Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 35— - FEDERAL LAND POLICY AND MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - DESIGNATED MANAGEMENT AREAS › § 1785
Creates the Fossil Forest Research Natural Area. It covers about 2,770 acres in the Bureau of Land Management’s Farmington District in New Mexico, shown on a “Fossil Forest” map dated June 1983. As soon as possible after November 12, 1996, the Secretary of the Interior must file a map and legal description with the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources and the House Committee on Resources. The map may be corrected for clerical or mapping errors and must be kept for public inspection in the Office of the Director of the Bureau of Land Management. The Secretary, through the BLM Director, must protect the Area and manage it under federal land laws. Except for valid existing rights, the Area is closed to mining claims, mineral and geothermal leasing, and mineral material sales. The Secretary may exchange coal leases in New Mexico for any preference-right coal lease application in the Area, following existing law and public-interest review. Oil and gas leases issued before November 12, 1996, must follow Group 3100 of 43 C.F.R. (including §3162.5–1) and any extra terms needed to avoid harming the land or its scientific and educational values. Grazing is not allowed. Within 3 full fiscal years after November 12, 1996, the BLM must make a baseline inventory of all fossil types and then monitor them as the management plan requires. A management plan must be sent to the two Congressional committees within 5 years of November 12, 1996; it must include a cooperative program for lab and field work and public education (including vertebrate fossils), vehicle limits, rules for fossil excavation and minimal use of machines, and standards for fixing surface damage.
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Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1785
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73