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In Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Montana, mineral owners can own the mineral rights indefinitely and there is no way for them to passively revert to the surface owner. If a surface owner wants to own the mineral rights under their land, they must find and contact the mineral owners and offer to purchase them.
The State of Montana owns over 6 million acres of mineral rights but only 5 million acres of surface rights. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) manages the split estate land involving a private surface owner and the federal government as the mineral owner.
To see if you own mineral rights to your property, then get a copy of your deed. You can get it from the county Recorders Office. Look to see if the previous owner conveyed fee simple title to you. The deed should record whether the mineral rights are owned by someone else.
The State Land Board owns approximately 1.2 million acres of mineral estate where the surface estate above is owned by another party (split or severed estate). Under Colorado law, the mineral estate owner is granted rights to access their mineral ownership, even if the surface is owned by another party.
In Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Montana, mineral owners can own the mineral rights indefinitely and there is no way for them to passively revert to the surface owner. If a surface owner wants to own the mineral rights under their land, they must find and contact the mineral owners and offer to purchase them.
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Mineral rights are automatically included as a part of the land in a property conveyance, unless and until the ownership gets separated at some point by an owner/seller. An owner can separate the mineral rights from land by: Conveying (selling or otherwise transferring) the land but retaining the mineral rights.
Mineral rights are automatically included as a part of the land in a property conveyance, unless and until the ownership gets separated at some point by an owner/seller. An owner can separate the mineral rights from land by: Conveying (selling or otherwise transferring) the land but retaining the mineral rights.
Get a deed. To see if you own mineral rights to your property, then get a copy of your deed. You can get it from the county Recorders Office. Look to see if the previous owner conveyed fee simple title to you. The deed should record whether the mineral rights are owned by someone else.
Surprisingly, these materials may or may not belong to the surface owner. Millions of acres of private land in the Montana/Dakotas region involve a split estate; where the surface ownership is private but the mineral rights are retained by the federal government or other entities.
Get a deed. To see if you own mineral rights to your property, then get a copy of your deed. You can get it from the county Recorders Office. Look to see if the previous owner conveyed fee simple title to you. The deed should record whether the mineral rights are owned by someone else.

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