Source : THE AGE NEWS
Dateline Resources has expanded its district-scale Music Valley heavy rare earths project in California, staking an additional 66 claims to lock up another 1300 acres of prospective ground.
The move follows recent fieldwork that confirmed strong evidence of the recognised host rock for heavy rare earth element (HREE) mineralisation in the region.
The company says the new claims cover a north-westerly extension of a priority geophysical target and consolidate its control over the area. Mapping and sampling by the company’s consultants have now identified outcropping zones of the prized Pinto Gneiss unit that correlate with a thorium anomaly picked up in recent geophysical surveys.
The discovery of the host rock is significant, moving the project from a set of compelling geophysical images to tangible geology on the ground that can be mapped, sampled and ultimately drilled.
‘This (Pinto Gneiss) unit is recognised as the principal host to heavy rare earth mineralisation in the district.’
Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi
Dateline’s latest work has added to the data from a massive airborne magnetic and radiometric survey flown in March, which covered the entirety of the 20,520-acre project that was consolidated earlier this year, increasing the grounds by a massive 1800 per cent.
Interpretation of the new data has now lit up numerous structures across the project, with the company’s geos highlighting a geological trifecta of features considered prospective for HREE mineralisation.
The freshly identified ‘sweet spots’ are primarily found within the favourable Pinto Gneiss host unit. They occur at the intersection of thorium-rich zones, a key indicator for HREEs, along with local faulting and contacts with younger diorite intrusions.
Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi said: “The addition of these claims further enhances the scale and strategic position of the Music Valley project, while securing ground that hosts an extension of one of our priority geophysical targets.”
Music Valley sits in a well-endowed mining district just 110 kilometres south of MP Materials’ massive Mountain Pass mine, the only significant rare earths producer in the United States and host to a resource of 26.27 million tonnes grading a whopping 5.89 per cent total rare earth oxides.
Dateline has now stitched together a commanding position across the Music Valley. The terrain was first flagged for heavy rare earth mineralisation by the US Geological Survey more than seven decades ago. However, despite the historical smoke, the area has seen little modern exploration.
Strategic location is a recurring theme for Dateline. Its flagship Colosseum gold project sits just 10km north of the very same Mountain Pass operation. A bankable feasibility study on Colosseum recently tabled some impressive numbers, projecting a pre-tax net present value of US$785 million (AU$1.12 billion) and an internal rate of return of 49.5 per cent, based on a US$4200 (AU$5997) per ounce gold price.
Notably, Colosseum is also considered prospective for HREE’s, with the drill rods already spinning to test for the critical minerals. The company also owns the Argos strontium project in California, the largest known deposit in the US.
With the US government actively looking to establish secure domestic supply chains for critical minerals such as rare earths and reduce its reliance on foreign sources, in-country projects with genuine district-scale prospectivity are beginning to attract significant attention.
Dateline’s approach of building on historical work with modern exploration techniques appears to be paying early dividends. Having staked a commanding land position over Music Valley, a region with serious geological pedigree, the company’s first high-tech survey has now pointed to where the treasures may lie.
With its geologists now running a fine-tooth comb over the prospective host rock, the company looks to be one step closer to unleashing the drill bit at its Californian Music Valley project.
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