Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - HOMESTEADS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER X— - STOCK-RAISING HOMESTEAD › § 299
Keeps the United States as owner of all coal and other minerals when land is entered or patented, and it lets people who have the right to the minerals come on the land to look for or take them. Those people must not harm permanent buildings and must pay for any crop damage. If someone buys or gets the mineral rights, they may use as much of the surface as needed for mining only if they first get the surface owner’s written OK, pay agreed damages, or post a bond approved by the Secretary of the Interior to cover damages and reclamation. Notices and patents must show these rules. After this part takes effect, anyone except the surface owner must file a notice with the Secretary of the Interior and send a certified mail notice to the surface owner before exploring. The written notice must be sent at least 30 days before entry. Exploration that causes only minimal surface disturbance is allowed during an authorized period that starts 30 days after the notice and ends when the 90-day claim-filing period (or any extension) ends. One person and affiliates may not cover more than 6,400 acres in a State or 1,280 acres on one owner’s land. For full mining work beyond minimal exploration, the person must get the surface owner’s consent or get Secretary approval by posting a reclamation bond, filing a plan of operations that minimizes damage, paying a surface-use fee (up to fair market value), and reclaiming the land. Surface owners may request inspections (Secretary decides within 10 days or immediately for imminent danger), seek compensation for permanent damage, and sue for double damages plus costs for willful misconduct or gross negligence. The Secretary can use and then release bonds to pay damages and ensure reclamation. These rules do not apply to minerals covered by the Mineral Leasing Act, the Geothermal Steam Act, or the Materials Act of 1947. Definitions: "mineral activities" = exploration, mining, or processing; "exploration" = methods to find and describe a deposit; "mining" = taking ore from the ground; "beneficiation" = crushing, grinding, and processing ore; "mining claim" = a claim under U.S. mining laws; "tangible improvements" = farm, home, or business improvements.
Full Legal Text
Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 299
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73