Burbank field, the Osage Mineral Estate, and the unique tribal-trust framework that makes Osage County's mineral interests different from anywhere else in Oklahoma.
Get a Free Mineral ValuationOsage County is the only county in the United States where the entire mineral estate beneath the surface is held in trust by a single tribal nation — the Osage Nation. The federal Osage Allotment Act of 1906 separated surface ownership from mineral ownership across the entire county and reserved all minerals to the Osage Tribe. This means that on every section in Osage County:
The surface is owned by individuals (private fee surface)
The minerals are owned in trust by the Osage Nation
Royalty income from production is distributed to enrolled Osage tribal members ("headright" holders) by the Bureau of Indian Affairs
An Osage headright is a fractional share of the Osage Mineral Estate's royalty income. The original 2,229 headrights were issued in 1906 to enrolled Osage tribal members. Today, headrights have been inherited through generations and can be held by both Osage and non-Osage individuals. A headright generates a quarterly payment from the Osage Nation administrative system, with the amount fluctuating based on production levels and commodity prices across the entire county.
Headrights are subject to specific federal regulations on inheritance, taxation, and transfer. Some categories of headright transfers require Bureau of Indian Affairs approval.
The Burbank field in northern Osage County, discovered in 1920, is one of the largest oil fields in U.S. history. At its peak in the early 1920s the field produced over 100,000 BOPD. Burbank has been on continuous waterflood since the 1940s and remains one of the longest-running secondary recovery operations anywhere in the country. Cumulative production exceeds 600 million barrels.
For the Osage Mineral Estate, Burbank field is the single largest revenue contributor — and has been for over a century.
Headright holders looking to evaluate their interest's value or considering a sale should be aware that headright transfers are subject to federal regulations distinct from the standard Oklahoma mineral deed conveyance. The Osage Nation, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and federal probate rules all play a role in headright inheritance and transfer.
Buckhead Energy can provide a valuation framework for headright income streams, with the explicit understanding that any actual transfer is subject to BIA and Osage Nation approval where required.
While the Osage Mineral Estate covers the entire county, there are limited circumstances where private fee mineral ownership can exist — most commonly when minerals beneath previously-purchased federal lands or selected boundary areas were severed before the 1906 Allotment Act. These cases are unusual and typically require a chain-of-title review back to the original federal patent.
Whether you hold a headright, a fee mineral interest, or a surface-with-leased-minerals position, we'll provide a free written valuation.
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