Mineral sands could be the way forward for a more renewable future. Deposits are being increasingly prized for their valuable materials, and ability supply the development of the renewable technology. 

What is mineral sand?

Mineral sands are a type of heavy mineral deposit commonly found along shorelines and in beach dunes. Mineral sands contain heavy minerals like rutile, ilmenite, zircon and monazite, which are useful in renewable energy technology. The minerals in these sands are resistant to weathering and erosion, allowing them to accumulate over time. They are mined through dredging or open-pit methods and processed to extract the useful minerals.

 

 

 

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How are mineral sands formed?

These minerals originate in crystals that grow in rocks. The weather erodes these rocks over millions of years and rain and fast-flowing streams wash the mineral-rich sediment into the sea. Waves then dump the sediment onto beaches, but drag back the sediment’s lighter minerals. The heavy minerals, which are then concentrated, remain. 

If any light minerals do happen to make it to the beach, the wind often blows them away (further concentrating the hard mineral deposits). This process occurs over millions of years, during which time deposits grow and can take up many kilometres of beachline.

But the process doesn’t end there. Because sea levels rise and fall over time and shorelines move, sand deposits can end up either buried in more sand or eroding and being redeposited elsewhere. Hence, deposits are found inland and deep underground.

 

 

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