Location Map — New Mexico

To create a exploration project location map for New Mexico, import your NM claims or data as GeoJSON, assign the appropriate layer role for automatic styling, set the Satellite or Topographic basemap, and export as PNG or PDF. The entire process takes 15–30 minutes with no GIS experience required.

About Mining in New Mexico

New Mexico has a significant copper mining history in its southwestern ranges, with major open-pit porphyry copper mines and renewed gold and silver exploration.

Key minerals: copper, gold, silver, potash, uranium, coal. Notable deposits: Chino, Tyrone, Cobre, Pinos Altos. Mining districts: Grant County, Socorro, Mogollon, Lordsburg.

The New Mexico Mining and Minerals Division administers mineral rights in New Mexico. Claim data is accessible through BLM LR2000.

What is a Location Map?

A location map provides geographic context for an exploration project — showing the property in relation to nearby infrastructure, towns, past-producing mines, and regional geology. It is required in virtually every investor presentation, technical report, and corporate presentation. A clear, professional location map immediately communicates project accessibility and regional context.

How to Create a Location Map for New Mexico

  1. Import your property boundary as GeoJSON
  2. Enable the Province/State inset to show regional context
  3. Turn on Context overlay for roads, towns, and water
  4. Enable Reference Labels to show place names
  5. Zoom out to show 50–200 km of surrounding area
  6. Add a distance ring to show project scale
  7. Configure the title with project name and region
  8. Export as PNG for presentations or PDF for reports

Recommended Settings for New Mexico

  • Basemap: Satellite or Topographic
  • Design theme: Investor — Navy & White or Terrain — Earthy & Warm
  • Export format: PNG at 2× for investor presentations, PDF (Letter or A4) for NI 43-101 reports
  • Coordinate system: Ensure source data is in WGS84 (EPSG:4326)

Common Use Cases in New Mexico

  • Corporate presentations
  • NI 43-101 reports
  • Investor decks
  • Website project pages
  • Regulatory submissions

Frequently Asked Questions

What file format do I need for New Mexico mineral claims data?
New Mexico mineral claims boundaries are available from BLM LR2000 and can typically be downloaded as Shapefiles or KML. Convert these to GeoJSON at mapshaper.org before importing into Exploration Maps.
Who regulates mineral claims in New Mexico?
Mineral claims in New Mexico are regulated by the New Mexico Mining and Minerals Division. All tenure and claims data can be queried through BLM LR2000.
What minerals are typically mapped in New Mexico?
New Mexico is known for its copper, gold, silver, potash deposits. Key producing and exploration-stage properties include Chino, Tyrone, Cobre. The main mining districts are Grant County, Socorro, Mogollon.
Can I export a New Mexico exploration project location map for an NI 43-101 report?
Yes. Exploration Maps exports PNG and PDF at 2–3× pixel ratio, suitable for inclusion in NI 43-101 technical reports as required figures. The export includes north arrow, scale bar, legend, and title block — all elements required for NI 43-101 compliance.