request shall state the purpose of the proposed meeting.

SECTION 4. Notices of meetings  shall be in writing and signed by the  President
or  Vice-President  or the Secretary or an Assistant  Secretary or by such other
person or persons as the Directors shall designate.  Such notice shall state the
purpose or purposes  for which the


                                       46
<PAGE>


meeting  is called  and the time and the  place,  which may be within or without
this  State,  where  it is to be held.  A copy of such  notice  shall be  either
delivered personally to or shall be mailed, postage prepaid, to each stockholder
of record entitled to vote at such meeting not less than ten nor more than sixty
days before such meeting.  If mailed,  it shall be directed to a stockholder  at
his  address as it appears  upon the  records of the  corporation  and upon such
mailing of any such notice,  the service  thereof shall be complete and the time
of the  notice  shall  begin to run from the date  upon  which  such  notice  is
deposited in the mail for transmission to such stockholder. Personal delivery of
any such  notice to an  officer of the  corporation  or  association,  or to any
member  of a  partnership  shall  constitute  delivery  of such  notice  to such
corporation,  association or partnership.  In the event of the transfer of stock
after  delivery of such notice of and prior to the  holding of the  meeting,  it
shall not be  necessary  to  deliver or mail such  notice of the  meeting to the
transferee.

SECTION 5. Business transactions at any special meeting of stockholders shall be
limited to the purpose stated in the notice.

SECTION 6. The holders of a majority  of the stock  issued and  outstanding  and
entitled  to vote  thereat,  present in person or  represented  by proxy,  shall
constitute a quorum at all meetings of the  stockholders  for the transaction of
business  except  as  otherwise  provided  by  statute  or by  the  Articles  of
Incorporation.  If, however,  such quorum shall not be present or represented at
any meeting of the  stockholders,  the  stockholders  entitled to vote  thereat,
present in person or  represented  by proxy,  shall  have  power to adjourn  the
meeting  from time to time,  without  notice  other  than  announcements  at the
meeting,  until a quorum shall be presented or  represented.  At such  adjourned
meetings at which a quorum shall be present or represented,  any business may be
transacted  which  might  have been  transacted  at the  meeting  as  originally
notified.

SECTION 7. When a quorum is present or represented  at any meeting,  the vote of
the  holders  of 10% of the  stock  having  voting  power  present  in person or
represented  by proxy shall be  sufficient  to elect  Directors or to decide any
question  brought before such meeting,  unless the question is one upon which by
express  provision  of  the  statute  or of the  Articles  of  Incorporation,  a
different vote shall govern and control the decision of such question.

SECTION 8. Each  stockholder of record of the  corporation  shall be entitled at
each meeting of the stockholders to one vote for each share standing in his name
on the books of the corporation.  Upon the demand of any  stockholder,  the vote
for  Directors  and the vote upon any  question  before the meeting  shall be by
ballot.

SECTION 9. At any meeting of the stockholders any stockholder may be represented
and vote by a proxy or proxies  appointed by an  instrument  in writing.  In the
event that any such instrument in writing shall designate two or more persons to
act as proxies,  a majority of such persons present at the meeting,  or, if only
one shall be present,  then that one shall have and may  exercise all the powers
conferred  by such  written  instruction  upon all of the persons so  designated
unless the instrument shall otherwise provide.  No proxy or power of attorney to
vote shall be voted at a meeting of the  stockholders  unless it shall have been
filed with the  Secretary  of the meeting  when  required by the  inspectors  of
election.  All questions regarding the qualifications of voters, the validity of
proxies  and the  acceptance  of or  rejection  of votes


                                       47
<PAGE>


shall be decided by the  inspectors  of election  who shall be  appointed by the
Board of Directors, or if not so appointed, then by the presiding officer at the
meeting.

SECTION 10. Any action which may be taken by the vote of the  stockholders  at a
meeting may be taken without a meeting if  authorized by the written  consent of
stockholders  holding  at least a  majority  of the  voting  power,  unless  the
provisions  of the statute or the  Articles of  Incorporation  require a greater
proportion  of voting power to authorize  such action in which case such greater
proportion of written consents shall be required.

                                    ARTICLE 3

                                    DIRECTORS

SECTION  1. The  business  of the  corporation  shall be managed by its Board of
Directors  which may exercise all such powers of the corporation and do all such
lawful acts and things as are not by statute or by the Articles of Incorporation
or by  these  Bylaws  directed  or  required  to be  exercised  or  done  by the
stockholders.

SECTION 2. The number of Directors which shall  constitute the whole board shall
be riot less than one and not more than eight.  The number of Directors may from
time to time be  increased or decreased to not less than one nor more than eight
by action of the Board of  Directors.  The  Directors  shall be  elected  at the
annual meeting of the  stockholders  and except as provided in section 2 of this
Article,  each Director elected shall hold office until his successor is elected
and qualified. Directors need not be stockholders.

