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Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries are a few of 92,125 beneficiaries of a 131-year-old federal mining law that gives away precious metals, minerals, and even the title to the land itself for less than $10 an acre. Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries own the minerals under an estimated 22,552 acres of claimed land, and have submitted mining plans and notices that encompass 1,512 acres of BLM-managed land, not including the acreages of mines they may operate on Forest Service land. giving Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries more total land holdings (claims and patents) than over 99.5% of all other mining interests.
Headquarters4601 DTC Blvd. Suite 750 |
Subsidiaries IncludeFlorida Canyon Mining (100%) |
Information on subsidiaries and parent companies shown here represents our best estimate of corporate structure at the time of this website release, and are drawn from various publicly available sources. Please report any noted omissions and errors to EWG with a credible source or citation. Thank you.
Statistics on this page include the ownership of subsidiaries. View this page without subsidiary information included.
| Claims | Patents | Mining Plans & Notices | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 1,094 | 0 | 4 | ||||||
| Estimated Acreage | 22,552 | 0 | 1,512 | ||||||
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Source: EWG analysis of US BLM data.
These mines are owned by Apollo Gold Inc, its subsidiaries, or its parent company.
| Name of Mine | Location of Mine | Mine Status | Metal Mined | Map Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diamond Hill Mining, Inc. | Broadwater County, MT | Suspended | Gold | map |
| Florida Canyon Mine | Pershing County, NV | Open | Gold | map |
| Montana Tunnels Mine | Jefferson County, MT | Open | Gold | map |
Source: EWG analysis.
Like all U.S. claimholders, Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries acquired ownership of precious metals and minerals on U.S. public land for about $2 per acre, and maintains possession of the claim with a small per-acre fee, typically $5 each year. Apollo Gold Inc pays no royalties to the federal government for metals and minerals mined from this land.
For Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries:
Claims by State.
| State | Number of Claims | Estimated Acreage | Date(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nevada | 778 | 16,073 | 1983 - 2003 |
| Montana | 316 | 6,478 | 1939 - 1997 |
| U.S. Total | 1,094 | 22,552 | 1939 - 2003 |
Find these features on the map.
Source: EWG analysis of US BLM data.
Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries are some of the 3,323 mine operators on U.S. BLM lands with mining plans and notices listed as currently active in government records, operating under laws that allow mining interests to extract and sell precious metals and minerals previously held by the public. Apollo Gold Inc may also operate mines on Forest Service lands, which are not contained in the LR2000 database that is the backbone of this website. Because the government often fails to promptly close out records for mines no longer active, active mining may be completed for some of the operations represented by plans and notices in this website. But regardless of the status of mining operations on a particular site, filings of plans and notices are indicative of mining on the property - whether past, present, or planned. Mining operations led by Apollo Gold Inc may well have left behind permanent pollution. In 2001 mines generated 45 percent of all pollution in EPA's Toxic Release Reporting system while accounting for just 0.36 percent of all industrial facilities.
For Apollo Gold Inc and its subsidiaries:
Plans and Notices on BLM land by State.
| State | Number of Plans and Notices on BLM land | Estimated Acreage | Date(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Montana | 1 | 1,500 | 1986 |
| Nevada | 3 | 12 | 1997 - 2003 |
| U.S. Total | 4 | 1,512 | 1986 - 2003 |
Find these features on the map.
Source: EWG analysis of US BLM data.
Source: EWG analysis of Bureau of Land Management's Land and Mineral Records 2000 (LR2000) data system. For claims, acreages are estimated based on maximum allowable size of claims. For patents, acreages are taken directly from the LR2000 database where available, and are estimated based on maximum allowable size of claim that preceded the patent where acreages are not noted in LR2000. All notices are assumed to be five acres in size, and the size of plans are calculated directly as the size of the land represented by the legal land description in the LR2000 database. The acreages we estimate through these methods would tend to overestimate the actual amount. We welcome corrections here, and would welcome a federal data management system that included the acreages involved in these important federal land transactions.