Infographic: Where is North America’s next rare earths mine?
Rare earths – essential components in electronics, defence applications and electric vehicle batteries – are hot geopolitical items as Western countries seek […]
A long-running battle between Nordgold (LON: NORD) and China’s Shandong Gold over Cardinal Resources (ASX: CDV) has taken an unexpected turn after a […]
Researchers from The Australian National University, RMIT University, the University of Sydney and the Oak Ridge National Laboratory say that both Lonsdaleite and regular diamonds can form at room temperatures by just applying high pressures.
The solution uses stacks of satellite images of the same location taken every few days and allows for picking up even the slightest topographical changes over time.