The 6 by 10 mile block of land that was known as Area 51 with withdrawn
by the
AEC in Public
Land Order 1662 on June 28, 1958.
The NTS Draft EIS (Jan. 1996, v.1, page 4-9) states:
"Under Public Land Order 1662 (June 20, 1958),
approximately 38,400 acres were reserved for the
use of the Atomic Energy Commission in connection the the NTS.
Management of this land has since been delegated to the U.S. Air Force."
Inquiries to DOE yielded this
1996 statement,
while FOIA requests to DOE have brought vague national security denials,
implying (to us) that any agreement between DOE and the AF is secret.
This means that Area 51 is indeed a no man's land -- neither controlled by
DOE nor confirmable by the Air Force. (The AF only acknowledges that they
do have "facilities at Groom Dry Lake," not that they control the land
or the entire base.)
We still don't know...
When the land gained the "Area 51" designation.
When and how Area 51 was turned over to the Air Force.
Under what authority the Groom Lake
land was used by the military and DOE prior to June 20, 1958.
One revealing tidbit: The Tonopah Test Range
is referred to as Area 52 in the DOE/NV internal phone book
(June 1990).
If Areas 53-55 exist, we expect they are satellite sites. For example,
if there was an area number for the Project Faultless site (about 100 miles
north of the NTS), we would expect it to be numbered in the 50s.
This orderly view of the universe is belied only by Area 13, which is
a plutonium dispersal site on
Air Force land north of Area 51.
Perhaps 50s numbers refer to areas of joint AF/DOE control.
Other Land Actions
Public Law 98-485
that withdrew the Groom Mountain area for the Nellis Air Force Range.
10/17/84. [Abstract]
Draft EIS for Nellis Range renewal+ (83 lines)
- Message - Published: 10/19/98 - Source: Ufomind (Mailing List) [Posted by Vernon J. Brechin] <10/19/98 #3>
DOE gives up Area 51+ (25 lines)
- Message - Published: 12/16/99 - Source: Ufomind (Mailing List) [Posted by Glenn Campbell, Las Vegas] <12/16/99 #5>