SECTION 3.  Vacancies  in the Board of  Directors  including  those caused by an
increase in the number of Directors, may be filed by a majority of the remaining
Directors,  though less than a quorum, or by a sole remaining Director, and each
Director so elected  shall hold  office  until his  successor  is elected at the
annual or a special meeting of the stockholders.  The holders of a two-thirds of
the  outstanding  shares of stock entitled to vote may at any time  peremptorily
terminate the term of office of all or any of the Directors by vote at a meeting
called for such purpose or by a written  statement  filed with the Secretary or,
in his  absence,  with any  other  officer.  Such  removal  shall  be  effective
immediately, even if successors are not elected simultaneously and the vacancies
on the Board of  Directors  resulting  therefrom  shall only be filled  from the
stockholders.

               A vacancy or vacancies on the Board of Directors  shall be deemed
to exist in case of death,  resignation  or removal of any  Director,  or if the
authorized number of Directors be increased,  or if the stockholders fail at any
annual or special meeting of stockholders at which any Director or Directors are
elected to elect the full authorized number of Directors to be voted for at that
meeting.

               The stockholders may elect a Director or Directors at any time to
fill any  vacancy  or  vacancies  not filled by the  Directors.  If the Board of
Directors  accepts the  resignation  of a Director  tendered to take effect at a
future time, the Board or the stockholders shall have power to elect a successor
to take office when the resignation is to become effective

                                       48
<PAGE>



               No reduction of the authorized number of Directors shall have the
effect of removing any Director prior to the expiration of his term of office.

                                    ARTICLE 4

                        MEETING OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

SECTION 1. Regular meetings of the Board of Directors shall be held at any place
within or  without  the State  which  has been  designated  from time to time by
resolution  of the Board or by written  consent of all members of the Board.  In
the absence of such designation regular meetings shall be held at the registered
office of the corporation. Special meetings of the Board may be held either at a
place so designated or at the registered office.

SECTION 2. The first meeting of each newly  elected Board of Directors  shall be
held immediately following the adjournment of the meeting of stockholders and at
the place thereof. No notice of such meeting shall be necessary to the Directors
in order legally to constitute the meeting, provided a quorum be present. In the
event such  meeting  is not so held,  the  meeting  may be held at such time and
place as shall  be  specified  in a notice  given as  hereinafter  provided  for
special meetings of the Board of Directors.

SECTION 3. Regular  meetings of the Board of Directors  may be held without call
or notice at such time and at such place as shall from time to time be fixed and
determined by the Board of Directors.

SECTION  4.  Special  meetings  of the Board of  Directors  may be called by the
Chairman or the  President  or by the  Vice-President  or by any two  Directors.
Written  notice of the time and place of  special  meetings  shall be  delivered
personally to each  Director,  or sent to each Director by mail or by other form
of written communication, charges prepaid, addressed to him at his address as it
is shown upon the records or if not readily ascertainable, at the place in which
the meetings of the Directors are regularly  held. In case such notice is mailed
or telegraphed,  it shall be deposited in the postal service or delivered to the
telegraph  company  at least  forty-eight  (48)  hours  prior to the time of the
holding of the meeting.  In case such notice is delivered or taxed,  it shall be
so delivered or taxed at least  twenty-four  (24) hours prior to the time of the
holding of the meeting. Such mailing, telegraphing,  delivery or taxing as above
provided shall be due, legal and personal notice of such Director.

SECTION 5. Notice of the time and place of holding an adjourned meeting need not
be given to the absent  Directors  if the time and place be fixed at the meeting
adjourned.

SECTION 6. The  transaction  of any meeting of the Board of  Directors,  however
called and noticed or wherever held, shall be as valid as though transacted at a
meeting duly held after regular call and notice, if a quorum be present, and if,
either before or after such  meeting,  each of the Directors not present signs a
written waiver of notice, or a consent of holding such meeting,  or approvals of
the minutes thereof. All such waivers, consents or approvals shall be filed with
the corporate records or made a part of the minutes of the meeting.

SECTION 7. The majority of the authorized number of Directors shall be necessary
to  constitute a quorum for the  transaction  of business,  except to adjourn as
hereinafter  provided.

                                       49
<PAGE>


Every act or decision done or made by a majority of the  Directors  present at a
meeting  duly held at which a quorum is present  shall be regarded as the act of
the Board of  Directors,  unless a greater  number be  required by law or by the
Articles of Incorporation. Any action of a majority, although not at a regularly
called meeting,  and the record thereof, if assented to in writing by all of the
other members of the Board shall be as valid and effective in all respects as if
passed by the Board in regular meeting.

SECTION 8. A quorum of the Directors  may adjourn any Directors  meeting to meet
again at stated  day and  hour;  provided,  however,  that in the  absence  of a
quorum,  a majority of the Directors  present at any Directors  meeting,  either
regular or special,  may adjourn  from time to time until the time fixed for the
next regular meeting of the Board.

