US Team Studies Alaskan Rare Earth Deposit
posted on
Sep 09, 2010 08:27AM
Edit this title from the Fast Facts Section
http://www.resourceinvestor.com/News/2010/9/Pages/US-Team-Sudies-Alaskan-Rare-Earth-Deposit.aspx
The two so-called “heavy” rare earths have been found in what are called “anomalously high grades” in the Bokan area. The mineralogy in the area is believed be the largest historically documented heavy rare earth elements (HREE) deposit in the United States.
China has recently moved to decrease the export of these heavy rare earth elements, increasing interest in securing short- and long-term supplies within the U.S., the Halifax, Nova Scotia-based Ucore noted in a statement.
“The US government is quite interested in these minerals,” said Anthony Mariano, an international recognized expert on rare earth mineralogy who accompanied the USGS study group. A report on Mariano’s views of the Bokan area has been promised in the near future by Jack Lifton, who also visited the Ucore project last month
The USGS, a bureau of the US Department of Interior, had last year awarded a research grant to geology departments at four Canadian universities for a continuing study of the Bokan deposit, which contains uranium as well as rare earths.
As a result of the studies, the federal agency is planning to use the Dotson Ridge area of Bokan to analyze vein-type REE deposits and alternative deposits associated with alkaline-peralkaline complexes, Ucore executives said. REE mineralization of the Bokan-Dotson Ridge property, which is fully owned by Ucore, is structurally controlled in multiple dikes and veins radial to a peralkaline intrusive complex.
The USGS team examined a number of areas in the Bokan complex, also including the Dotson Shear, Geoduck, Wennie and Geiger zones. Also examined was the Sunday Lake zone described as having yielded some of the highest HREE grades on record for a North American deposit. The complex is located about 60 kilometers southwest of Ketchikan, Alaska.
In addition to Mariano, participants in the study visit included resource and geological specialists Bradley van Gosen, Philip Verplanck and Richard Grauch, who supervised the USGS team; James Barker, co-author of the original 1988 US Bureau of Mines study of Bokan, and Jaroslav Dostal from St. Mary’s University in Halifax, who is directing the Canadian universities study and is an expert on ore genesis.
“We welcome the involvement of the USGS at Bokan,” said Jim McKenzie, president and CEO of Ucore, a junior exploration company."Not only will their expertise help us to identify and assess the unusual chemical, mineralogical, and structural aspects of this complex project area, their work will also highlight the significance of Bokan's unusual concentrations of HREE's, to various US policy makers."
Ucore’s share price jumped on the TSX Venture Exchange following the company’s statement on the USGS visit and ended the trading day up more than 11% .
The two so-called “heavy” rare earths have been found in what are called “anomalously high grades” in the Bokan area. The mineralogy in the area is believed be the largest historically documented heavy rare earth elements (HREE) deposit in the United States.
China has recently moved to decrease the export of these heavy rare earth elements, increasing interest in securing short- and long-term supplies within the U.S., the Halifax, Nova Scotia-based Ucore noted in a statement.
“The US government is quite interested in these minerals,” said Anthony Mariano, an international recognized expert on rare earth mineralogy who accompanied the USGS study group. A report on Mariano’s views of the Bokan area has been promised in the near future by Jack Lifton, who also visited the Ucore project last month
The USGS, a bureau of the US Department of Interior, had last year awarded a research grant to geology departments at four Canadian universities for a continuing study of the Bokan deposit, which contains uranium as well as rare earths.
As a result of the studies, the federal agency is planning to use the Dotson Ridge area of Bokan to analyze vein-type REE deposits and alternative deposits associated with alkaline-peralkaline complexes, Ucore executives said. REE mineralization of the Bokan-Dotson Ridge property, which is fully owned by Ucore, is structurally controlled in multiple dikes and veins radial to a peralkaline intrusive complex.
The USGS team examined a number of areas in the Bokan complex, also including the Dotson Shear, Geoduck, Wennie and Geiger zones. Also examined was the Sunday Lake zone described as having yielded some of the highest HREE grades on record for a North American deposit. The complex is located about 60 kilometers southwest of Ketchikan, Alaska.
In addition to Mariano, participants in the study visit included resource and geological specialists Bradley van Gosen, Philip Verplanck and Richard Grauch, who supervised the USGS team; James Barker, co-author of the original 1988 US Bureau of Mines study of Bokan, and Jaroslav Dostal from St. Mary’s University in Halifax, who is directing the Canadian universities study and is an expert on ore genesis.
“We welcome the involvement of the USGS at Bokan,” said Jim McKenzie, president and CEO of Ucore, a junior exploration company."Not only will their expertise help us to identify and assess the unusual chemical, mineralogical, and structural aspects of this complex project area, their work will also highlight the significance of Bokan's unusual concentrations of HREE's, to various US policy makers."
Ucore’s share price jumped on the TSX Venture Exchange following the company’s statement on the USGS visit and ended the trading day up more than 11% .