Examples of Mineral resource lands in a sentence
Mineral resource lands may include lands designated for long-term forestry.
Mineral resource lands shall contain non-strategic minerals which are minable, recoverable and marketable in the present or foreseeable future as determined by a licensed professional geologist.
Mineral resource lands shall not include category (class) one (1) or two (2) wetlands or their protective buffers, but may include category (class) three (3) and four (4) wetlands.
Mineral resource lands shall not include habitats of primary association to species listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act or state law and their buffers as established by the critical areas ordinance at the time of designation.
Mineral resource lands shall not include agriculture lands of long-term commercial significance, or historical/cultural preservation sites.
Mineral resource lands shall not include agriculture lands of long term commercial significance, or historical/cultural preservation sites, and any Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) one-hundred- year floodplain.
Mineral resource lands shall not be designated within the Zone 1 (one- year) or Zone 2 (five-year) horizontal time of travel boundaries for any Group A public water system.
Mineral resource lands shall be located away from geologically hazardousareas such as marine bluffs, the bluff area in the Nisqually HillsideOverlay, or areas that would cause a public safety hazard, but mayinclude steep and/or unstable slopes as provided by the critical areasordinance.
Mineral resource lands shall contain non-strategic minerals which are minable, recoverable and marketable in the present or foreseeable future as determined by a licensed professional geologist.5. Mineral resource lands shall not include historical/cultural preservation sites.6. Mineral resource lands may include lands designated for long-term forestry.
Mineral resource lands especially should be designated as close as possible to their likely end use areas, to avoid losing ac- cess to those valuable minerals by development, and to minimize the costs of production and transport.