Dateline clocks 7.1 per cent rare earths in California

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Murray Ward

July 15, 2026 — 12:06pm

Dateline Resources has hit paydirt from first-pass rock chip sampling at its district-scale Music Valley heavy rare earths project in California, with one sample returning a stunning 7.13 per cent total rare earth oxides (TREO).

In a compelling validation of its exploration model, the company says all 33 samples collected from surface returned anomalous rare earth grades, confirming widespread mineralisation and lighting up multiple targets across the sizeable 20,000 -acre project area.

Pinto gneiss outcrop featuring 7.1% TREO at its Southern target at the Music Valley rare earths project in California

‘The presence of Y-HREE responses is a lead indicator of heavy rare earths within the broader district.’

Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi

The results provide Dateline with the first geochemical confirmation for targets generated from its recent high-resolution airborne magnetic and radiometric survey.

The company’s Southern target area delivered the headline result, with one sample grading an eye-watering 7.13 per cent TREO. What makes the result even more intriguing is that it is not isolated.

Two other samples in the Southern area, between 650 and 800 metres away, also returned impressive grades of 2.32 per cent and 1.07 per cent TREO, respectively.

Dateline says the wide spacing of these high-grade hits suggests the potential for a large-scale mineralised system. Additionally, the samples also show a strong correlation with radiometric anomalies identified in its recent geophysical survey, reinforcing the targeting methodology.

Meanwhile, in the Northwest target area, mapping has identified a 200-metre-long strike of the prospective Pinto Gneiss host rock. Rock chips from this zone returned consistently anomalous results, with grades ranging from 1.09 per cent TREO in the north to 0.68 per cent TREO in the south.

The company says one sample from this area, DC-25, returned the strongest magnet heavy rare earth suite in the program to date. Featuring 411 parts per million (ppm) of the valuable yttrium, dysprosium and terbium elements.

Dateline’s third area, the Central target, defined a broad 500m by 500m zone of anomalous mineralisation, with all six samples taken in the area returning TREO values up to 0.66 per cent.

Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi said: “The sampling has confirmed the presence of rare earths at surface across the entire sampled areas, with the NW Target being the biggest and most consistent of the target zones.”

The company only consolidated the Music Valley project in March, increasing its footprint by a massive 1800 per cent to stitch together a commanding land position.

The ground sits in a well-endowed US mining district just 110km south of the only significant rare earths producer in the United States, MP Materials’ massive Mountain Pass mine, which hosts a hefty resource of 26.27 million tonnes at a whopping 5.89 per cent TREO.

Whilst US Geological Survey geologists first flagged heavy rare earths mineralisation in the area more than 70 years ago, the prospect has seen little modern exploration until now.

Dateline’s approach of leveraging historical work with modern exploration techniques appears to be paying early dividends. Having identified a geological trifecta, favourable host rocks, thorium anomalies and structural complexity, its first boots-on-the-ground sampling campaign has now confirmed the chemistry is right at surface.

The company says it’s wasting no time, with the geos already on-site to conduct infill sampling and refine targets for a maiden drill campaign.

The Music Valley project makes up just one part of Dateline’s US-based exploration portfolio.

Its flagship Colosseum gold project also sits close to Mountain Pass, just 10km north of the operation. On top of its gold inventory, the project is considered prospective for heavy rare earths, with a 10,000-metre drilling campaign, including 18 holes specifically targeting rare earths, already underway.

A bankable feasibility study on Colosseum’s gold potential recently outlined a pre-tax net present value of US$785 million (AU$1.14 billion) and an internal rate of return of 49.5 per cent.

Just this week, the company received a significant boost when the US Department of Justice filed a motion supporting its right to operate at the mine.

The US government is actively seeking to build secure domestic supply chains for critical minerals. In particular, those projects with genuine district-scale potential are attracting the bulk of the attention.

Dateline went looking for a rare earths system at Music Valley, based on old geological whispers and new-school geophysics. With its first round of sampling now returning high-grade results across multiple, widespread targets, suddenly, the whispers appear to be getting louder.

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