WARNING TO USERS OF THIS SYSTEM 

This is a United States Government computer system, maintained by the Department of the Interior, to provide Official Unclassified U.S. Government information only. Use of this system by any authorized or unauthorized user constitutes consent to monitoring, retrieval, and disclosure by authorized personnel.

USERS HAVE NO REASONABLE EXPECTATION OF PRIVACY IN THE USE OF THIS SYSTEM.

Unauthorized use may subject violators to criminal, civil, and/or disciplinary action.

STAY AWAY FROM ALL AML SITES

Any Abandoned Mine Land site is potentially dangerous. Only trained AML reclamation specialists should enter these sites.

DO NOT TRESPASS ON PRIVATE PROPERTY

Many AML sites are on private property. Do not trespass on private property to get to an AML site.

DISCLAIMER

OSM’s Abandoned Mine Land Inventory is:

Incomplete Only high priority (Priority 1 and 2) coal mining related problems have been systematically inventoried. These are the primary problems addressed by OSMs Abandoned Mine Land Program. Because resources are limited, States and Indian tribes have not always been able to inventory all their high priority (Priority 1 and 2) coal mining related problems. Please contact individual States/Indian tribes for additional information. Inventory only includes problems eligible for funding. Many problems are not eligible for funding.

Dynamic Ineligible problems become eligible. This can happen when a problem deteriorates to the point that it becomes a public hazard, when economic development brings people in contact with what had been remote sites, or some other factor changes. New problems arise. Examples include fires, subsidence holes, and landslides.