                                    ARTICLE 5

                             COMMITTEES OF DIRECTORS

SECTION 1. The Board of Directors  may, by  resolution  adopted by a majority of
the whole Board,  designate  one or more  committees  of the Board of Directors,
each  committee to consist of two or more of the  Directors  of the  corporation
which,  to the extent  provided in the  resolution,  shall and may  exercise the
power of the Board of Directors in the management of the business and affairs of
the  corporation  and may have power to authorize the seal of the corporation to
be affixed to all papers  which may  require it. Such  committee  or  committees
shall  have  such  name or names as may be  determined  from time to time by the
Board of Directors. The members of any such committee present at any meeting and
not  disqualified  from voting  may,  whether or not they  constitute  a quorum,
unanimously  appoint  another  member  of the Board of  Directors  to act at the
meeting in the place of any absent or disqualified  member.  At meetings of such
committees,  a majority  of the members or  alternate  members at any meeting at
which there is a quorum shall be the act of the committee.

SECTION 2. The committee  shall keep regular  minutes of their  proceedings  and
report the same to the Board of Directors.

SECTION 3. Any action  required or  permitted  to be taken at any meeting of the
Board of Directors or of any committee thereof may be taken without a meeting if
a written  consent thereto is signed by all members of the Board of Directors or
of such  committee,  as the case may be, and such written  consent is filed with
the minutes of proceedings of the Board or committee.

                                    ARTICLE 6

                            COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

SECTION  1. The  Directors  may be paid their  expenses  of  attendance  at each
meeting of the Board of Directors and may be paid a fixed sum for  attendance at
each meeting of the Board of Directors or a stated  salary as Director.  No such
payment shall  preclude any Director from serving the  corporation  in any other
capacity and receiving  compensation  therefore.  Members of special or standing
committees  may be allowed like  reimbursement  and  compensation  for attending
committee meetings.

                                       50
<PAGE>


                                    ARTICLE 7

                                     NOTICES

SECTION 1.  Notices  to  Directors  and  stockholders  shall be in  writing  and
delivered  personally  or  mailed  to the  Directors  or  stockholders  at their
addresses  appearing on the books of the  corporation.  Notices to Directors may
also be given by fax and by telegram.  Notice by mail,  fax or telegram shall be
deemed to be given at the time when the same shall be mailed.

SECTION 2.  Whenever  all parties  entitled to vote at any  meeting,  whether of
Directors or  stockholders,  consent,  either by a writing on the records of the
meeting or filed with the  Secretary,  or by  presence  at such  meeting or oral
consent entered on the minutes,  or by taking part in the  deliberations at such
meeting  without  objection,  the doings of such meeting shall be as valid as if
had at a meeting regularly called and noticed,  and at such meeting any business
may be  transacted  which  is not  excepted  from  the  written  consent  to the
consideration  of which no objection for want of notice is made at the time, and
if any  meeting  be  irregular  for want of notice or such  consent,  provided a
quorum was  present at such  meeting,  the  proceedings  of said  meeting may be
ratified and approved and rendered likewise valid and the irregularity or defect
therein  waived by a writing  signed by all parties  having the right to vote at
such meeting;  and such consent or approval of  stockholders  may be by proxy or
attorney, but all such proxies and powers of attorney must be in writing.

SECTION 3.  Whenever  any notice  whatever  is  required  to be given  under the
provisions of the statute,  of the Articles of Incorporation or of these Bylaws,
a waiver  thereof in writing,  signed by the person or persons  entitled to said
notice,  whether  before  or after  the time  stated  therein,  shall be  deemed
equivalent thereto.

                                    ARTICLE 8

                                    OFFICERS

SECTION  1. The  officers  of the  corporation  shall be  chosen by the Board of
Directors and shall be a President, a Secretary and a Treasurer.  Any person may
hold two or more offices.

SECTION 2. The Board of Directors at its first meeting after each annual meeting
of  stockholders  shall  choose a Chairman of the Board who shall be a Director,
and shall choose a President, a Secretary and a Treasurer,  none of whom need be
Directors.

SECTION 3. The Board of  Directors  may  appoint a  Vice-Chairman  of the Board,
Vice-Presidents and one or more Assistant  Secretaries and Assistant  Treasurers
and such other  officers  and agents as it shall deem  necessary  who shall hold
their  offices for such terms and shall  exercise  such powers and perform  such
duties as shall be determined from time to time by the Board of Directors.

                                       51
<PAGE>



SECTION 4. The salaries  and  compensation  of all  officers of the  corporation
shall be fixed by the Board of Directors.

SECTION 5. The officers of the corporation  shall hold office at the pleasure of
the  Board of  Directors.  Any  officer  elected  or  appointed  by the Board of
Directors  may be  removed  any time by the  Board  of  Directors.  Any  vacancy
occurring in any office of the  corporation  by death,  resignation,  removal or
otherwise shall be filled by the Board of Directors.

