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Public Land Patented Since 2000 in The United States

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Location:    Since:

Since 2000, the hardrock mining industry has acquired the title to an estimated 15,614 acres of land in The United States previously owned by the public and rich in gold, silver, and other precious metals and minerals. Although a moratorium on new mining "patents" - conversion of public lands to private - has been in place since 1994, the government continues to grant pending requests. See who has gained title to lands since 1872, 1980, 1990, or 2000.

Quick facts about patented lands in The United States since 2000

• Acres of U.S. land, previously public, titled the mining industry since 2000: 15,614

• Companies and individuals granted patents, total: 66

• Dollars paid for each acre: $2.50 or $5

• Royalties paid to federal government from mines on patented public land: $0

EWG analysis of data compiled by the Bureau of Land Management.


Top Mining Patent Purchasers in The United States Ranked by Acres Patented Since 2000

Companies have been consolidated to account for subsidiaries.

 Company/IndividualHeadquartersNumber of PatentsEstimated AcreagePatent Date(s)
1 Phelps Dodge Mining Co Phoenix, AZ 9 2,957 2000 to 2001
2 Manville Sales Corp Denver, CO 24 1,997 2001
3 Kinross World HQ in Canada 4 1,383 2000 to 2001
4 Newmont Mining Corp Denver, CO 11 1,292 2000 to 2002
5 Floridin Co San Bernardino, CA 1 1,140 2001
6 Hanson Natural Res Golden, CO 8 892 2000 to 2002
7 Gold Fields Mining Co Lakewood, CO 4 875 2000
8 Independence Mining Reno, NV 5 686 2001
9 Meridian Gold Company Reno, NV 5 686 2001
10 Oil Dri Corp Reno, NV 1 420 2000
See all patent purchasers in The United States since 2000

 

State Ranking Ranked by Acres Patented Since 2000

 StateNumber of PatentsEstimated Acreage 
1Nevada496,979details
2Idaho144,004details
3Montana352,191details
4Arizona121,338details
5California12939details
6Oregon162details
7Wyoming161details
8Colorado140details

 

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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.