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Science 25 July 1980:
Vol. 209. no. 4455, pp. 464 - 472
DOI: 10.1126/science.209.4455.464

Articles

Seabed Mlinerals and the Law of the Sea

V. E. McKelvey 1

1 Senior scientific adviser to the United States Law of the Sea Delegation and a geoloogist with the U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia 22092

If, as seems likely, a comprehensive law-of-the-sea treaty is successfully concluded, minerals of the continental margins would be almost entirely controlled by coastal nations, and the right to produce minerals of the deep ocean floor would be licensed by an International Seabed Authority. Mineral production from the continental margins is likely to increase and diversify with time. The only minerals from the deep ocean floor for which there are reasonably good prospects of production within the next decade are the metalliferous muds from some of the deeps in the Red Sea (which lie within what is likely to be the jurisdiction of Saudi Arabia and Sudan) and nodules in the northeastern equatorial Pacific that contain recoverable metals, namely nickel, copper, cobalt, and possibly manganese, molybdenum, and vanadium.





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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)