SECTION  6.  The  CHAIRMAN  OF  THE  BOARD  shall  preside  at  meetings  of the
stockholders  and the Board of  Directors,  and shall  see that all  orders  and
resolutions of the Board of Directors are carried into effect.

SECTION 7. The VICE-CHAIRMAN shall, in the absence or disability of the Chairman
of the Board,  perform the duties and exercise the powers of the Chairman of the
Board and shall  perform  other such duties as the Board of  Directors  may from
time to time prescribe.

SECTION 8. The PRESIDENT shall be the chief executive officer of the corporation
and shall have active  management of the business of the  corporation.  He shall
execute on behalf of the corporation  all  instruments  requiring such execution
except to the  extent the  signing  and  execution  thereof  shall be  expressly
designated  by the Board of  Directors  to some  other  officer  or agent of the
corporation.

SECTION 9. The  VICE-PRESIDENTS  shall act under the  direction of the President
and in absence or  disability  of the  President  shall  perform  the duties and
exercise the powers of the  President.  They shall perform such other duties and
have such other powers as the  President or the Board of Directors may from time
to time  prescribe.  The Board of Directors may designate one or more  Executive
Vice-Presidents  or  may  otherwise  specify  the  order  of  seniority  of  the
Vice-Presidents.  The duties and powers of the  President  shall  descend to the
Vice-Presidents in such specified order of seniority.

SECTION  10.  The  SECRETARY  shall act under the  direction  of the  President.
Subject to the  direction  of the  President he shall attend all meetings of the
Board  of  Directors  and  all  meetings  of the  stockholders  and  record  the
proceedings.  He shall  perform  like duties for the  standing  committees  when
required.  He shall give,  or cause to be given,  notice of all  meetings of the
stockholders  and special  meetings of the Board of Directors,  and will perform
other  such  duties  as may be  prescribed  by the  President  or the  Board  of
Directors.

SECTION  11. The  ASSISTANT  SECRETARIES  shall act under the  direction  of the
President.  In order of their  seniority,  unless  otherwise  determined  by the
President or the Board of Directors, they shall, in the absence or disability of
the Secretary, perform the duties and exercise the powers of the Secretary. They
shall  perform other such duties and have such other powers as the President and
the Board of Directors may from time to time prescribe.

12.  SECTION  The  TREASURER  shall act under the  direction  of the  President.
Section  Subject to the  direction of the President he shall have custody of the
corporate  funds and  securities  and shall keep full and  accurate  accounts of
receipts  and  disbursements  in books  belonging to the  corporation  and shall
deposit  all money and other  valuable  effects in the

                                       52
<PAGE>


name  and to the  credit  of the  corporation  in  such  depositories  as may be
designated  by the  Board of  Directors.  He  shall  disburse  the  funds of the
corporation as may be ordered by the President or the Board of Directors, taking
proper  vouchers for such  disbursements,  and shall render to the President and
the Board of Directors,  at its regular meetings, or when the Board of Directors
so  requires,  an  account  of all  his  transactions  as  Treasurer  and of the
financial condition of the corporation.

               If required by the Board of Directors,  the Treasurer  shall give
the corporation a bond in such sum and with such surety as shall be satisfactory
to the Board of  Directors  for the  faithful  performance  of the duties of his
office  and for  the  restoration  to the  corporation,  in  case of his  death,
resignation,  retirement or removal from office, of all books, papers, vouchers,
money and other property of whatever kind in his possession or under his control
belonging to the corporation.

SECTION  13.  The  ASSISTANT  TREASURERS  in order of  their  seniority,  unless
otherwise  determined by the President or the Board of Directors,  shall, in the
absence or  disability  of the  Treasurer,  perform the duties and  exercise the
powers of the  Treasurer.  They shall  perform  such other  duties and have such
other powers as the  President  or the Board of Directors  may from time to time
prescribe.

                                    ARTICLE 9

                              CERTIFICATES OF STOCK

SECTION 1. Every stockholder  shall be entitled to have a certificate  signed by
the President or a Vice- President and the Treasurer or an Assistant  Treasurer,
or the Secretary or an Assistant  Secretary of the  corporation,  certifying the
number of shares owned by him in the  corporation.  If the corporation  shall be
authorized  to issue more than one class of stock or more that one series of any
class, the designations,  preferences and relative,  participating,  optional or
other special  rights of the various  classes of stock or series thereof and the
qualifications,  limitations or restrictions of such rights,  shall be set forth
in  full  or  summarized  on the  face or  back  of the  certificate  which  the
corporation shall issue to represent such stock.

