Imagine if every mining dataset, geological model, drill result, and exploration workflow lived in one synchronized AI-powered system.
That’s what we’re building at Lithora.
The mining industry generates massive amounts of data, yet teams still lose time and value navigating fragmented software and disconnected workflows.
We’re turning exploration analysis from months into minutes.
The future of mining isn’t guesswork. It’s intelligence.
What part of the mining workflow do you think is most overdue for disruption?
#Lithora #MiningTech #AI #MineralExploration
A geologist shouldn’t need to become a data engineer to do geology.
Yet that’s exactly what’s happening.
A typical exploration project might use:
• acQuire for drilling data
• Leapfrog for geological modeling
• ArcGIS for spatial analysis
• Excel for reporting
• Multiple lab systems for assays
None of them were designed to work seamlessly together.
So every week, highly trained geologists spend hours:
Exporting data
Cleaning formats
Reconciling versions
Rebuilding workflows
Not because the science is difficult.
Because the software stack is fragmented.
The mining industry has spent decades optimizing drilling, sampling, and resource estimation.
But we’ve largely ignored the infrastructure connecting them.
The next leap in mineral exploration won’t come from collecting more data.
It will come from eliminating the friction between the data we already have.
That’s the problem we’re focused on solving at Lithora.
#MiningTech #MineralExploration #Geology #CriticalMinerals #MiningInnovation #DataInfrastructure
Mining investors love simple stories.
Geology doesn’t.
Some of the most valuable deposits in the world are misunderstood because they’re viewed through the lens of a single commodity instead of the entire mineral system.
The biggest opportunities are often hiding in the complexity.
One of the biggest misconceptions in mining is that value only comes from new discoveries.
Some of the largest value creation events happen when existing data is understood better.
A reserve upgrade can be worth more than a new discovery if it meaningfully changes project economics.
Every major mining breakthrough eventually becomes an infrastructure story.
Discovering a deposit is only the beginning.
The real value is created when geology, processing, logistics, and capital are coordinated into a functioning supply chain.
The winners of the next commodity cycle will be the companies that optimize the entire system, not just the mine.
@BusInsiderSSA A modern cadastre is more than a regulatory upgrade—it’s a data upgrade. The jurisdictions that make geological information easier to discover, integrate, and analyze will attract exploration capital faster than those that don’t.
@MyriadUranium 23 targets can create thousands of datasets. The challenge isn’t finding data anymore—it’s connecting geology, drilling, geophysics, and GIS fast enough to identify what matters. Exploration workflows are becoming as important as exploration assets.
@trtafrika Everyone talks about major mining projects.
Yet Ghana just showed that small-scale miners can move national production numbers more than many billion-dollar announcements.
@peer_metals Silver’s shift from precious metal to strategic material is one of the more important resource stories of this decade. Industrial demand is changing the conversation.
@SalvadorMaurice Identifying pegmatites is encouraging. The real test is whether the upcoming assays can distinguish the most prospective targets from the noise.
@MyriadUranium AI may be driving the conversation, but reliable baseload power is what makes it possible. The connection between data centers, energy demand, and uranium is becoming harder to ignore
@africatodayMG Rwanda’s growth highlights how critical minerals can become a meaningful driver of economic development when supported by investment, infrastructure, and clear policy frameworks.
@EloroResources Mining is one of those industries whose value is often underestimated because its impact extends far beyond direct GDP contribution. Many of the technologies and infrastructure we rely on every day begin with a mined resource.
@business Critical minerals are increasingly being treated as strategic assets, but building regulatory and technical capacity is often overlooked. Resource potential alone doesn’t guarantee supply growth.