The state had something called the Mined Land Reclamation Law. It says that “gold and silver found on private and state lands, and minerals/fossils found on state land, are owned by New York State.” The law stems from a statute sometimes referred to as The Kings Law which dates back to 1776.
@VolcanoGoldDiggerAdirondacks so I read a lot on what you just sent me. I don't know if it would be worth it to pay 50 bucks to the secretary of state and file notice to the commissioner every time I want to go look in a different spot to look for gold or silver. Maybe I'm getting all this wrong. But if you need to pay and submit notice with name and address with a detailed map of where you're going to look for gold and then still have a possibility of permits being denied. I don't know man. Seems like a lot for something that won't pan out. No pun intended.
You can look for it if it is not big enough to mine sorry new york state-nobody has mind gold with a gold pan, Check out If you want to learn how to gold pan N.Y.S. state land in the Adirondacks@@nathan-d8
I will let you decide if any gold in the Adirondacks the CCC people planted trees for 10 years in the adrondacks red pine and schoch pine are not native to the U.S. The reason they planted trees is because of the volcanos. When I was a kid I use to sit on two 20ft diameter bolders that I wouls say came out of a swamp with ridges all around it and one side was open Out west they have a saying Iron gives birth to gold. In school they still teach all gold and sliver belong to new york. take a Falcon metal detector $300.00 and see if you can make if say metal in side a stone that you found in a gravel pit and gold on a bever DAM I have Get the book Fist full of gold by Christ Ralph
thank you
The state had something called the Mined Land Reclamation Law. It says that “gold and silver found on private and state lands, and minerals/fossils found on state land, are owned by New York State.” The law stems from a statute sometimes referred to as The Kings Law which dates back to 1776.
in 1946 it change it to new york consolidated laws Public land law PBL 82
@VolcanoGoldDiggerAdirondacks so I read a lot on what you just sent me. I don't know if it would be worth it to pay 50 bucks to the secretary of state and file notice to the commissioner every time I want to go look in a different spot to look for gold or silver. Maybe I'm getting all this wrong. But if you need to pay and submit notice with name and address with a detailed map of where you're going to look for gold and then still have a possibility of permits being denied. I don't know man. Seems like a lot for something that won't pan out. No pun intended.
You can look for it if it is not big enough to mine sorry new york state-nobody has mind gold with a gold pan, Check out If you want to learn how to gold pan N.Y.S. state land in the Adirondacks@@nathan-d8
Have you ever found any gold ?
I will let you decide if any gold in the Adirondacks the CCC people planted trees for 10 years in the adrondacks red pine and schoch pine are not native to the U.S. The reason they planted trees is because of the volcanos. When I was a kid I use to sit on two 20ft diameter bolders that I wouls say came out of a swamp with ridges all around it and one side was open Out west they have a saying Iron gives birth to gold. In school they still teach all gold and sliver belong to new york. take a Falcon metal detector $300.00 and see if you can make if say metal in side a stone that you found in a gravel pit and gold on a bever DAM I have Get the book Fist full of gold by Christ Ralph
Gold is $2500.00 an oz.