International audienceHarold Hotelling’s 1931 contribution is known for providing a basic principle – the Hotelling rule – to the economics of non-renewable resources. Nearly ninety years later, empirical tests conclude the rule lacks empirical validity, requiring strong amendments to describe the long-term, aggregate behavior of its target object. On the basis of Hotelling’s unpublished archival material, this paper revisits the place given to the Hotelling rule in non-renewable resource economics. Our reconstruction shows that Hotelling’s 1931 paper has been misinterpreted: from the outset, the Hotelling rule was not valid for mineral resources. In contrast, the consideration of two inherent geological constraints, alongside exhaustibilit...