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MiningBlogsAppia Rare Earths & Uranium’s Tom Drivas Reports 300 Metres at 2.55% TREO From Surface in Brazil Carbonatite
Appia Rare Earths & Uranium’s Tom Drivas Reports 300 Metres at 2.55% TREO From Surface in Brazil Carbonatite
Mining

Appia Rare Earths & Uranium’s Tom Drivas Reports 300 Metres at 2.55% TREO From Surface in Brazil Carbonatite

•February 25, 2026
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Jack Lifton @ InvestorNews (Critical Minerals & Rare Earths)
Jack Lifton @ InvestorNews (Critical Minerals & Rare Earths)•Feb 25, 2026

Why It Matters

High‑grade carbonatite‑hosted rare earth grades position Appia to compete with world‑class producers and could unlock significant valuation upside as demand for clean‑energy magnets accelerates.

Key Takeaways

  • •300‑m hole returned 2.55% TREO from surface
  • •Peak interval 1.7 m with 14.27% TREO
  • •Magnet rare earths reach 2.3% within high‑grade zone
  • •Carbonatite mineralization open at depth, extending northeast
  • •Appia plans 43‑101 resource and pre‑feasibility this year

Pulse Analysis

The recent drill results from Appia’s Ultra Hard Rock carbonatite in Goiás underscore the strategic importance of Brazil’s rare‑earth potential. Carbonatite deposits, which host the majority of non‑Chinese rare‑earth mines such as Lynas in Australia and MP Materials in the United States, are prized for their high concentrations of light and heavy rare‑earth elements. Appia’s 300‑metre hole, delivering 2.55% TREO from surface and a standout 14.27% TREO over 1.7 metres, signals a robust, vertically extensive system that could rival these benchmark projects.

From a technical perspective, the drilling program has now logged 7,347 metres across 29 holes, revealing two distinct mineralization styles: an upper ionic‑clay envelope and a deeper hard‑rock carbonatite body. The magnet rare‑earth suite—neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbium—reaches 2.3% within the high‑grade interval, a composition directly relevant to high‑performance permanent magnets used in wind turbines and electric vehicles. With mineralization open at depth and trending northeast, Appia is poised to advance a 43‑101 compliant resource estimate and a pre‑feasibility study on the ionic‑clay target, milestones that could materially de‑risk the project and attract downstream partners.

Beyond Brazil, Appia leverages a diversified portfolio that includes rare‑earth projects in Saskatchewan and Ontario, as well as uranium assets in the Athabasca‑like Otherside property. The company’s claim of trading at roughly 10% of peer valuations highlights a potential discount opportunity for investors. Upcoming field work, a massive RC drilling campaign, and a presence at PDAC 2026 provide a clear roadmap for value creation, positioning Appia as a multi‑commodity play in the rapidly evolving clean‑energy supply chain.

Appia Rare Earths & Uranium’s Tom Drivas Reports 300 Metres at 2.55% TREO from Surface in Brazil Carbonatite

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