ENER Massive Reserve of Helium Found by Minnesota Exploratory Drill, Likely the Biggest Find Ever in North America

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Massive Reserve of Helium Found by Minnesota Exploratory Drill, Likely the Biggest Find Ever in North America​

A new find of underground helium in Minnesota could turn out to be one of the largest in the world, Minneapolis’s WCCO-TV reported Thursday.

The drill site, just outside Babbitt in the northeastern part of the state, took about a month from initially breaking ground to get to a depth of 2,200 feet.

What it found there, Pulsar Helium CEO Thomas Abraham-James called “a dream.”
“There was a lot of screaming, a lot of hugging and high fives. It’s nice to know the efforts all worked out and we pulled it off,” Abraham-James told WCCO.

He said that the concentration of helium sampled was 12.4 percent — about 30 times what the outlet referred to as “the industry standard,” and higher even than the company had forecast.
“12.4% is just a dream,” the CEO told the outlet. “It’s perfect.”

Further analysis remains to be done, of course, but the finding confirmed work completed in 2011 that indicated the presence of helium deep under the surface, the Duluth News Tribune reported.


Companies generally pursue helium concentrations above 0.3 percent that they can locate, the outlet noted.

“So now the real hard begins to find out what is it truly that we have and the size of the prize,” Abraham-James told the News Tribune.

Studying the size of the find and the feasibility of a full-sized mining operation could take up to a year, the company told WCCO.

The Topez Project, as the drill site is called, was initially planned to go to a depth of 2,250 feet, but had to stop earlier than expected because of “abnormally warm temperatures and looming road weight restrictions,” according to the paper.

A device that looks like a “glorified fire hydrant,” according to Abraham-James, will now be installed over the hole to allow for additional sampling and testing.
A crew from Duluth Metals in 2011 first discovered helium in the area when searching for platinum-palladium metals, the News Tribune reported.

Helium is valued for everything from filling balloons to being used as a safe and effective coolant in liquid form.
“It’s used in everything from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines, semiconductor manufacturing and leak testing, to air tanks for medical patients and deep-sea divers, to aerospace and defense industries,” the News Tribune notes.

“This is outstanding news for the region as we continue to look at ways to diversify our local economy,” Republican state Rep. Roger Skraba said in a statement. “I look forward to working with state regulators to make sure that helium drilling can proceed here in Northern Minnesota safely and effectively.
“Helium is an incredibly important gas that is needed for a variety of modern products, and I am hopeful that we can source this gas and process it right here in the Northland in the very near future,” he added.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Awesome! It’s been a personal dream of mine to make my own dirigible-like flying craft For decades. I was giving up after reading recent stories about the government selling off all it’s helium stocks.

or....the other blimp

OIP.cKQ7HcS7LURlUjVGz67gWAHaJj
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Massive Reserve of Helium Found by Minnesota Exploratory Drill, Likely the Biggest Find Ever in North America​

A new find of underground helium in Minnesota could turn out to be one of the largest in the world, Minneapolis’s WCCO-TV reported Thursday.

The drill site, just outside Babbitt in the northeastern part of the state, took about a month from initially breaking ground to get to a depth of 2,200 feet.

What it found there, Pulsar Helium CEO Thomas Abraham-James called “a dream.”
“There was a lot of screaming, a lot of hugging and high fives. It’s nice to know the efforts all worked out and we pulled it off,” Abraham-James told WCCO.

He said that the concentration of helium sampled was 12.4 percent — about 30 times what the outlet referred to as “the industry standard,” and higher even than the company had forecast.
“12.4% is just a dream,” the CEO told the outlet. “It’s perfect.”

Further analysis remains to be done, of course, but the finding confirmed work completed in 2011 that indicated the presence of helium deep under the surface, the Duluth News Tribune reported.


Companies generally pursue helium concentrations above 0.3 percent that they can locate, the outlet noted.

“So now the real hard begins to find out what is it truly that we have and the size of the prize,” Abraham-James told the News Tribune.

Studying the size of the find and the feasibility of a full-sized mining operation could take up to a year, the company told WCCO.

The Topez Project, as the drill site is called, was initially planned to go to a depth of 2,250 feet, but had to stop earlier than expected because of “abnormally warm temperatures and looming road weight restrictions,” according to the paper.

A device that looks like a “glorified fire hydrant,” according to Abraham-James, will now be installed over the hole to allow for additional sampling and testing.
A crew from Duluth Metals in 2011 first discovered helium in the area when searching for platinum-palladium metals, the News Tribune reported.

Helium is valued for everything from filling balloons to being used as a safe and effective coolant in liquid form.
“It’s used in everything from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines, semiconductor manufacturing and leak testing, to air tanks for medical patients and deep-sea divers, to aerospace and defense industries,” the News Tribune notes.

“This is outstanding news for the region as we continue to look at ways to diversify our local economy,” Republican state Rep. Roger Skraba said in a statement. “I look forward to working with state regulators to make sure that helium drilling can proceed here in Northern Minnesota safely and effectively.
“Helium is an incredibly important gas that is needed for a variety of modern products, and I am hopeful that we can source this gas and process it right here in the Northland in the very near future,” he added.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.

Because such a find would be of both strategic and financial importance, Traitor Joe will make use of, and/or sale of helium illegal…

OA
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Worst of it - just like other mining/natural resources enterprises here in N Minnesota (including very viable deposits of copper, nickel and rare earth) - the greenie loons, state and EPA will have it all tied up in court for decades.

The only jobs they want for us living in the "land of rocks and cows" is scrubbing toilets for tourists.
 

jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
Seems to me I just read somewhere we had sold off are stored helium supply.
The gov must have known that the new supply would be coming on line soon, and decided to make a buck while they still could by selling what remains of the country’s strategic reserve of helium before news got out of the new find.
 

Delta

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Seems to me I just read somewhere we had sold off are stored helium supply.

That was the second story I found when I googled "Helium". I hope the sale did not automatically include future helium reserves, like the one just found.

Helium apparently has many uses other than filling blimps (or capsizing islands).
 
Last edited:

Mark D

Now running for Emperor.
The gov must have known that the new supply would be coming on line soon, and decided to make a buck while they still could by selling what remains of the country’s strategic reserve of helium before news got out of the new find.
I'm sure that's why Joe has us selling-off our SPR too.

[/sacr]
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
Wonder how big the silver and gold pockets that they know of are????
 
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