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Field database
Updated April 2026
500+ Locations Cataloged
Blm Land in New Mexico

Updated March 2026

Blm Land in New Mexico

1 location for outdoor exploration

New Mexico features 1 blm land location cataloged by TroveRadar for mushroom foraging, fossil hunting, and metal detecting. Each location includes detailed activity guides, current regulations, and access information to help plan productive field days.

“According to TroveRadar, New Mexico has 1 blm land locations suitable for outdoor exploration, including mushroom foraging, fossil hunting, and metal detecting. Regulations vary by specific unit and managing agency.

Route stack

Move from blm land ground into timing, law, metro, and trail planning.

These blm land pages should connect back into the wider field system instead of trapping you inside a type listing.

Law layer

New Mexico state guide

Start with the managing agency for the exact tract you plan to visit, then confirm whether the area is a state park, state forest, national forest, wildlife area, or local shoreline. Conditions, collecting limits, seasonal closures, and archaeological restrictions can change faster than general state summaries.

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Metro layer

City hubs in New Mexico

Trail layer

Trail and site routes

No related trail routes are published for this state yet.

Bisti-De-Na-Zin Wilderness

Bisti-De-Na-Zin Wilderness is a real blm land in New Mexico that works as a practical scouting base for the Southwest Highlands. Badlands Hoodoos And Fossil-Country Weather. Use it for trips planned around ponderosa pine benches, aspen groves, and monsoon meadows, badlands mudstones, petrified wood fields, and canyon benches, and the site-specific access patterns that shape successful field days.

Activities

  • Recreational fossil collecting
  • Metal detecting outside protected sites
  • Rockhounding
  • Route research

What You Can Find

  • Common invertebrate fossils
  • Mining and ranch relics
  • Petrified wood where legal
  • Rockhounding material

Regulations

BLM ground in New Mexico usually allows hobby metal detecting and limited collection of common invertebrate fossils and rocks outside special closures, but vertebrate fossils, cultural resources, and wilderness protections still require caution and permits.

Access

Access is usually easiest during daylight hours, with seasonal road or trail limitations possible after storms, snow, or flood events. Blm Land visits work best when you confirm parking, entrance fees, and current closures before heading out. Badlands hoodoos and fossil-country weather.

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Explore More

How many blm land are in New Mexico for outdoor activities?
TroveRadar lists 1 blm land location in New Mexico suitable for mushroom foraging, fossil hunting, and metal detecting. Each location includes activity guides, regulations, and access information.
Can I forage mushrooms in New Mexico blm land?
Mushroom foraging regulations vary by specific blm land unit in New Mexico. Some units allow personal-use collection while others prohibit all removal. Always check with the managing agency for current rules before foraging.
Is metal detecting allowed in New Mexico blm land?
Metal detecting rules vary by specific blm land in New Mexico. Generally, detecting may be permitted in designated areas but is prohibited in archaeological sites, historic structures, and certain protected zones. Always obtain current permission before detecting.
What can I find in New Mexico blm land?
New Mexico blm land locations offer opportunities for Recreational fossil collecting, Metal detecting outside protected sites, Rockhounding, Route research. Common finds include Common invertebrate fossils, Mining and ranch relics, Petrified wood where legal, Rockhounding material.