rare earth minerals

hmmm

Hero Member
Jun 9, 2007
830
95
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Upvote 0

jmoller99

Sr. Member
Jan 8, 2010
294
109
Colorado Springs, Colorado USA
Detector(s) used
Whites GMT, Goldmaster Vsat, 5900, Bounty Hunter Discovery 3300 and Falcon MD-20.
Primary Interest:
Other
Most rare earth mines have other elements that are more plentiful, and the rare earth element recovery are a by product of processing for the other major element. There was a large strike for rare earths south west of Omaha Nebraska this summer - you never know where you will find ore.

California and Colorado are 2 other states I know that have mining areas that have processed it.
 

nebraskadad

Sr. Member
Jan 8, 2005
287
9
hmmm,

REE's have a brought spectrum of uses, from electronics, to hybrid vehicles.

moller's post is correct in the fact Quantum RE minerals, used a 1980s mineral assessment from UNL Nat Res, to further drill for REE deposits.

niobium is used in alloying other metals, increasing tensile strength. It is also used in creation of superconductive materials.

In the area in question, known as the Elk Creek Formation, (Niobium, Neodynium) have been assayed in quantities, similar to those assays in the current leader "China".

Generally "soil" is not the parent material. The "lode" so to speak in the area in question is material at depths of 600' to 1200' below surface. In a layer from the late Ordovician era, when much of the continent was under water.
http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~rcb7/namO450.jpg

uses of REE's
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rare_earth_element
 

OP
OP
hmmm

hmmm

Hero Member
Jun 9, 2007
830
95
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
nebraskadad said:
hmmm,
REE's have a brought spectrum of uses, from electronics, to hybrid vehicles.
moller's post is correct in the fact Quantum RE minerals, used a 1980s mineral assessment from UNL Nat Res, to further drill for REE deposits.
niobium is used in alloying other metals, increasing tensile strength. It is also used in creation of superconductive materials.
In the area in question, known as the Elk Creek Formation, (Niobium, Neodynium) have been assayed in quantities, similar to those assays in the current leader "China".
Generally "soil" is not the parent material. The "lode" so to speak in the area in question is material at depths of 600' to 1200' below surface. In a layer from the late Ordovician era, when much of the continent was under water.
http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~rcb7/namO450.jpg
uses of REE's
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rare_earth_element
very interesting, thanks.
the hard pann comes from this dike, i theorize the dike has been working from volcanics and has been slowly depositing this mound of hard pann for millions of years. i assume this volcanic rock has come from deep deaths. do you think i should test it for rare earths.
 

Attachments

  • DIKE.jpg
    DIKE.jpg
    112.6 KB · Views: 926
  • dike2.jpg
    dike2.jpg
    72.6 KB · Views: 1,070

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest Discussions

Top