Rare Earth Element and Yttrium (REY) Hyper-Enriched Karst Bauxites of the Mercedes-Aceitillar Mining District, Sierra de Bahoruco,SW Dominican Republic

Abstract

Rare earth elements, including yttrium (REYs), are the most sought-after among the so-called critical or strategic elements for the low-carbon energy industry. In the past decade, karst bauxite deposits have been targeted as potential nonconventional sources of these elements. The karst bauxite deposits from the Mercedes-Aceitillar mining district, classified as Fe-rich bauxites and bauxites sensu stricto, contain anomalously high REY contents oscillating between 514 and 28,787 ppm (median of 1,489 ppm), making them the most REY-enriched karst bauxites globally. Most of the samples studied are enriched in light rare earth elements (La-Nd; up to 7,449 ppm) and Y (up to 14,830 ppm). However, the most REY-enriched bauxites yield particularly high middle rare earth element (Sm-Gd; up to 4,579 ppm) and heavy rare earth element (Tb-Lu; up to 6,163 ppm) contents. In addition, the studied bauxites contain significant amounts of other critical metals, such as Sc and Ga (median of 62 and 39 ppm, respectively). The mineralogy consists predominantly of Al oxyhydroxides (mostly gibbsite), with variable amounts of Fe oxyhydroxides and kaolinite. The REY mineralogy in samples with high REY contents (>3,000 ppm) consists mainly of REY-bearing phosphates (e.g., monazite, xenotime, rhabdophane, churchite) and/or carbonates (bastnäsite group). In samples with moderate REY contents (<3,000 ppm), the main REY-bearing minerals are Al oxyhydroxides, onto which the REYs are most likely adsorbed. These findings indicate that the potential extraction of REYs and other critical metals, such as Sc and Ga, in the studied bauxites from the Mercedes-Aceitillar mining district could add, on average, an ~20% surplus to the revenue obtained from Al2O3 exploitation. The unprecedented REY contents discovered in these karst bauxites from the Dominican Republic present a unique opportunity to unravel critical metal concentration mechanisms in supergene environments and to develop new geochemical models for nonconventional REY deposits.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Society of Economic Geologists

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.5382/econgeo.5214

Economic Geology, 2026

https://doi.org/10.5382/econgeo.5214

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

(c) Society of Economic Geologists, 2026

This item appears in the following Collection(s)