Greenland Mines (NASDAQ: GRML) announced that Professor Wolfgang Maier and Associate Professor Kristoffer Szilas will join the company’s 2026 field campaign at its Skaergaard precious and critical metals project in southeast Greenland. The appointments bring additional expertise in layered intrusions, magmatic ore deposits and Greenland geology to support ongoing exploration and development activities.
The company said Maier and Szilas will work alongside its in-country leadership and technical consultants as part of a team of more than 40 specialists supporting the 2026 Skaergaard season. Integrating the researchers’ academic expertise with its commercial exploration program is expected to help refine geological models, improve data collection and support future resource evaluation and development planning at the project.
Greenland Mines Ltd. is a Nasdaq-listed company with two operating divisions: Mining, focused on the exploration and development of the Skaergaard Project and, subject to closing of a previously announced transaction, the Sarfartoq neodymium-praseodymium rare earths project; and Biotech, including Klotho’s KLTO‑202 primary indication for ALS. The company’s strategy is centered on building a multi-asset platform with exposure to rare earth magnet materials, precious metals and selected midstream processing opportunities, while advancing its broader North Atlantic Critical Metals Corridor vision.
For more details, the full press release is available at https://ibn.fm/NtqbI. The latest news and updates relating to GRML are available in the company’s newsroom at https://ibn.fm/GRML.
This announcement underscores Greenland Mines' commitment to advancing its Skaergaard project by leveraging top academic talent. The addition of Maier and Szilas, both recognized experts in their fields, signals the company’s focus on rigorous geological analysis and data-driven exploration. As the global demand for critical metals intensifies, Greenland Mines' efforts in southeast Greenland could play a significant role in securing supply chains for rare earth materials and precious metals.


