Could There Be Significant Rare-earth Deposits in The continental US?

Rare earth elements are necessary for modern technology, but they only come from a few sources around the globe

New research has discovered them hiding in coal mines in the USA.

Valuable rare earth elements that are crucial for batteries, touchscreens and other modern technologies may be snuggled right up against ‘fossil fuels’, researchers have discovered.

A new study of coal mines in Utah and western Colorado found that rock layers alongside coal seams are rich in elements like scandium, yttrium and neodymium.

These and other rare-earth elements are used in ubiquitous modern technologies like smartphones and are also crucial for ‘green’ energy technologies such as wind turbines and hybrid cars.

The vast majority of rare earth elements are currently mined or processed in China, and so the U.S. Department of Energy has been funding the hunt for these elements in the United States, in hopes of spurring domestic production.

“There’s a real societal need to develop these minerals domestically,” study co-author Lauren Birgenheier, a geologist at the University of Utah, told Live Science.

Inspired by previous research that had found rare earth elements in association with coal in the Appalachian region, Birgenheier and her team took samples from six active and four idle coal mines in central Utah and western Colorado.

The researchers used X-ray fluorescence and mass spectrometry — two geochemical methods for determining which elements exist within a sample — to look for traces of the 17 metallic rare earths elements.

The researchers found that between 24 and 45 percent of shale and siltstone rocks adjacent to coal seams had at least 200 parts per million (ppm) of these elements, while all volcanic rocks sampled contained rare earth elements at those levels or higher.

“They’re in these shale or muddy gray units that are above and below the coals,” Birgenheier said. “If you’re already mining the coal seam out you could envision a model where you take some of the shales above and below.”

The Department of Energy currently considers a concentration of 300 ppm of rare earth elements as economically viable for mining. Birgenheier and her team set the lower bar of 200 ppm for exploratory reasons, and more work will be needed to find out how many of the deposits are feasible for mining.

In western Colorado and Utah, the coal beds formed from a peat swamp environment, Birgenheier said, and the rare earth elements probably became integrated into the rock layers from volcanic ash that settled in the swamps, or from biological organisms that accumulated the metals before dying and transforming, under heat and pressure, into coal.

Over millennia, the metals may then have leached out of the coal itself and into the adjoining rocks.

Coal beds across the country have different histories, she said, but other research groups are currently carrying out similar studies in other areas, from the Gulf Coast to Wyoming to the coal fields of Illinois.

The findings were published April 26 in the journal Frontiers in Earth Science.

See more here livescience.com

Header image: Lauren Birgenheier, University of Utah

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Comments (2)

  • Avatar

    Wisenox

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    Don’t know if it’s real, or a ploy to abate investment concerns and bad press. Oh look, rare elements and no child labor. No need to worry about pushing lithium or EV’s, rare Earth elements are everywhere now.
    Bad news, fake news, what news, fuck the news, we make the news.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Boris Badenov

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    200ppm, so 1,000,000 TONS and you get .02% or 200 tons, that’s s a heck of a lot of dirt., aren’t they worried about climate change or something?

    Reply

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