SECTION 2. If a  certificate  is signed (a) by a transfer  agent  other than the
corporation or its employees or (b) by a registrar other than the corporation or
its  employees,  the  signatures  of  the  officers  of the  corporation  may be
facsimiles.  In case any  officer who has signed or whose  facsimile  signatures
have been placed upon a certificate  shall cease to be such officer  before such
certificate is issued,  such  certificate  may be issued with the same effect as
though  the  person  had  not  ceased  to be  such  officer.  The  seal  of  the
corporation,  or  a  facsimile  thereof,  may,  but  need  not  be,  affixed  to
certificates of stock.

SECTION 3. The Board of Directors may direct a new  certificate or  certificates
to be issued in place of any certificate or certificates  theretofore  issued by
the  corporation  alleged to have been lost or  destroyed  upon the making of an
affidavit  of that fact by the person  claiming the  certificate  of stock to be
lost  or  destroyed.  When  authorizing  such  issue  of a  new  certificate  or
certificates,  the Board of Directors  may, in its discretion and as a condition
precedent to the issuance  thereof,  require the owner of such lost or destroyed
certificate or certificates, or his legal representative,  to advertise the same
in such manner as it shall


                                       53
<PAGE>

require  and/or  give the  corporation  a bond in such sum as it may  direct  as
indemnity  against  any claim  that may be made  against  the  corporation  with
respect to the certificate alleged to have been lost or destroyed.

SECTION  4. Upon  surrender  to the  corporation  or the  transfer  agent of the
corporation  of a certificate  for shares duty endorsed or accompanied by proper
evidence of  succession,  assignment  or authority to transfer,  it shall be the
duty of the corporation,  if it is satisfied that all provisions of the laws and
regulations  applicable to the corporation  regarding  transfer and ownership of
shares  have  been  compiled  with,  to issue a new  certificate  to the  person
entitled thereto, cancel the old certificate and record the transaction upon its
books.

SECTION 5. The Board of Directors may fix in advance a date not exceeding  sixty
(60) days nor less  than ten (IO)  days  preceding  the date of any  meeting  of
stockholders,  or the date of the  payment of any  dividend,  or the date of the
allotment of rights,  or the date when any change or  conversion  or exchange of
capital stock shall go into effect,  or a date in connection  with obtaining the
consent of stockholders for any purpose, as a record date for the termination of
the stockholders  entitled to notice of and to vote at any such meeting, and any
adjournment thereof, or entitled to receive payment of any such dividend,  or to
give  such  consent,  and in the such  case,  such  stockholders,  and only such
stockholders as shall be  stockholders of record on the date so fixed,  shall be
entitled to notice of and to vote as such meeting,  or any adjournment  thereof,
or to receive such payment of dividend,  or to receive such allotment of rights,
or to  exercise  such  rights,  or to give  such  consent,  as the  case may be,
notwithstanding  any transfer of any stock on the books of the corporation after
such record date fixed as aforesaid.

SECTION 6. The corporation  shall be entitled to recognize the person registered
on its  books  as the  owner  of the  share to be the  exclusive  owner  for all
purposes including voting and dividends,  and the corporation shall not be bound
to  recognize  any  equitable  or other  claims to or interest in such shares or
shares on the part of any -other person, whether or not it shall have express or
other notice thereof, except as otherwise provided by the laws of Nevada.

                                   ARTICLE 10

                               GENERAL PROVISIONS

SECTION 1. Dividends upon the capital stock of the  corporation,  subject to the
provisions  of the  Articles of  Incorporation,  if any,  may be declared by the
Board of Directors at any regular or special meeting, pursuant to law. Dividends
may be paid in cash, in property or in shares of the capital  stock,  subject to
the provisions of the Articles of Incorporation.

SECTION 2.  Before  payment of any  dividend,  there may be set aside out of any
funds  of the  corporation  available  for  dividends  such  sum or  sums as the
Directors  from time to time, in their  absolute  discretion,  think proper as a
reserve or reserves to meet  contingencies,  or for equalizing  dividends or for
repairing and  maintaining  any property of the  corporation,  or for such other
purpose  as  the  Directors  shall  think  conducive  to  the  interests  of the


                                       54
<PAGE>

corporation,  and the  Directors  may modify or abolish any such  reserve in the
manner in which it was created.

SECTION 3. All checks or demands for money and notes of the corporation shall be
signed by such  officer or officers or such other person or persons as the Board
of Directors may from time to time designate.

SECTION 4. The fiscal year of the  corporation  shall be fixed by  resolution of
the Board of Directors.

SECTION 5. The  corporation may or may not have a corporate seal, as may be from
time to time determined by resolution of the Board of Directors.  If a corporate
seal is adopted, it shall have inscribed thereon the name of the corporation and
the words "Corporate Seal" and "Nevada". The seal may be used by causing it or a
facsimile thereof to be impressed or affixed or in any manner reproduced.

