Source : THE AGE NEWS
Dalaroo Metals has pulled off a major coup in Greenland after securing government approval for two new exploration licences at its Blue Lagoon project.
The regulatory nod has tightened the company’s hold over what is fast emerging as a district-scale critical minerals province in the country’s mineral-rich south.
The newly granted licences materially expand the company’s footprint across the globally recognised Gardar Alkaline Province, a geological belt renowned for hosting rare earth elements, along with zirconium, niobium and hafnium mineralisation linked to alkaline intrusive systems. A further adjacent application remains pending.
The enlarged landholding gives Dalaroo a commanding position over what could be a large integrated coastal critical minerals system. The company believes it now has control over key transport corridors and interpreted accumulation zones across the entire Blue Lagoon system.
‘We believe Blue Lagoon is continuing to evolve into a highly significant exploration asset for the Company.’
Dalaroo Metals chief executive officer John Morgan
In particular, it’s chasing a “source-to-sink” geological model, in which weathering from upstream alkaline intrusive rocks releases heavy minerals that are naturally transported through drainage networks before concentrating in downstream sediment traps.
According to management, natural hydraulic sorting processes may have concentrated the heavy minerals in seabed traps, bringing the largely unexplored offshore environment sharply into focus as a key exploration target.
Previous exploration has already delivered eye-catching surface results across 2.7 kilometres of strike, with all 113 samples returning anomalous critical mineral values. Assays included zirconium oxide grades up to 4.42 per cent, hafnium up to 99 parts per million and total rare earth oxides up to 0.81 per cent.
The results also revealed strong zirconium-hafnium enrichment inside the finer sediment fractions, reinforcing Dalaroo’s interpretation of zircon-dominant heavy mineral accumulation sourced from upstream alkaline intrusive rocks.
Dalaroo Metals chief executive officer John Morgan said: “The expanded project footprint now gives Dalaroo the ability to systematically test the full scale of the mineral system at a time when Greenland is becoming increasingly important in the global critical minerals landscape.”
The next exploration phase will mark Dalaroo’s first integrated onshore and offshore campaign at Blue Lagoon.
Planned onshore work includes auger drilling, detailed geological and structural mapping, outcrop coring, sediment characterisation, grain-size analysis and mapping of sediment transport pathways.
Offshore programs will involve Van Veen grab sampling, targeted nearshore geochemical surveys, bathymetric profiling and sediment trap mapping, all aimed at identifying prospective heavy mineral accumulation zones.
Blue Lagoon’s low uranium and thorium levels may also support cleaner permitting pathways and simpler downstream processing routes.
The Greenland push is rapidly becoming the centrepiece of Dalaroo’s international growth strategy. The company recently locked in full ownership of the core Blue Lagoon licence and its expanded grounds sit right beside the Gardaq joint venture, Greenland’s biggest mineral licence holder, controlled by London-listed Amaroq and its private partner GCAM.
Beyond Greenland, Dalaroo is also advancing its Bondoukou gold project in Côte d’Ivoire’s prolific Birimian Greenstone Belt. There, management has defined a 9-kilometre gold corridor, laced with artisanal workings and ripe for targeted drilling. Back home in Western Australia, its earlier-stage Lyons River project is hunting base metals in the Gascoyne, while the company’s Namban project in the Wheatbelt adds copper-gold discovery upside to the portfolio.
Greenland is increasingly emerging as a flagship opportunity due to its expanding district-scale footprint, multi-commodity critical minerals exposure and growing strategic relevance in Western-aligned supply chains.
As Western economies scramble to secure alternative supplies of critical minerals, Greenland is becoming increasingly important as a frontier outside China for permanent magnets, defence systems, advanced electronics and electrification infrastructure.
Dalaroo’s Blue Lagoon play is increasingly looking less like a long-shot punt and more like a carefully assembled district-scale critical minerals system. With offshore exploration now joining the field campaign, the upcoming season shapes as a potentially defining chapter for the company’s Greenland ambitions.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: mattbirney@bullsnbears.com.au