Hard Rock Mining on the Public Land

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Council of [i.e. on] Environmental Quality, 1977 - 37 lappuses

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20. lappuse - ... and harmonious and coordinated management of the various resources without permanent impairment of the productivity of the land and the quality of the environment with consideration being given to the relative values of the resources and not necessarily to the combination of uses that will give the greatest economic return or the greatest unit output.
7. lappuse - Where minerals have been found and the evidence is of such a character that a person of ordinary prudence would be justified in the further expenditure of his labor and means, with a reasonable prospect of success, in developing a valuable mine, the requirements of the statute have been met.
8. lappuse - States, no claimant of any mining claim hereafter located under the mining laws of the United States shall...
7. lappuse - There can be no gainsaying that this mining law of 1872 is not administered as it was originally intended. There has been a definite trend in decisions toward more stringent requirements to establish the validity of a claim. Examples of these may be found in the narrowing application of the rule of discovery, the employment of the rule of marketability, the definition of "common varieties," and the concern for economic values.
12. lappuse - ... the United States receive fair market value of the use of the public lands and their resources unless otherwise provided for by statute...
4. lappuse - ... and because gold and silver are the most excellent things which the soil contains, the law has appointed them (as in reason it ought) to the person who is most excellent and that is the King.i* In the United States, this interpretation never took hold.
14. lappuse - That, in managing the public lands the Secretary shall by regulation or otherwise take any action required to prevent unnecessary or undue degradation of the lands and their resources or to afford environmental protection.
11. lappuse - Mineral exploration and development should have a preference over some or all other uses on much of our public lands.
4. lappuse - ... a higher and superior class, and things most excellent to those persons who excel all others; and because gold and silver are the most excellent things which the soil contains, the law has appropriated them (as in reason it ought) to the person who is most excellent, and that is the King.
7. lappuse - The requirements are innovations which have been superimposed on the basic law by the need for standards which can serve to prevent the subversion of the law for nonmineral purposes. Examples of these may be found in the narrowing application of the rule of discovery, the employment of the rule of marketability, the definitions of "common varieties.

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