Mountain Pass, California
Mountain Pass, California Sevier-Laramide Project See the southernmost exposures of the Cretaceous Sevier orogeny! Mountain Pass in southeastern California is the site of America's most important rare earth element (REE) mine. The mine lies in the footwall just below the early to mid-Cretaceous Keystone thrust, part of the Sevier orogeny and one of North America's largest thrust faults. Mountain Pass is on Interstate 15 between Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Las Vegas is shown at the upper right; the closed solar plant at Ivanpah is the three dark blotches in the valley NE of the pass. Millions have seen this location as they drive by, but few have know the site's significance. Looking north from west of the mine, the Keystone thrust (red) places Cambrian strata over the Proterozolic granitic rocks, including the unusual rock called carbonatite that hosts the REEs. The carbonatite intruded into this leucogranite, which contains almost no dark minerals....