                                   ARTICLE 11

                                 INDEMNIFICATION

               Every person who was or is a party or is a threatened  to be made
a party to or is involved  in any action,  suit or  proceeding,  whether  civil,
criminal,  administrative or  investigative,  by reason of the fact that he or a
person of whom he is the legal representative is or was a Director or officer of
the  corporation  or is or was serving at the request of the  corporation or for
its  benefit  as a  Director  or  officer  of  another  corporation,  or as  its
representative in a partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, shall
be indemnified  and held harmless to the fullest legally  permissible  under the
General  Corporation  Law of the State of Nevada  from time to time  against all
expenses,  liability and loss (including attorney's fees,  judgments,  fines and
amounts paid or to be paid in settlement) reasonably incurred or suffered by him
in  connection  therewith.  The expenses of officers and  Directors  incurred in
defending a civil or criminal  action,  suit or  proceeding  must be paid by the
corporation as they are incurred and in advance of the final  disposition of the
action, suit or proceeding upon receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of the
Director  or  officer to repay the amount if it is  ultimately  determined  by a
court of competent jurisdiction that he is not entitled to be indemnified by the
corporation.  Such right of indemnification  shall be a contract right which may
be enforced in any manner desired by such person.  Such right of indemnification
shall not be  exclusive  of any other  right which such  Directors,  officers or
representatives  may  have  or  hereafter  acquire  and,  without  limiting  the
generality of such statement,  they shall be entitled to their respective rights
of indemnification under any bylaw, agreement,  vote of stockholders,  provision
of law or otherwise, as well as their rights under this Article.

               The Board of Directors may cause the  corporation to purchase and
maintain  insurance  on behalf of any person who is or was a Director or officer
of the corporation,  or is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a
Director  or officer  of  another  corporation,  or as its  representative  in a
partnership,  joint  venture.  trust or other  enterprise  against any liability
asserted against such person and incurred in any such capacity or arising out of
such status,  whether or not the  corporation  would have the power to indemnify
such person.


                                       55
<PAGE>


               The Board of Directors may form time to time adopt further Bylaws
with  respect to  indemnification  and amend these and such Bylaws to provide at
all times the fullest  indemnification  permitted by the General Corporation Law
of the State of Nevada.

                                   ARTICLE 12

                                   AMENDMENTS

SECTION 1. The Bylaws may be amended by a majority  vote of all the stock issued
and  outstanding  and  entitled to vote at any annual or special  meeting of the
stockholders, provided notice of intention to amend shall have been contained in
the notice of the meeting.

SECTION 2. The Board of Directors  by a majority  vote of the whole Board at any
meeting may amend these Bylaws,  including  Bylaws adopted by the  stockholders,
but the  stockholders  may from time to time specify  particulars  of the Bylaws
which shall not be amended by the Board of Directors.

APPROVED AND ADOPTED MARCH 5, 1999.

                          CERTIFICATE OF THE SECRETARY

I,  Carol  Krushnisky,  hereby  certify  that I am  the  Secretary  of  ZEB  ORO
EXPLORATIONS INC.., and the foregoing Bylaws, consisting of 12 pages, constitute
the code of Bylaws of this company as duly  adopted at a regular  meeting of the
Board of Directors of the corporation held on .

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto subscribed my name on March 5, 1999.

    /s/ "Carol Krushnisky"
- ----------------------------
Carol Krushnisky - Secretary


                                       56







                                                                    EXHIBIT 3(a)

                NOT VALID UNLESS COUNTERSIGNED BY TRANSFER AGENT
               INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

                           SPECIMEN STOCK CERTIFICATES

                                                           CUSIP NO. 989203 10 4

(LOGO)                                                                    SHARES

                                     ZEB ORO

                                EXPLORATIONS INC.

                   Authorized Common Stock: 200,000,000 Shares
                                Par Value: $0.001




THIS CERTIFIES THAT

IS THE RECORD HOLDER OF

          -Shares of ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC. Common Stock -

transferable  on the books of the  Corporation  in person or by duly  authorized
attorney upon surrender of this Certificate properly endorsed.  This Certificate
is not valid until  countersigned  by the Transfer  Agent and  registered by the
Registrar.

                   Witness  the  facsimile  seal  of  the  Corporation  and  the
facsimile of its duly authorized officers.

Dated:

      "Carol Krushnisky                                    "Steven Bruce"
- ------------------------------                     -----------------------------
                     Secretary                                         President

Not valid unless countersigned by transfer agent

                                                   Countersigned Registered:
                                                NEVADA AGENCY AND TRUST COMPANY
                                               50 WEST LIBERTY STREET, SUITE 880
                                                       RENO, NEVADA, 89501

                                               By
                                                  ------------------------------
                                                          Authorized Signature


                                       57
<PAGE>

                     TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISITRAR AGREEMENT

      THIS AGREEMENT  made and entered into this 10th day of March,  1999 by and
between:

NEVADA AGENCY AND TRUST COMPANY, 50 West Liberty Street, Suite 880, Reno, Nevada
89501, hereinafter called "TRANSFER AGENT," and

ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC., 320 - 1100 Melville Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6E
4A6, a Nevada corporation, hereinafter called "COMPANY."

