Mining Regulations




206
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 4

alone, and the practice and procedure
of the Warden’s Court relating to hear-
ings before the Warden and Assessors
shall not apply.

(23.) The appointment and notification by the
Warden as to the time and place for
the hearing of any application, or for
the holding of any preliminary inquiry,
may be made by him in such manner
as he thinks fit, either generally with
respect to all cases in a given Court-
house or specifically with respect to
specific cases, and may in like manner
be made by the Registrar acting under
the general instructions of the Warden.

SURVEYS.

  1. Regulations for the time being in force re-
    lating to block and section surveys, made under
    “ The New Zealand Institute of Surveyors and
    Board of Examiners Act, 1900,” shall be deemed
    to be incorporated herewith, and shall be read and
    construed, mutatis mutandis, as though they formed
    part of these regulations, but shall be construed
    subject to these regulations.

  2. Before disposing of any application the
    Warden in his discretion may order the land to
    which the application relates to be surveyed, not-
    withstanding that the area does not exceed 20
    acres.

  3. In every case where the land to which the
    application relates is to be surveyed the surveyor
    appointed to make the survey shall with all prac-
    ticable despatch proceed as follows :—

(1.) He shall duly and carefully survey the
ground, and, after making all necessary
inquiries, shall furnish to the Chief Sur-
veyor for approval by him or the Chief
Draughtsman, and transmission to the
Warden, a plan of the ground, together
with a report as to—

(a.) Its areas, boundaries, description,
and character ;

(b.) The likelihood of any watercourse
or artificial reservoir within the bound-
aries being required for, or the feasi-
bility of the same being applied to,
public purposes, or the use of miners
generally for gold-mining purposes.

(c.) The cases in which and the extent
to which any mining privilege lawfully
held by any other person than the ap-
plicant is likely to be affected by the
grant of the application ;

(d.) Any objections of a public nature
to the granting of the application which
are disclosed by the survey ; and

(e.) Any other circumstances which, in
the opinion of the surveyor, should be
reported to the Warden to enable him
properly to deal with the application.

(2.) The approval of the aforesaid plan and
report shall be signified by memo. in

8

writing thereon under the hand of the
Chief Surveyor or Chief Draughtsman.

(3.) With the aforesaid plan and report, the
surveyor shall also furnish to the Chief
Surveyor for transmission to the Warden
a tracing of so much of the general map
of the district as will connect the land
with at least one trigonometrical station,
or, in the absence of such station, then
with some fixed point.

  1. The following general rules shall apply with
    respect to surveys :—

(1.) If the land to be surveyed affects or in-
cludes any mining privilege, private hold-
ing, building, race, or other area, whether
held or occupied under the Mining Act
or otherwise, the same must be shown
by the surveyor on the plan, and full
particulars relating thereto (including
acres) must, as far as practicable, be
given in the surveyor’s report to the
Warden. It shall be the surveyor’s duty
to make careful inquiries respecting all
claims to prior occupancy, and, if pos-
sible, to furnish the names of such occu-
pants or claimants ; but in computing
the acreage of the land surveyed it shall
not be his duty to deduct therefrom the
acreage of any land to which any such
claim to prior occupancy relates.

(2.) Every survey must be connected with a
fixed and clearly indicated survey mark
already established, such as the corner
of a section, the angle of a road, a trigo-
metrical station, or the corner of a
mining claim already surveyed. But
whenever, in forest lands, a trigono-
metrical station is within a quarter of a
mile of the mining area under survey,
connection with it must be made in pre-
ference.

(3.) If a former survey is taken as a common
boundary, it shall be the surveyor’s duty
to ascertain that the lines on the ground
conform to the recorded bearings and
dimensions of that survey. If correct it
may be adopted as data for the survey
in hand ; and, if not, the discrepancy
disclosed must be reported to the Chief
Surveyor when forwarding plan of survey
for his approval.

(4.) In the survey of claims every boundary
shall be cut throughout, and every corner
shall be marked on the ground by
trenches, as described in the regulations
of the Surveyors’ Board incorporated
herewith ; but in forest lands the
trenches may be cut for a length of
3 ft. only.

(5.) All previously surveyed mining areas or
allotments that may adjoin or be within
5 chains of the land under survey must
be shown on the plan, together with the
tie-lines used to determine their position.



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VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1908, No 4





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🌾 Mining Act Regulations - Procedures for Applications (continued from previous page)

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
Mining Act, Applications, Notification, Public notice, Newspapers, Occupiers, Registered letter, Posting up, Objections, Warden, Registrar, License, Area, Rectification