Authors
MP Smith, Kathryn Moore, Dora Kavecsánszki, Adrian Anthony Finch, Jindrich Kynicky, Frances Wall
Publication date
2016/5/1
Source
Geoscience Frontiers
Volume
7
Issue
3
Pages
315-334
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The rare earth elements are unusual when defining giant-sized ore deposits, as resources are often quoted as total rare earth oxide, but the importance of a deposit may be related to the grade for individual, or a limited group of the elements. Taking the total REE resource, only one currently known deposit (Bayan Obo) would class as giant (>1.7 × 107 tonnes contained metal), but a range of others classify as large (>1.7 × 106 tonnes). With the exception of unclassified resource estimates from the Olympic Dam IOCG deposit, all of these deposits are related to alkaline igneous activity – either carbonatites or agpaitic nepheline syenites. The total resource in these deposits must relate to the scale of the primary igneous source, but the grade is a complex function of igneous source, magmatic crystallisation, hydrothermal modification and supergene enrichment during weathering. Isotopic data suggest that the sources …
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