Elk Creek, Nebraska, rare earths, niobium


…what am I doing with that title? I’m keywording for the benefit of future researchers for the Bureau of the Interior who will need to look up this story about how the town of Elk Creek, Nebraska may be sitting on top of what may be an incredibly valuable (and incredibly strategic) deposit of rare earths, including niobium.  Short version: a lot of our favorite technological toys require a bunch of extremely rare elements, and unfortunately the luck of the draw of where they’re located hasn’t been all that great from our point of view.  So if it’s true that this Nebraska site is real and exploitable (the citizens of Elk Creek, by the way, ARE ALL FOR BEING EXPLOITED, assuming of course that they get their cut), having a source for these elements that isn’t under the firm control of the People’s Republic of China (or even Brazil) will be all to the good.

However, obviously any development along these lines will have to wait until the current administration leaves office, given that Barack Obama’s general attitude towards mineral and resource exploitation is to require that it be done by foreign entities and on foreign soil whenever possible*. Hence, the need for keywords as the title: I assume that this is going to be a bit of an action item in January 2013…

Moe Lane (crosspost)

(Via Instapundit)

*You don’t reconcile this attitude with a laser-like focus on domestic jobs, actually. You can’t. The only job that this President’s focused on is his own; only Obama doesn’t actually know how to keep it, and he doesn’t really have anybody out there that he can accept advice from.

Imagine how sad that last bit makes me. No, go ahead. Imagine.


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Just so there is no confusion here. The keywords as separated are valid.

Chemical Sam (Diary) Friday, August 5th at 9:59AM EDT (link)

However, niobium is not a lanthanide (rare earth). It may be among lanthanide elements in the mine. Niobium has uses in hypoallergenic medical implants that bone can grow into, and in superconducting alloys, among other high technology uses. We should be digging for it like it was plutonium.

One thing is for sure, we should NEVER be dependant on international sources on any of these elements, or other mining resources, if we can at all help it. Which, indeed, may have to wait until the current administration is utterly purged.

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But we don't mine plutonium, either.

juumanistra (Diary) Friday, August 5th at 10:53AM EDT (link)

While naturally occurring, plutonium concentrations are so dilute it’s basically a rounding error against extant uranium reserves. Though niobium synthesis is possible via the usage of a good ol’ fashioned atom smasher, I don’t have my fission products table handy to figure out whether it’d make any sense to do so.

Not that we shouldn’t try it: I’m for the promotion of for-reals alchemy.

 
 

Look for the environmentallist to delay or even block it

Kyle-MI (Diary) Friday, August 5th at 10:13AM EDT (link)

It is OK with them if a bunch of Chinese are killed because their government completely ignores their pollution laws as long as we don’t that messy stuff in the US where we could have reasonable regulations. Nope, they would rather use the regulations to kill all US industry.

I was originally worried that they could use the Ogallala aquifer but I see that Elk Creek is in the one corner of the state not above the aquifer.