
Dalaroo Metals’ 2026 exploration campaign at its Blue Lagoon critical minerals project in southern Greenland is already bearing fruit, with geological mapping identifying multiple potential hard-rock sources for its previously discovered, widespread rare earths mineralisation.
The company says it has now defined four distinct granite units, numerous aplite sills, beryl-bearing pegmatites and, notably, what it interprets as eudialyte-bearing alkaline granites – a potential smoking gun in its hunt for the mother lode.
The work follows an impressive maiden 2025 program, which confirmed a 2.7-kilometre-long mineralised corridor, with all 113 sediment samples returning anomalous values, peaking at a solid 0.81 per cent total rare earth oxides and an impressive 4.42 per cent zirconium oxide.
These early wins established Blue Lagoon as a potentially compelling discovery and the current program is designed to test Dalaroo’s “source-to-sink” geological model. The company says the landscape is acting like a giant natural processing plant. Weathering of fertile intrusive rocks releases heavy, valuable minerals, which are then transported by drainage systems and concentrated in the Blue Lagoon basin.
The latest fieldwork appears to strongly support this theory, with widespread, naturally concentrated heavy mineral sands identified throughout eastern drainages and along beach foreshores.
The identification of pink alkaline granites that contain minerals interpreted as eudialyte is a significant development since eudialyte is a well-known zirconium and rare earths-bearing mineral. If confirmed by lab analysis, it would represent the first direct field evidence linking fertile source rocks to the mineralised sediments.
Importantly, these prospective granites were found immediately upslope from some of the highest-grade heavy mineral samples collected last year. The additional discovery of beryl-bearing pegmatites provides another pointer towards fertility, as beryl is a pathfinder mineral often associated with highly evolved granitic systems capable of concentrating rare earths.
Our 2026 field program is rapidly advancing and, importantly, is delivering far more than simply exploration progress. Every day in the field is improving our understanding of the Blue Lagoon mineral system.
Dalaroo says its exploration program is on schedule, with geological mapping 65 per cent complete and surface and lagoon sediment sampling sitting at 40 and 50 per cent, respectively. A ground-penetrating radar (GPR) survey has also kicked off to provide a three-dimensional view of the sediment architecture.
Despite weather-related logistical hurdles, the company successfully pivoted from mechanised drilling to a hand-auger program and transitioned to a flexible, helicopter-supported fly-camp, allowing it to maintain exploration momentum.
While Greenland is a key focus, Dalaroo is also advancing a significant gold play in Côte d’Ivoire. The company recently hit the kind of surface geochemistry numbers at its Bondoukou project that would make a hard-rock driller blush, unveiling a stunning peak soil sample of 23.26 grams per tonne gold and defining a consistent 7km-long mineralised corridor.
Dalaroo’s work in Greenland is timely, with the region rapidly emerging as one of the world’s most important new jurisdictions for critical minerals outside of China.
Neighbouring explorers, Critical Metals Corp and Amaroq Minerals Limited, are also advancing projects, making Southern Greenland a busy and strategically important province for Western economies looking to secure diversified supply chains.
With the field season in full swing, Dalaroo has flagged a steady stream of upcoming news. This includes the completion of the GPR survey, lagoon and surface sampling and geological mapping.
Following that, attention will turn to laboratory assay results from the hard-rock and heavy mineral concentrate samples, important for confirming the presence of rare earths-bearing minerals such as eudialyte. The company will also undertake preliminary metallurgical work before generating targets for follow-up drilling.
Dalaroo headed to the icy shores of Greenland this season with a clear mission to find the source of the extensive rare earths mineralisation it uncovered last year. The early geological clues, particularly the potential discovery of eudialyte-bearing granites right where they should be, suggest management appears to be closing in on its target.
If the upcoming lab results confirm the field interpretations, Dalaroo could rapidly transform Blue Lagoon from an exciting surface discovery into a well-defined and potentially large-scale critical minerals system.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au
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