{
  "state": {
    "name": "Texas",
    "abbreviation": "TX",
    "slug": "texas"
  },
  "county": {
    "name": "Nolan",
    "slug": "nolan",
    "url": "https://www.americanroyaltybuyers.com/mineral-rights/texas/nolan",
    "basinSlug": "eastshelf",
    "description": "American Royalty Buyers acquires mineral rights and royalties in Nolan County, Texas. Our team provides comprehensive valuations.",
    "overview": "Nolan County, around Sweetwater on the Eastern Shelf, is a mature oil and gas county where decades of shallow carbonate and sandstone production provide steady, long-life royalty income on the northeastern flank of the Permian Basin.",
    "geology": "Nolan County produces from shallow Eastern Shelf carbonates and sandstones — including Canyon, Strawn, and Clearfork intervals — at relatively shallow depths, typical of the platform's long-lived conventional fields rather than the deep-basin shale.",
    "activity": "Operators maintain legacy waterfloods and conventional production across Nolan County, with periodic recompletion and shallow development activity sustaining long-duration royalty streams.",
    "keyFormations": [
      "Canyon",
      "Strawn",
      "Clearfork",
      "Palo Pinto"
    ],
    "stats": [
      {
        "label": "Sub-Basin",
        "value": "Eastern Shelf"
      },
      {
        "label": "Primary Play",
        "value": "Shallow conventional carbonate / sand"
      },
      {
        "label": "Hub City",
        "value": "Sweetwater"
      }
    ],
    "faqs": [
      {
        "q": "Is Nolan County still producing oil and gas?",
        "a": "Yes. Nolan County is a mature Eastern Shelf county where shallow conventional carbonate and sandstone reservoirs continue to produce, often under long-running waterfloods. Production is steadier and longer-lived than deep-basin shale, though typically at lower per-well rates."
      },
      {
        "q": "How does ARB value Nolan County mineral rights?",
        "a": "ARB reviews public production data, your operator and formations, decimal interest, and nearby activity, then provides a free, no-obligation offer with no fee to you."
      }
    ]
  }
}