Camera IconDalaroo Metals has secured full ownership of the high-grade heart of its Blue Lagoon project in Greenland. Credit: File

Dalaroo Metals has just ticked off a major milestone at its Blue Lagoon critical minerals project in south-west Greenland, successfully acquiring full control of its core exploration licence, which hosts the majority of the project.

Formal grant of the tenement has now provided the company with total security over the most prospective zones of a district-scale system that has already served up high-grade rare earth elements, zirconium, niobium and hafnium. Additionally, the company has applied for massive extensions to its offshore ground that it hopes will lock up the entire mineralised system.

Dalaroo’s newly secured ground hosts a confirmed 2.7-kilometre mineralised strike, where a standout maiden field campaign in 2025 delivered anomalous values from every one of the 113-sample taken.

Peak surface assays reached 0.81 per cent total rare earth oxides, a result made even more compelling by its high-value composition. Crucially, between 25 and 29 per cent of that total consists of high-demand magnet rare earth oxides.

Notably neodymium and praseodymium, underlining Blue Lagoon’s potential to host a significant critical minerals deposit in a premier, Western-aligned jurisdiction.

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Dalaroo says the transition from application to granted status is a pivotal de-risking event that offers the legal and operational runway to fast-track its upcoming field season.

The formal grant of MEL 2022-07 is a pivotal de-risking event for Dalaroo. It provides us with 100% tenure security over the high-grade heart of the Blue Lagoon Project.

Dalaroo Metals chief executive officer John Morgan

The company now effectively controls the very heart of a mineral system that it believes extends from primary source rocks on land into downstream depositional traps offshore. This “source-to-sink” model views the landscape as a natural sluice box, where constant weathering of upstream alkaline rocks releases valuable minerals into the lagoon.

While Greenland is currently taking centre stage, Dalaroo is maintaining a high-octane exploration engine at its Bondoukou gold project in Côte d’Ivoire. The company recently wrapped up a massive 2250-sample soil geochemistry program as part of its “Priority 1” phase. The campaign covered a 4.5-kilometre stretch of a formidable 9.5-kilometre gold corridor at the Gold Ridge prospect, located within the prolific Birimian Greenstone Belt.

Field crews have now moved into a second priority area in the project’s northwestern block to continue the 4400-sample campaign. The systematic work aims to define high-conviction drill targets. The campaign follows up on historical rock chip samples that returned up to 17.95 grams per tonne gold. Additionally, Dalaroo has completed channel sampling at its Dingbi artisanal site to guide future drilling beneath existing surface workings.

Dalaroo is also keeping boots on the ground back on home soil. At its Namban project in Western Australia’s northern wheatbelt, the company is chasing nickel, copper and platinum group elements. Notably, the project sits within the same geological setting as Chalice Mining’s massive 30-million-ounce palladium equivalent Julimar discovery, located just 80 kilometres to the south.

Meanwhile, at the Lyons River project in the Gascoyne region, the company is hunting a diverse mineral bounty across an expansive 838-square-kilometre holding, with gold leading the charge.

With the core Greenland tenure now locked in, Dalaroo has launched a structured de-risking program for the 2026 field season. The multi-pronged campaign will feature maiden drilling designed to define coherent mineralised zones alongside a suite of high-tech geophysical tools.

Specialised ground-penetrating radar will be deployed to map sediment thickness and identify buried “paleochannels” that could act as heavy mineral traps. In the lagoon itself, the company plans to use side-scan sonar for bathymetry and Van Veen grab sampling to retrieve seabed sediments for mineralogical analysis.

By consolidating its hold on the high-grade core and simultaneously applying for massive offshore extensions, Dalaroo is acquiring the ground to potentially define a major new critical minerals province. With a 2026 exploration blitz about to kick off and as the scramble to secure the rare earths for permanent magnets continues, the company’s Greenland discovery is looking more and more like very well-timed piece of potential “company making” geological detective work.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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