Rare-earth mineral
A rare-earth mineral is a mineral that contains one or more rare-earth elements as major metal constituents. Rare-earths are to be distinguished from critical minerals, which are materials of strategic or economic importance that are defined differently by different countries.
Definition and nomenclature
Minerals are solids composed of various inorganic elements, mixed through processes such as evaporation, pressure or other physical changes.Rare-earth minerals are rare because rare-earth elements have unique geochemical properties that prevent them from easily forming minerals, and are therefore not normally found in deposits large or concentrated enough for mining. This is the reason they are called "rare earths".
Rare-earth minerals contain one or more of the 17 rare-earth elements, 15 of which are known as the lanthanides, the other two being scandium and yttrium.
Rare-earth elements or minerals are distinct from minerals or materials described as critical minerals or raw materials, which refers to materials that are considered to be of strategic or economic importance to a country. There is no single list, but individual governments compile lists of materials that are critical for their own economies.
Common minerals containing rare-earth elements
Rare-earth minerals are usually found in association with alkaline to peralkaline igneous magmas in pegmatites or with carbonatite intrusives. Perovskite mineral phases are common hosts to rare-earth elements within the alkaline complexes.Mantle-derived carbonate melts are also carriers of rare earths. Hydrothermal deposits associated with alkaline magmatism contain a variety of rare-earth minerals.
Common hydrothermal minerals that often contain significant rare-earth elements include:
- aeschynite-(Ce)
- aeschynite-(Y)
- allanite
- apatite
- bastnäsite
- britholite
- brockite
- cerite
- dollaseite-(Ce)
- fluocerite
- fluorite
- gadolinite
- monazite
- parisite-(Ce)
- parisite-(La)
- stillwellite
- synchysite
- titanite
- wakefieldite
- xenotime
- zircon
Mining
The presence of rare-earth minerals can be a valuable indicator in geological surveys and mineral resource assessments. There are over 160 rare-earth minerals known, but only four of these occur in amounts suitable for mining. They can occur in either primary or secondary deposits.Primary deposits result from hydrothermal and igneous processes, while secondary deposits are sedimentary and formed through weathering processes. In the case of primary deposits, the minerals are generally found in the specific location where the elements came together to form the deposit. Secondary deposits have undergone metamorphic or sedimentary processes in a location different from where the minerals were actually formed. Depending on the type of deposit, various methods can be employed to extract the minerals from both primary and secondary deposits.