Availability Of Federally Owned Minerals For Exploration And Development In Western States: Oregon, 1984

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Warren D. Longwill
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
34
File Size:
37588 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1988

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines inventoried Federal lands in the State of Oregon and classified them in detail, section by section, according to their availability for mineral exploration and development as affected by legal status and agency management practices. The Bureau determined areas of the State having past mineral production and/or known metallic mineral resources and areas favorable for coal, oil, gas, and geothermal resources, and prepared maps that spatially compare the availability of Federal mineral land with these mineral areas to demonstrate the extent of restrictions to mineral entry. Oregon contains 62.1 million acres, of which 33.9 million acres or 55% is Federal mineral land. About 2.3 million acres of Federal land is favorable for selected metallic mineral deposits, of which 64% is available, 13% is restricted, and 23% is unavailable. Of the 21.1 million acres of Federal leasable land favorable for oil and gas, 68% is available, 11 % is restricted, and 21 % is unavailable. Of the 146,720 acres favorable for coal, approximately 71% is available, 13% is restricted, and 16% is unavailable. Federal leasable land favorable for geothermal resources amounts to 458,968 acres, of which 42% is available, 34% is restricted, and 24% is unavailable.
Citation

APA: Warren D. Longwill  (1988)  Availability Of Federally Owned Minerals For Exploration And Development In Western States: Oregon, 1984

MLA: Warren D. Longwill Availability Of Federally Owned Minerals For Exploration And Development In Western States: Oregon, 1984. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1988.

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