Granite County's Granite and Philipsburg mining districts were major hard-rock gold-silver producers during the 1880s–1940s, with the Sapphire Range remaining tectonically active and mineralized. The Flint and Clark Fork rivers contain persistent placer gold; modern recovery methods have renewed interest in fine gold deposits. The remote high country limits access to summer months. The BLM Missoula Field Office administers federal claims; this is pristine backcountry terrain.
The nearest mapped access corridor, osm:5719760 (mapped off-road route), lies approximately 628 feet from this claim's centroid. off-road vehicle clearance is required. Vehicle staging is feasible directly adjacent to the claim boundary.
216 active claims surround Moose Placer within a 7-mile radius. The estimated open aliquot count is approximate — use the live map for precise 20-acre resolution.
Map Open Aliquots →FIND OPEN GROUND. STAKE IT. FILE IT.
No card required to preview.
Moose Placer is a 1800.77-acre Placer Claim in Granite County, Montana (MT), filed under BLM serial number MT106389067 in the Bureau of Land Management Mining Location Record System.
Under the General Mining Act of 1872 (30 U.S.C. § 22), claims on federal land are maintained by filing the annual maintenance fee or performing assessment work. Current BLM status: Active. 216 additional active claims exist within 7 miles.
To find open federal land adjacent to Moose Placer, AuthoriProspector overlays live BLM claims at 20-acre aliquot precision alongside USGS MRDS historic mine markers, BLM wilderness boundaries, and military no-go zones.
FIND OPEN GROUND. STAKE IT. FILE IT.
No card required to preview.