no. if you own the surface rights they cannot have a road, tanks, pump, or road with out your approval.
The only way to make money from your mineral rights is if an oil company wants to lease them to drill and then you make more money if they drill a producing well or if you sell them. The company leasing the mineral rights will arrange payment, usually by check, depending upon the lease agreement which is signed by the owner of the mineral rights and the leasing company.
Superior Drill Company was created in 1800.
It means they could potentially harm the surface of your property and you could do nothing about it. If they wanted to drill for minerals on your land, they could do so...without compensating you.
Iron, carbide, titanium to name a few.
Diamonds are quite helpfull.
Iron, carbide, titanium to name a few.
Yes, you can, but you will have to order it from the company that made your drill.
Nothing is harder then a diamond. Only like a drill can break it.
A rock drill may be tipped with industrial diamonds, because the diamond tip makes the drill harder than the rock(s). Diamond is the hardest natural mineral on Earth.
Under state laws, crude oil is considered to be a mineral. If one owns the "mineral rights" to a piece of land, one has the right to drill for oil. Oil is drilled for, or in essence, "mined," the same as coal and gold. Oil is also a liquid and a fossil fuel. In this respect, it can't be considered what is conventionally thought of as a "mineral" -- which more often brings to mind precious metals, salts, sulfur and the like. However, dictionaries classify petroleum as a mineral.
This scale is correctly called the Mohs scale. Scientists use this scale to measure a rock's hardness or softness. They can discover how hard a mineral or rocks is and drill in to it and find out more about it.
Vernon Dursley worked as director of a drill-making company called Grunnings.