Finland is situated in the central part of the Fennoscandian shield, which is the largest outcropping Precambrian domain in Europe, and has high potential for exploration of REE and other metals. The known examples of REE mineralisation in Finland occur in carbonatitic and alkaline intrusives, granites, hydrothermal rocks and kaolinitic saprolites. There are currently no economic REE deposits in Finland, although REE were extracted between 1963 and 1972 from apatite concentrate mined as a by-product in the Korsnäs lead (Pb)-REE mine in western Finland. In the future, REE could potentially be extracted as a by-product of mining for commodities such as phosphorus (P) and gold (Au). Currently, the most promising REE deposit is associated with the Sokli carbonatite complex in northeastern Finland.
REE in carbonatitic intrusives
The Korsnäs
Pb-REE-bearing
carbonatite dyke intrudes Palaeoproterozoic mica-gneisses of the
South Pohjanmaa schist belt. The Outokumpu Oy mining company operated
the Korsnäs mine from 1961 to 1972 and produced 45 000 tons Pb
and 36 000 tons of lanthanide concentrate. The grade of the ore
was 3.57 per cent Pb and 0.91 per cent total rare earth oxides
(RE2O3). The major ore minerals were galena, apatite, monazite and
allanite. The deposit consists of mineralised zones in pegmatite and
carbonatite or calcareous scapolite-diopside-barite-bearing skarn
rock. The wall rock of the dyke has been kaolinised in the strongly
sheared ore zone. Apatite and monazite are heterogeneously
distributed in the ore but follow galena.
A
swarm of REE enriched carbonatite dykes and associated alkaline veins
is found within an extensive area, covering over 100 sq.km, centered
around Panjavaara in Juuka,
Eastern Finland. The dikes and veins are highly enriched in REE, with
concentrations reaching 5-10 %, and even the smallest veinlets
typically showing 1-2 % total REE. The studied rocks display elevated
LREE to HREE ratios, with bastnäsite, ancylite, and monazite as the
most important REE carriers.
REE in alkaline intrusives
Iivaara
is
the type locality of ijolite, which is a common rock type in
carbonatite-bearing alkaline complexes. The phosphor potential of the
Iivaara intrusion is very high, but the REE potential is still under
study. The Iivaara intrusion shows many similarities with the
Lovozero alkaline massif in Russia, which is mined on a small scale
for REE. Geophysical interpretation has revealed ring structures
around the Iivaara intrusion, which could be potential REE targets.
The Katajakangas Nb-REE
mineralisation is located within Precambrian alkaline gneissic
granite in the Otanmäki area, central Finland. The nearby Kontiaho
mineralisation
is similar, but a resource estimate is only available for the
Katajakangas occurrence. The Katajakangas mineralisation forms narrow
lenses or layers, up to a few metres wide, within sheared
quartz-feldspar gneiss with riebeckite and alkali pyroxene. The main
ore minerals are zircon, bastnäsite, columbite and thorite. The
narrow mineralised zone in the Katajakangas alkaline gneiss contains
high concentrations of Nb, Zr, yttrium (Y), thorium (Th) and REE,
with an estimated Nb-YREE resource of 0.46 million tons at 2.4 per
cent RE2O3, 0.31 per cent Y2O3 and 0.76 per cent NbO (Sarapaa et
al., 2013). The alkaline gneiss contains 0.7 – 1.5 per cent Zr and
0.1 – 0.2 per cent Th.
The Lamujärvi syenites
in central Finland display strong enrichment in Zr (1587 parts per
million (ppm)), Nb (up to 685 ppm), Ta (up to 82 ppm) and REE (up to
5350 ppm), but the grades and volumes of these rocks appear too small
to be currently of economic potential. The major REE-bearing minerals
in the enriched rocks are allanite and monazite.
REE in granitic pegmatites and granites
REE in kaolinitic saprolites
The Virtasalmi kaolin
deposits in south east Finland have thicknesses of 30 – 40 m,
locally up to 100 m. The kaolin contains 40 to 75 weight per
cent kaolinite, 20 – 30 per cent quartz and some potassium
(K)-feldspar and muscovite. The total REE content of kaolin in the
basal part of the weathering profile reaches a maximum 0.1 – 0.2
per cent REE. The
200 km long Tana
Belt on
the southern side of the Lapland Granulite Belt includes HREE and
LREE anomalies in regional till geochemistry and kaolinitic
saprolite. The REE content in Mäkärä Au-bearing saprolite is 0.05
per cent, locally up to 0.4 per cent REE in saprolite. Typical
REE-rich minerals are monazite, rhabdophane and xenotime.
Key references
Al
Ani, T and Sarapää, O. 2013. Geochemistry and mineral phases of REE
in Jammi carbonatite veins and fenites, southern end of the Sokli
complex, NE Finland. Geochemistry:
Exploration, Environment, Analysis,
v. 13:217–224.
Sarapää,
O and Sarala, P. 2013. Rare earth element and gold exploration in
glaciated terrain — example from the Mäkärä area, northern
Finland. Geochemistry:
Exploration, Environment, Analysis,
v. 13:131–143.
Sarapää,
O, Al Ani, T, Lahti, S I, Lauri, L S, Sarala, P, and Torppa,
A. 2013. Rare earth exploration potential in
Finland. Journal
of Geochemical Exploration,
Volume 133, 25–41.
Vartiainen,
H. 1980. The petrography, mineralogy and
petrochemistry of the Sokli carbonatite massif, northern Finland.
Geological Survey of Finland, Bulletin 313, 126 p.