Australian synthetic biologists have developed a prototype for an innovative biosensor that can detect rare earth elements and be modified for a range of other applications.
The find is believed to contain the largest deposit of medium and heavy REEs in China, fueling the country's high-tech ambitions.
PHILADELPHIA — Pennsylvania could help President Donald Trump's second administration achieve its energy goals, but not in ...
Lycaon Resources recently completed scout drillhole at its Stansmore target in WA to test a magnetic anomaly has intercepted ...
The Yellow River, which stretches from the Tibetan Plateau to the Bohai Sea in China, is so called because of the color lent ...
MTM Critical Metals (ASX:MTM) is on track for the start up of its US-based critical minerals extraction technology plant by ...
Analysis of debris from the nearly 5 billion-year-old asteroid Bennu suggests the building blocks of DNA and RNA were present ...
Swedish state-owned mining company LKAB announced that it can meet around 18% of Europe's rare earth metal demand in the long ...
The building blocks for life, including salts, organic matter and amino acids have been found in samples returned to Earth ...