              NOW THEREFORE,  for valuable consideration and the mutual promises
herein contained, the parties hereto agree as follows, to wit:

      1.  [APPOINTMENT OF TRANSFER  AGENT] The COMPANY hereby appoints  TRANSFER
AGENT as the  Transfer  Agent and  Registrar  for the  COMPANY'S  Common  Stock,
commencing on this 10th day of March, 1999.

      2.  [COMPANY'S  DUTY] The COMPANY  agrees to deliver to  TRANSFER  AGENT a
complete  up-to-date  stockholder  list  showing  the  name  of  the  individual
stockholder,  current address, the number of shares and the certificate numbers,
it being specifically understood and agreed that the TRANSFER AGENT is not to be
held  responsible  for any omissions or error,  that may leave occurred prior to
this  Agreement  whether  on the  part of the  COMPANY  itself  or its  previous
transfer agent or agents.  The COMPANY hereby agrees to indemnify TRANSFER AGENT
in this regard.

      3. [STOCK  CERTIFICATES]  The COMPANY agrees to provide an adequate number
of stock certificates to handle the COMPANY'S transfers on a current basis. Upon
receipt of TRANSFER  AGENT'S request,  the COMPANY agrees to furnish  additional
stock  certificates as TRANSFER AGENT deems necessary  considering the volume of
transfers.  The stork  certificates  shall be supplied at  COMPANY'S  cost.  The
TRANSFER AGENT agrees to order stock  certificates from its printer upon request
of the COMPANY.

      4. [TRANSFER  AGENT DUTIES]  TRANSFER AGENT agrees to handle the COMPANY'S
transfers,  record  the  same,  and  maintain  a  ledger,  together  with a file
containing all correspondence relating to said transfers, which records shall be
kept confidential and be available to the COMPANY and its Board of Directors, or
to any person  specifically  authorized  by the Board of Directors to review the
records  which  shall be made  available  by TRANSFER  AGENT  during the regular
business hours.

      5.  [TRANSFER  AGENT  REGISTRATION]  TRANSFER  AGENT  warrants  that it is
registered as a Transfer  Agent with the United Stakes  Securities  and Exchange
Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

                                       58
<PAGE>


      6.  [STOCKHOLIDER  LIST]  From  time to time,  as  necessary  for  Company
stockholders  meeting or  mailings,  the  TRANSFER  AGENT will  certify and make
available to the current,  active stockholders list for COMPANY purposes.  it is
agreed that a reasonable charge for supplying such list will be made by TRANSFER
AGENT to the COMPANY.  It is further agreed that in the event the TRANSFER AGENT
received a request or a demand from a stockholder or the attorney of agent for a
stockholder, for a list of stockholders, the TRANSFER AGENT will serve notice of
such request by certified mail to the COMPANY. The COMPANY will have forty-eight
(48) hours to respond in writing to the TRANSFER  AGENT.  If the COMPANY  orders
the TRANSFER AGENT to withhold  delivery of a list of stockholders as requested,
the TRANSFER AGENT agrees to follow the orders of the COMPANY.  The COMPANY will
then follow the procedure set forth in the Uniform  Commercial  Code to restrain
the TRANSFER AGENT from making delivery of a stockholders list.

      7.  [TRANSFER  FEE]  TRANSFER  AGENT agrees to assess and collect from the
person requesting a transfer and/or the transferror, a fee of Fifteen and No/100
dollars ($15.OO) for each stock  certificate  issued,  except original issues of
stock or warrant certificates, which fees shall be paid by the COMPANY. This fee
may be decreased or increased at any time by the TRANSFER AGENT.  This fee shall
be the property of the TRANSFER AGENT.

      8. [ANNUAL FEE] The COMPANY agrees to pay the TRANSFER AGENT an annual fee
of TWELVE  HUNDRED  DOLLARS  ($1,200.00)  each  year.  This fee  reimburses  the
TRANSFER  AGENT for the expense and time  required to respond to the written and
oral inquiries from brokers and the investing public, as well as maintaining the
transfer books and records of the corporation. The annual fee will be due on 1st
of July of each year and is subject to annual review.

      8  [TERMINATION]  This  Agreement  may be terminated by either party given
written notice of such  termination to the other party at least ninety (90) days
before the effective  date.  The TRANSFER AGENT shall return all of the transfer
records to the COMPANY and its duties and  obligations  as TRANSFER  AGENT shall
cease at that time. The TRANSFER  AGENT will be paid a Termination  Fee of $1.00
per registered  stockholder  of the Company at the time the written  termination
notice is served.

