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Minerals in Liberia: The Complete List

Liberia sits on part of the West African craton, where varied geology supports deposits that have shaped local communities and trade for decades. Mining activity ranges from artisanal to larger-scale projects, with knock-on effects for roads, ports and local services.

There are 11 Minerals in Liberia, ranging from Diamonds to Zircon. Data are organized by Main location(s),Deposit type,Production status, which you’ll find below.

Which of these minerals are currently the biggest contributors to Liberia’s exports?

Iron ore and gold have historically been the largest export earners, with rutile and diamonds also contributing at times; several other minerals appear in smaller-scale or artisanal operations. Check the Production status column in the list below to see which deposits are active, suspended, or historical before relying on any single source.

How do I use the Main location(s), Deposit type, Production status columns when researching?

Treat Main location(s) as the geographic reference, Deposit type as the geological/mining context (placer, vein, sedimentary, etc.), and Production status as the operational snapshot; combine those with recent government or company reports to confirm current activity.

Minerals in Liberia

Mineral Main location(s) Deposit type Production status
Iron ore Nimba County; Bong Range; northern Liberia Banded Iron Formation (BIF) Past production
Gold Lofa; Nimba; Bong; Grand Gedeh; widespread interior Alluvial and lode (vein) deposits Producing (artisanal and small-scale)
Diamonds Gbarpolu; Grand Cape Mount; Lofa; river systems Alluvial (placer) gravels Producing (artisanal); past commercial production
Rutile Coastal counties (Grand Cape Mount to Grand Kru) Placer (beach heavy-mineral sands) Exploration
Ilmenite Coastal counties (western and southern coast) Placer (beach heavy-mineral sands) Exploration
Zircon Coastal beach and dune sands Placer (heavy-mineral sands) Exploration
Monazite Coastal heavy-mineral sands Placer (heavy-mineral sands) Known occurrence
Garnet Coastal sands and inland alluvials Placer (heavy-mineral and river gravels) Known occurrence
Kaolinite Central and coastal counties Residual/weathering clay (kaolin) Producing (small-scale)
Limestone Grand Bassa; central Liberia Sedimentary carbonate rock Producing (local cement and construction)
Silica (quartz) sand Margibi; coastal and riverine areas Sand/sandstone (quartz) deposits Known occurrence; small-scale supply

Images and Descriptions

Iron ore

Iron ore

High-grade hematite and magnetite in the Nimba and Bong ranges powered Liberia’s export economy. Large BIF-hosted deposits are regionally important for steel feedstock; many projects were active before civil war and remain targets for redevelopment.

Gold

Gold

Gold occurs as alluvial nuggets and lode veins across Liberia’s greenstone belts. Artisanal and small-scale miners dominate production; larger exploration projects target hard-rock deposits with potential commercial scale.

Diamonds

Diamonds

Alluvial diamonds are recovered from river and terrace gravels. Historically significant though small-scale today, diamond mining supports local communities and occasional commercial operations in productive gravel systems.

Rutile

Rutile

Rutile is a titanium oxide mineral concentrated in Liberia’s coastal sand belts. It’s sought for titanium feedstock and pigment production; substantial coastal heavy-mineral targets have been mapped and are the focus of exploration.

Ilmenite

Ilmenite

Ilmenite is the primary titanium-iron ore in beach sands. Liberian coastal deposits host ilmenite-rich concentrates alongside rutile and zircon; these sands attract exploration for export-grade heavy minerals.

Zircon

Zircon

Zircon is a zirconium silicate found in Liberia’s heavy-mineral sands, valued for ceramics and refractory uses. Coastal concentrations are common and are explored together with rutile and ilmenite for mineral-sands projects.

Monazite

Monazite

Monazite, a phosphate containing rare earth elements and thorium, occurs in beach sands. It’s a potential REE source but carries regulatory and radiological considerations that affect development.

Garnet

Garnet

Garnet is commonly concentrated with other heavy minerals in beach and river sediments. Industrial garnet is used as an abrasive and filtration media; Liberia’s garnet occurrences are small but widespread.

Kaolinite

Kaolinite

Kaolinite (kaolin) is a white clay used in ceramics, paper, and paint. Weathering of feldspathic rocks yields kaolin deposits that are locally mined for domestic industry and small commercial supply.

Limestone

Limestone

Limestone (calcite-rich rock) is quarried for cement manufacture and construction aggregate. Local deposits supply national building materials and support cement plants and infrastructure projects.

Silica (quartz) sand

Silica (quartz) sand

High-purity silica sands and quartz veins are present for glassmaking, foundry, and industrial uses. Localized deposits supply domestic industry, with potential for higher-value processing if upgraded.

Minerals in Other Countries