Title 43 › Chapter 29— SUBMERGED LANDS › Subchapter I— GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 1301
Defines key words used in these rules about underwater and coastal land. It explains what counts as “lands beneath navigable waters,” what the State boundaries and coast line mean, and who “grantees,” “lessees,” “persons,” and “natural resources” refer to. “Lands beneath navigable waters” means three kinds of areas: nontidal waters within a State that were navigable under U.S. law when the State joined the Union (up to the ordinary high water mark, as it changes by natural build-up, erosion, or drying); tidal areas up to the mean high tide line and seaward out to three geographical miles from the coast, or farther if the State’s seaward boundary already extended beyond three miles; and land that was filled, made, or reclaimed from those waters. “Boundaries” include a State’s seaward edges as of statehood or as Congress approved or extended under section 1312, but never more than three geographical miles into the Atlantic or Pacific or more than three marine leagues into the Gulf, except where fixed by final U.S. Supreme Court coordinates. “Coast line” means the ordinary low water line and the seaward limit of inland waters. “Grantees” and “lessees” are entities given State grants or leases under State law, but they get only the rights shown in those grants. “Natural resources” include oil, gas, other minerals, and marine life, but not water power. “Lands beneath navigable waters” does not include certain stream beds that were lawfully conveyed after public surveys. “State” means any State, and “person” can mean a person, association, State, local government, or corporation.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1301
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60