      I0.  [COMPANY  STATUS] The COMPANY will promptly advise the TRANSFER AGENT
of any changes or amendments to the Articles of  Incorporation,  any significant
changes in corporate  status,  changes in officers,  etc., and of all changes in
filing status with the Securities and Exchange Commission,  or any state entity,
and to hold the, TRANSFER AGENT harmless from its failure to do so.

      II-  [INDEMNIFICATION  OF TRANSFER  AGENT] The COMPANY agrees to indemnify
and hold  harmless  the  TRANSFER  AGENT,  from any and all loss,  liability  of
damage,  including reasonable  attorneys' fees and expenses,  arising out of, or
resulting from the assertion against the TRANSFER AGENT of any claims,  debts or
obligations in connection  with any of the TRANSFER  AGENT'S duties as set forth
in the Agreement, and specifically it is understood that the

TRANSFER  AGENT  shall  have the right to apply to  independent  counsel  at the
COMPANY'S expense in following the COMPANY'S directions and orders.

                                       59
<PAGE>


      12.  [COUNTERPARTS]  This  Agreement  may be  executed  in any  number  of
counterparts,  each of which, when executed and delivered, shall be an original,
but all such counterparts shall constitute one and the same instrument.

      8 [NOTICE]  Any notice under this  Agreement  shall be deemed to have been
sufficiently  given if sent by registered or certified  mail,  postage  prepaid,
addressed as follows:

                           TO THE COMPANY:
                           Michael J. Kennaugh
                           ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                           320 - 1100 Melville Street
                           Vancouver, B.C. V6E 4A6

                           TO THE TRANSFER AGENT:
                           NEVADA  AGENCY  AND  TRUST  COMPANY  50 West  Liberty
                           Street, Suite 880 Reno, Nevada 89501

      14.  [MERGER  CLAUSE] This Agreement  supersedes all prior  agreements and
understandings  between the parties and may not be changed or terminated orally,
and no attempted  change,  termination or waiver of any of the provisions hereof
shall binding unless in writing and signed by the parties hereto.

      15.  [GOVERNING  LAW] This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with the laws of the State of Nevada.

      THIS  AGREEMENT has been executed by the parties  hereto as of the day and
   year 1st above written,  by the duly  authorized  officer or officers of said
   parties,  and the same will be binding  upon the  assigns and  successors  in
   interest of the parties hereto.

                                            NEVADA AGENCY AND TRUST COMPANY
                                            TRANSFER AGENT

                                            BY     /S/   "AMANDA CARDINALLI"
                                               --------------------------------
                                              AMANDA CARDINALLI, VICE PRESIDENT

                                            ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.
                                            COMPANY

                                            BY    /S/  "MICHAEL J. KENNAUGH"
                                               --------------------------------
                                                  MICHAEL J. KENNAUGH
                                                  PRESIDENT

                                        60





                                                                   EXHIBIT 10(I)

               CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT


ZEB ORO EXPLORATIONS INC.

         We hereby  consent to the use of our report dated May 28, 1999,  in the
registration  statement  of Zeb Oro  Explorations  Inc.  filed in Form  10-SB in
accordance with Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

                                                     /s/ L. REX ANDERSEN

                                               ANDERSEN ANDERSEN & STRONG, L.C.

Salt Lake City, Utah
May 28, 1999

                                       61


<PAGE>

                                [INSERT GRAPHIC]



                                       62



                                                                  EXHIBIT 99 (A)



                              [GRAPHIC OMITTED]






<TABLE> <S> <C>


<ARTICLE>                     5
<MULTIPLIER>                                   1
<CURRENCY>                                     US Dollar

<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-mos
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                              DEC-31-1999
<PERIOD-START>                                 JAN-01-2000
<PERIOD-END>                                   APR-30-1999
<EXCHANGE-RATE>                                1.000
<CASH>                                         9,811
<SECURITIES>                                   0
<RECEIVABLES>                                  0
<ALLOWANCES>                                   0
<INVENTORY>                                    0
<CURRENT-ASSETS>                               9,811
<PP&E>                                         0
<DEPRECIATION>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                 9,811
<CURRENT-LIABILITIES>                          3,345
<BONDS>                                        0
                          0
                                    0
<COMMON>                                       15,300
<OTHER-SE>                                     (8,834)
<TOTAL-LIABILITY-AND-EQUITY>                   9,811
<SALES>                                        0
<TOTAL-REVENUES>                               0
<CGS>                                          0
<TOTAL-COSTS>                                  0
<OTHER-EXPENSES>                               8,834
<LOSS-PROVISION>                               0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                             0
<INCOME-PRETAX>                                0
<INCOME-TAX>                                   0
<INCOME-CONTINUING>                            0
<DISCONTINUED>                                 0
<EXTRAORDINARY>                                0
<CHANGES>                                      0
<NET-INCOME>                                   (8,834)
<EPS-BASIC>                                  (0.001)
<EPS-DILUTED>                                  (0.001)


</TABLE>


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