Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 5

!

!
"#$%!&'(!&)**!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!+,-./0!*(!!1,2!*&!
.232!456%!05678!/9$%65:;(!<$=2!>$$?#$=%;!3856%8?:@%6!.A@57%!-%77%6!
!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: June 28, 2011
!
Dear Fellow Shareholders,

The first half of 2011 has been an exciting period for the growing team at U.S. Rare Earth Minerals, Inc. Your
Company has made significant progress on its way to becoming a major force in re-mineralization the earth.

Many thanks for the flood of shareholder compliments after we announced our name change and three for one
stock split in April. The new name draws attention to the fact that while our product is composed of a broad
spectrum of macro, micro, and nano minerals, it also contains most of the seventeen known rare earth
elements. Included below is the AA Labs mineral analysis of our primary product, Excelerite, with its rare
earth minerals contents highlighted in red for your review. While our primary business at present is the
mining, packaging, and sales of our Excelerite products, it is our intention to focus on the extraction and sale
of certain rare earth minerals in the near future.

Since our name change and stock split, we have acquired the necessary mining equipment in order to take
complete control of our mining operations. Below are photos of the mine that show our equipment, large
storage warehouse and living accommodations for our workers. (equipment and building is all paid for in full)


6,000 sq ft Bldg Loading with the Gradall fork lift for storage over 400 1 ton (2,000 lb) totes


Some of the loading equipment Erecting the building Loading in bulk 44,000 tons


Unloading our John Deere Excavator Loading up 23 1 ton totes Picking up the 5 wheel to take to the mine


Our semi & trailer taking loader to mine Our local delivery box truck (carries 8 tons) Warehouse caterpillar forklift, lifts 2 tons at once

Besides the increase in our domestic sales this year, we have responded to substantial international product
interest, sending Excelerite test shipments to companies and agents in Brazil, Ghana, Ethiopia, Paraguay,
China, Australia, India, Japan, England, Mexico, Honduras and Dubai. We are diligently working towards
large volume sales and strategic alliances with companies both at home and abroad. Your Company is
currently bound by non-disclosure agreements with certain countries and several major U.S. agricultural
firms and therefore cannot announce any contracts or test results until we are permitted to do by the terms of
the contracts. We look forward to issuing press releases regarding these relationships in the coming months.

Until such time as we are able to post shareholder communications within the Investors section of our
upcoming new corporate website, currently under construction, all official company shareholder
communications will be accessible via the Press Releases link at www.us-rem.com.

We dont know of a single customer who has not tried Excelerite and marveled at its obvious effectiveness.
You, our shareholders, know Excelerite WORKS, so keep spreading the word! We look forward to a
fantastic future and wish to thank you for your continued loyalty and support.

Best regards,
Dennis Cullison, President
Paul Hait, CEO

!
!
!
!
Rare earths roster
Here's a closer look at some of the ways each rare earth element is used: !
!
!
Scandium: Added to mercury vapor lamps to make their light look more like
sunlight. Also used in certaintypes of athletic equipment including aluminum
baseball bats, bicycle frames and lacrosse sticks as well as fuel cells.!!
!
Yttrium: Produces color in many TV picture tubes. Also conducts microwaves and
acoustic energy, simulates diamond gemstones, and strengthens ceramics, glass,
aluminum alloys and magnesium alloys, among other uses.

Lanthanum: One of several rare earths used to make carbon arc lamps, which the
film and TV industry use for studio and projector lights. Also found in batteries,
cigarette-lighter flints and specialized types of glass, like camera lenses.

Cerium: The most widespread of all rare earth metals. Used in catalytic converters
and diesel fuels to reduce vehicles' carbon monoxide emissions. Also used in carbon
arc lights, lighter flints, glass polishers and self-cleaning ovens.

Praseodymium: Primarily used as an alloying agent with magnesium to make
high-strength metals for aircraft engines. Also may be used as a signal amplifier in
fiber-optic cables, and to create the hard glass of welder's goggles.

Neodymium: Mainly used to make powerful neodymium magnets for computer
hard disks, wind turbines, hybrid cars, earbud headphones and microphones. Also
used to color glass and to make lighter flints and welder's goggles.

Promethium: Does not occur naturally on Earth; must be artificially produced via
uranium fission. Added to some kinds of luminous paint and nuclear-powered
microbatteries, with potential use in portable X-ray devices.

