Research reveals geologic history of critical Alaska graphite deposit

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
April 13, 2023

A 汤姆视频 researcher is among the scientists who have revealed the metamorphic history of a high-grade graphite deposit on the Seward Peninsula. The Graphite Creek deposit is among the largest known of its kind in the United States.

Graphite is used in lithium-ion batteries, which power modern portable electronics, electric vehicles and renewable energy storage systems. 

鈥淭his gives us a better understanding of how the rock evolved and how the processes affected the rocks鈥 texture and mineralogy over time,鈥 said petrologist Sean Regan, an assistant professor of geology at the UAF Geophysical Institute and at the UAF College of Natural Science and Mathematics.

鈥淜nowing that can help with exploration,鈥 he said.

Graphite Creek ore body
Photo by George Case, U.S. Geological Survey.
The ore body containing graphite is shown in this 2021 photo of Graphite Creek. At far left is a Graphite One drill rig.

The United States extracts no graphite of its own. The nation imports one-third of its graphite from China, with Canada and Mexico among other suppliers.

The federal government has listed graphite as a critical mineral. 

The researchers鈥 findings can guide development of Graphite Creek by Graphite One, the company behind the mining project. The Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council in January 2021 designated Graphite Creek as a high-priority infrastructure project.

A research paper published Feb. 27 in the journal defines the age and characteristics of the deposit and provides information geologists can use to understand other potential graphite sites.

George Case of the U.S. Geological Survey in Anchorage is the paper鈥檚 lead author. Regan is among the eight co-authors. 

Geologists have had little understanding of the processes that lead to creation of high-grade flake graphite. That lack of understanding has been a barrier to evaluating such deposits for exploration and development.

鈥淭o really understand the system, you need to understand everything that鈥檚 going on. You need to incorporate tectonics, timing, petrology and structural geology,鈥 Regan said. 鈥淎ll of those things need to make sense together because it鈥檚 a system.鈥

The Graphite Creek deposit is 37 miles north of Nome in the Kigluaik Mountains and is approximately 3 miles long and one-tenth of a mile wide. The Kigluaik Mountains formed in the Late Cretaceous Period, 100 million to 66 million years ago. They include the .

Graphite map
U.S. Geological Survey map.
The map shows sites with more than 1,000 metric tons of contained graphite resource or past graphite production or both. This is approximately 3% of the average annual U.S. consumption of graphite between 2016 and 2020.

To reach their current graphite-rich state, the deposit鈥檚 rocks partially melted between 92 million and 97 million years ago in a process called biotite dehydration melting. The process removes up to 30% of a rock鈥檚 material as liquid, leaving a graphite-heavy solid along with other solids formed during the partial melt reaction. The liquid flows away.

Through analysis of core samples provided by Graphite One, the researchers established the first criteria for determining the likely presence of concentrated flake graphite. These criteria can now be used to evaluate other regions suspected of holding graphite:

  • The presence of original carbon-rich sedimentary rock deposited in water that didn鈥檛 contain dissolved oxygen. 
  • Evidence of high-temperature metamorphism such as the presence of potassium feldspar and sillimanite.
  • Evidence of partial melting such as through the presence of migmatites, which are rocks containing metamorphic rock and igneous or igneous-appearing rock.

 鈥淭he key here is this anatexis, or partial melting, which has removed silicate material and thereby concentrated the graphite,鈥 said Case, the research paper鈥檚 lead author.

The Graphite Creek deposit, and the Seward Peninsula, are within the Arctic Alaska-Chukotka microplate. That region also includes Alaska鈥檚 Brooks Range and Russia鈥檚 Chukotka, where the presence of similar geologic characteristics could indicate additional flake graphite deposits.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Sean Regan, sregan5@alaska.edu, 408-688-6495; George Case, gcase@usgs.gov, 907-786-7472

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