[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR2520.0-8]

[Page 110-111]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
    CHAPTER II--BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 2520_DESERT-LAND ENTRIES--Table of Contents
 
                Subpart 2520_Desert-Land Entries: General
 
Sec. 2520.0-8  Land subject to disposition.

    (a) Land that may be entered as desert land. (1) As the desert-land 
law requires

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the artificial irrigation of any land entered thereunder, lands which 
are not susceptible of irrigation by practicable means are not deemed 
subject to entry as desert lands. The question as to whether any 
particular tract sought to be entered as desert land is in fact 
irrigable from the source proposed by the applicant will be investigated 
and determined before the application for entry is allowed. In order to 
be subject to entry under the desert-land law, public lands must be not 
only irrigable but also surveyed, unreserved, unappropriated, non-
mineral (except lands withdrawn, classified, or valuable for coal, 
phosphate, nitrate, potash, sodium, sulphur, oil, gas or asphaltic 
minerals, which may be entered with a reservation of such mineral 
deposits, as explained in subpart 2093, nontimbered, and such as will 
not, without artificial irrigation, produce any reasonably remunerative 
agricultural crop by the usual means or methods of cultivation. In this 
latter class are those lands which, one year with another for a series 
of years, will not without irrigation produce paying crops, but on which 
crops can be successfully grown in alternate years by means of the so-
called dry-farming system. (37 L.D. 522 and 42 L.D. 524.)
    (2) Applications to make desert-land entries of lands embraced in 
applications, permits, or leases under the Act of February 25, 1920 (41 
Stat. 437), if in all other respects complete, will be treated in 
accordance with Sec. Sec. 2093.0-3 to 2093.0-7. Applications to make 
desert-land entries of lands within a naval petroleum reserve must be 
rejected, as no desert-land entry may be allowed for such lands.
    (3) Land that has been effectually reclaimed is not subject to 
desert land entry.
    (b) Quantity of lands that may be entered. An entry of lands under 
the Act of March 3, 1877, is limited to 320 acres, subject to the 
following additional limitations:
    (1) An entry of lands within an irrigation district which the 
Secretary of the Interior or his delegate has approved under the Act of 
August 11, 1916 (39 Stat. 506; 43 U.S.C. 621-630), is limited to 160 
acres.
    (2) An entryman may have a desert-land entry for such a quantity of 
land as, taken together with all land acquired and claimed by him under 
the other agricultural land laws since August 30, 1890, does not exceed 
320 acres in the aggregate, or 480 acres if he shall have made an 
enlarged homestead entry of 320 acres (Acts of August 30, 1890; 26 Stat. 
391; 43 U.S.C. 212; and of February 27, 1917; 39 Stat. 946; 43 U.S.C. 
330).
    (c) Entries restricted to surveyed lands. Unsurveyed public land 
withdrawn by Executive Orders 6910 and 6964 of November 26, 1934, and 
February 5, 1935, respectively, is not subject to appropriation, under 
the desert-land laws, until such appropriation has been authorized by 
classification. (See parts 2410, 2420, and 2430.)
    (d) Economic unit requirements, compactness. (1) One or more tracts 
of public lands may be included in a desert land entry and the tracts so 
entered need not be contiguous. All the tracts entered, however, shall 
be sufficiently close to each other to be managed satisfactorily as an 
economic unit. In addition, the lands in the entry must be in as compact 
a form as possible taking into consideration the character of available 
public lands and the effect of allowance of the entry on the remaining 
public lands in the area.
    (2) In addition to the other requirements of the regulations in this 
part, applicants for desert land entry must submit with their 
applications information showing that the tracts applied for are 
sufficiently close to each other to be managed satisfactorily as an 
economic unit and that the lands in the application are as compact as 
possible in the circumstances.
    (3) In determining whether an entry can be allowed in the form 
sought, the authorized officer of the Bureau of Land Management will 
take into consideration such factors as the topography of the applied 
for and adjoining lands, the availability of public lands near the lands 
sought, the private lands farmed by the applicant, the farming systems 
and practices common to the locality and the character of the lands 
sought, and the practicability of farming the lands as an economically 
feasible operating unit.

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