Samarium: Mixed with cobalt to create a permanent magnet with the highest
demagnetization resistance of any known material. Crucial for building "smart"
missiles; also used in carbon arc lamps, lighter flints and some types of glass.

Europium: The most reactive of all rare earth metals. Used for decades as a red
phosphor in TV sets and more recently in computer monitors, fluorescent lamps
and some types of lasers but otherwise has few commercial applications.

Gadolinium: Used in some control rods at nuclear power plants. Also used in
medical applications such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and industrially to
improve the workability of iron, chromium and various other metals.

Terbium: Used in some solid-state technology, from advanced sonar systems to
small electronic sensors, as well as fuel cells designed to operate at high
temperatures. Also produces laser light and green phosphors in TV tubes.

Dysprosium: Used in some control rods at nuclear power plants. Also used in
certain kinds of lasers, high-intensity lighting, and to raise the coercivity of high-
powered permanent magnets, such as those found in hybrid vehicles.


Holmium: Has the highest magnetic strength of any known element, making it
useful in industrial magnets as well as some nuclear control rods. Also used in solid-
state lasers and to help color cubic zirconia and certain types of glass.

Erbium: Used as a photographic filter and as a signal amplifier (aka "doping
agent") in fiber-optic cables. Also used in some nuclear control rods, metallic alloys,
and to color specialized glass and porcelain in sunglasses and cheap jewelry.

Thulium: The rarest of all naturally occurring rare earth metals. Has few
commercial applications, although it is used in some surgical lasers. After being
exposed to radiation in nuclear reactors, it's also used in portable X-ray technology.

Ytterbium: Used in some portable X-ray devices, but otherwise has limited
commercial uses. Among its specialty applications, it's used in certain types of
lasers, stress gauges for earthquakes, and as a doping agent in fiber-optic cables.

Lutetium: Mainly restricted to specialty uses, such as calculating the age of
meteorites or performing positron emission tomography (PET) scans. Has also been
used as a catalyst for the process of "cracking" petroleum products at oil refineries.


!
!
"#$#!%&'(!)&'*+!,-.('&/01!2.3#!45647!%-8('9::;0!<'#!!=(.;1!>%!?@@AB!







ANALYSIS OF AMERICAN ASSAY LABORTORIES

PARTS PER MILLION (PPM) UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE























noLe : We have all of Lhe 17 elemenLs ln 8are LarLh and mosL llkely aL hlgher levels as we go deeper,
!"#$%&'()$ does noL occur naLurally on earLh, musL be arLlflclally produced vla uranlum flsslon.

MINERAL QUANTITATION MINERAL QUANTITATION
Aluminum 28750 Molybdenum 0.1
Antimony 1.0 Neodymium 9.5
Arsenic 2.2 Nickel 5.8
Barium 607.2 Niobium 5.5
Beryllium 1.60 Osmium -0.01
Bismuth 0.03 Palladium -0.01
Boron 1.4 Phosphorus 327
Bromine 4 Platinum -0.01
Cadmium 0.09 Potassium 11616
Calcium 19572 Praeseodymium 1.9
Cerium 20.5 Rhenium -0.005
Cesium 5.8 Rhodium -0.01
Chloride 0.17 Rubidium 33.8
Chromium 25.4 Ruthenium -0.01
Cobalt 5.0 Samarium 1.7
Copper 9.0 Scandium 2.0
Dysprosium 1.4 Selenium -0.5
Erbium 0.9 Silicon 64.32
Europium 0.3 Silver .10
Fluorine Trace Sodium 5578
Gadolinium 1.8 Strontium 225
Gallium 8.5 Sulfur 411
Germanium -0.2 Tantalum 0.9
Gold -0.001 Tellurium 0.20
Hafnium 0.81 Terbium 0.6
Holmium 0.1 Thallium 0.21
Indium -0.2 Thorium 0.6
Iodine -0.5 Thulium 0.06
Iridium -0.01 Tin 1.1
Iron 12127 Titanium 1030
Lanthanum 11.7 Tungsten 2.0
Lead 8.1 Uranium 0.6
Lithium 56.8 Vanadium 41.0
Lutetium -0.1 Ytterbium 0.7
Magnesium 8188.0 Yttrium 5.9
Manganese 176.0 Zinc 26
Mercury 0.62 Zirconium 35

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi