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    • Rainbow Basin
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    • Volcanic Cinder Cones
    • Cima Cinders Mine
    • Aiken Mine
  • Home
  • Rainbow Wells
  • Rainbow Basin
  • Barstow Formation
  • Volcanic Cinder Cones
  • Cima Cinders Mine
  • Aiken Mine
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Rainbow Wells $13T Mineral Appraisal & Resource Estimate

Coalesce Mine Land-Invest completes a $13 Trillion Mineral Appraisal & Resource Estimate for the Cima Volcanic Field & East Mojave National Scenic Area (EMNSA). A Supergiant Mine area of 230 Sq/mi. of Cinder Cones & Lava Fields to the entire 2,410 Sq/mi. of the EMNSA containing Gigatons of Cinder, Quartz, Obsidian, Granite, Gold, Silver, Iridium, Platinum, Palladium, Ruthenium, Zirconium, Antimony, Chromium, Niobium, Tungsten, Tin, Molybdenum, Titanium, Cobalt, Copper, Manganese, Zinc, Magnetite, Iron & Lead, and over 30 other materials with existing mines, occurrences or detected from Osmium, Yttrium, Terbium & Dysprosium Heavy Rare Earths and Lanthanum, Cerium, Neodymium & Samarium Light Rare Earths and Radioactive Elements such as Uranium & Thorium known to occur in all volcanic structures. These materials were all detected in moderate to high anomalous amounts in all historical prospectus and previous mining history in and around the Cinder Cones and Lava Fields in the Cima Volcanic Formation, Cima Dome and entire East Mojave National Scenic Area; all located around the Rainbow Wells (city) in the Mojave National Preserve.

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Rainbow Wells Blog

Forgotten Gold Rivers: Ancient Waterways & Hidden Treasures

Google Earth

The Lava Tubes at Mojave National Preserve are featured in the Cima Dome Volcanic Field. A short, rocky hiking trail leads from a primitive parking area, to a skylight in the tube, where a ladder leads hikers into the lava tube. The Forgotten Gold Rivers: Ancient Waterways’ Hidden Treasures. Volcanic activity: Rapid burial under lava flows, as seen in California's Table Mountain basalts can perfectly preserve channel morphology and gold deposits. https://discoveryalert.com.au/news/forgotten-gold-rivers-ancient-waterways-treasures-2025/ 

Photos: Cinder Cones & Lava Beds

    Drone Footage of Cima Cinder Cones & Lava Field

     The Cima volcanic field is (-300 km^) Tertiary-Quaternary alkaline basalt field in  the Ivanpah highlands in east-central Mojave Desert. The basaltic rocks,  which range from late Miocene to Holocene, were erupted from at least 71 vents. The younger  vents are well-formed cinder cones, whereas older vents are marked by degraded cinder cones,  plugs, and crater-fill lava flows. https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1992/0182/report.pdf

    Dating The Mojave's Cima Volcanic Field

    Cima volcanic field is a volcanic field in San Bernardino County, California, close to the border with Nevada.[3][4] The volcanic field covers a surface area of 600 km2 (230 sq mi) within the Mojave National Preserve west of the Cima Dome and consists of about 40 volcanic cones with about 60 lava flows. The volcanic cones range from simple cones over multi-cratered mountains to eroded hills, and lava flows are up to 9.1 km (5.7 mi) long. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cima_volcanic_field

    History of the Cima Volcanic Formation & Lava Field

    Copyright © 2025  by Chris Edwards - All Rights Reserved.

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    • Rainbow Wells
    • Rainbow Basin
    • Barstow Formation
    • Volcanic Cinder Cones
    • Cima Cinders Mine
    • Aiken Mine

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