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Journal ArticleDOI

Deep-ocean mineral deposits as a source of critical metals for high- and green-technology applications: Comparison with land-based resources

TLDR
In this paper, the authors compare the grades and tonnages of nodules and crusts in those two areas with the global terrestrial reserves and resources, and compare the two largest existing land-based REE mines, Bayan Obo in China and Mountain Pass in the USA.
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This article is published in Ore Geology Reviews.The article was published on 2013-06-01. It has received 608 citations till now.

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Microbial Communities of Ferromanganese Sedimentary Layers and Nodules of Lake Baikal (Bolshoy Ushkany Island)

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors studied Fe-Mn nodules and host sediments recovered at the slope of Bolshoy Ushkany Island and determined the initial age of the Fe-mn nodule formation scattered in the sediments as 96 ± 5 −131 ± 8 Ka.
Journal Article

Section 5. Estimating Ultimate Resources

TL;DR: Our continuing global mineral needs must come from reserves and resources as mentioned in this paper, where the term resources refers to Earth's entire inventory of the mineral of interest, whereas reserves refer to that part of the resources that have been identified and quantified and can
Journal ArticleDOI

Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy instrument and spectral analysis for deep-ocean Fe-Mn crusts

TL;DR: In this paper , a laser induced breakdown spectroscopy optical system for the detection of deep-ocean ferromanganese crusts is designed and built, which can meet the requirements of near-insitu chemical component detection on ocean-going survey ships.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Submarine Thermal Springs on the Galápagos Rift

TL;DR: It is suggested that two-thirds of the heat lost from new oceanic lithosphere at the Gal�pagos Rift in the first million years may be vented from thermal springs, predominantly along the axial ridge within the rift valley.
OtherDOI

Rare earth elements: critical resources for high technology

Abstract: The rare earth elements (REE) form the largest chemically coherent group in the periodic table. Though generally unfamiliar, the REE are essential for many hundreds of applications. The versatility and specificity of the REE has given them a level of technological, environmental, and economic importance considerably greater than might be expected from their relative obscurity. The United States once was largely self-sufficient in these critical materials, but over the past decade has become dependent upon imports (fig. 1). In 1999 and 2000, more than 90% of REE required by U.S. industry came from deposits in China. Although the 15 naturally occurring REE (table 1; fig. 2) are generally similar in their geochemical properties, their individual abundances in the Earth are by no means equal. In the continental crust and its REE ore deposits, concentrations of the most and least abundant REE typically differ by two to five orders of magnitude (fig. 3). As technological applications of REE have multiplied over the past several decades, demand for several of the less abundant (and formerly quite obscure) REE has increased dramatically. The diverse nuclear, metallurgical, chemical, catalytic, electrical, magnetic, and optical properties of the REE have led to an ever increasing variety of applications. These uses range from mundane (lighter flints, glass polishing) to high-tech (phosphors, lasers, magnets, batteries, magnetic refrigeration) to futuristic (hightemperature superconductivity, safe storage and transport of hydrogen for a post-hydrocarbon economy).
Book ChapterDOI

Sea-Floor Tectonics and Submarine Hydrothermal Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify a number of sites of high-temperature venting and polymetallic sulfide deposits on the seafloor of the world's oceans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Uptake of elements from seawater by ferromanganese crusts: solid-phase associations and seawater speciation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a simple sorption model related to the inorganic speciation of the elements in seawater, as has been proposed in earlier models, in order to determine the host phases of 40 elements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sequential leaching of marine ferromanganese precipitates: Genetic implications

TL;DR: In this paper, the results of leaching experiments were carried out on twentyone hydrogenetic crust samples from different locations in the central Pacific and the results were compared with four crust and nodule samples of different genetic origin.
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