Bayan Obo Mining District Explained

Bayan Obo Mining District should not be confused with Bayan-Ovoo, Ömnögovi.

Bayan'obo
Settlement Type:District
Pushpin Map:China Inner Mongolia#China
Pushpin Label:Bayan
Pushpin Label Position:left
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:China
Subdivision Type1:Autonomous region
Subdivision Name1:Inner Mongolia
Subdivision Type2:Prefecture-level city
Subdivision Name2:Baotou
Seat Type:District seat
Seat:Tongyang Road Subdistrict
Area Total Km2:247.89
Population As Of:2020
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:22,681
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:China Standard
Utc Offset:+8
Coordinates:41.7828°N 109.9736°W
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Mon:Баян-Овоо Уурхайн дүүрэг
Monr:Bayan Oboɣ-a Aɣurqai-yin toɣoriɣ
Order:st
S:白云鄂博矿区
T:白雲鄂博礦區
P:Báiyún'èbó Kuàng Qū
L:rich ovoo mining district

Bayan'obo Mining District (Mongolian:,), or Baiyun-Obo or Baiyun'ebo, is a mining district in the west of Inner Mongolia, China. It is under the administration of Baotou City, the downtown of which is more than to the south.

The mines north of the town are the largest deposits of rare-earth elements yet found and, as of 2005, responsible for 45% of global rare-earth element production.[2] [3] [4]

In the satellite image at right, vegetation appears red, grassland is light brown, rocks are black, and water surfaces are green. Two circular open-pit mines are visible, as well as a number of tailings ponds and tailings piles.[5]

Administrative divisions

Bayan Obo Mining District is made up of 2 subdistricts.

NameSimplified ChineseHanyu PinyinMongolian (Hudum Script)Mongolian (Cyrillic)Administrative division code
Subdistricts
Mining Road SubdistrictChinese: 矿山路街道Mongolian: Уурхай замын зээл гудамж150206001
Tongyang Road SubdistrictChinese: 通阳道街道Mongolian: Дүн ян замын зээл гудамж150206002

Economic geology

China produced about 81,000 tons of rare-earth metals in 2001; the number jumped to about 120,000 by 2006. According to the Chinese Society of Rare Earths, 9600to of waste gas—containing dust concentrate, hydrofluoric acid, sulfur dioxide, and sulfuric acid—are released with every ton of rare metals that are mined. Approximately 75m2 of acidic wastewater, plus about a ton of radioactive waste residue are also produced.[5]

Mine deposit

Very large rare-earth elements (REE) Fe-Nb deposit (Bayan-Obo type), discovered as an iron deposit in 1927. REE minerals were discovered in 1936, and niobium-bearing ores in the late 1950s. Reserves are estimated at more than 40 million tons of REE minerals grading at 3–5.4% REE (70% of world's known REE reserves), 1 million tons of Nb2O5 and 470 million tons of iron. The deposit also contains an estimated 130 million tons of fluorite.

Bayan'obo is the world's largest known REE deposit.[6] The fluorite content of the ores also makes it the world's largest fluorite deposit.

The deposit occurs in an east–west trending Mesoproterozoic rift zone along the northern margin of the Sino-Korean Craton. Host strata are quartzite, slate, limestone, and dolomite. Dolomite is the main host rock. The orebodies are stratiform and lenticular, with masses, bands, layers, veins, and disseminations. Besides clear features of hydrothermal mineralization, the deposit also exhibits Mg, Fe, Na and F metasomatism. Sm-Nd monazite isochron age for bastnaesite and riebeckite is 1200 to 1300 Ma, whereas Th-Pb and Sm-Nd age of Ba-REE-F carbonates and aeschynite is 474 to 402 Ma.[7]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.citypopulation.de/en/china/neimenggu/admin/ Inner Mongolia: Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties
  2. The Bayan Obo iron-rare-earth-niobium deposits, Inner Mongolia, China . Lawrence J. Drewa, Meng Qingrunb and Sun Weijun . . 26 . 1–2 . 43–65 . 1990 . 10.1016/0024-4937(90)90040-8 .
  3. Chemical compositions of carbonate minerals from Bayan Obo, Inner Mongolia, China: implications for petrogenesis . Xue-Ming Yang, Michael J. Le Bas . Lithos . 72 . 1–2 . 97–116 . 2004 . 10.1016/j.lithos.2003.09.002 .
  4. Bayan Obo Controversy: Carbonatites versus Iron Oxide-Cu-Au-(REE-U) . Chengyu Wu . Resource Geology . 58 . 4 . 348–354 . 2007 . https://archive.today/20121217213134/http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121496988/abstract . dead . 2012-12-17 . 10.1111/j.1751-3928.2008.00069.x . free .
  5. http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=77723&src=eoa-iotd NASA Bayan Obo image and writeup
  6. Web site: Rare Earths: The Hidden Cost to Their Magic" (Part 2), Distillations Podcast and transcript, Episode 242 . Science History Institute. June 25, 2019 . 28 August 2019.
  7. Web site: Bayan Obo (Bayun-Obo; Baiyunebo) deposit, Bayan Obo, Darhan Muminggan United Banner, Baotou League, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China. at Mindat.org