Everything about Groom Lake totally explained
Area 51 is a remote tract of land in the southwestern portion of southern
Nevada in the western
United States. Situated at its center, on the southern shore of a dry lakebed (
salt lake), is a large military airfield, one of the most secretive places in the world. The base's primary purpose is to support development and testing of experimental aircraft and weapons systems.
The base lies within the
United States Air Force's vast
Nevada Test and Training Range. Although the facilities at the range are managed by the
99th Air Base Wing at
Nellis Air Force Base, the Groom facility appears to be run as an adjunct of the Air Force Flight Test Center (AFFTC) at
Edwards Air Force Base in the
Mojave Desert, around from Groom (
AFFTC homepage
), and as such the base is known as
Air Force Flight Test Center (Detachment 3).
Other names used for the facility include
Dreamland,
Paradise Ranch,
Home Base,
Watertown Strip,
Groom Lake and most recently
Homey Airport. The area is part of the Nellis
Military Operations Area, and military pilots refer to the forbidden airspace around it (R-4808N) as
The Box.
The intense secrecy surrounding the base, the very existence of which the U.S. government barely acknowledges, has led it to become the frequent subject of
conspiracy theories and
UFO folklore.
Geography
Area 51 shares a border with the
Yucca Flats region of the
Nevada Test Site (NTS), the location of many of the US
Department of Energy's nuclear weapons tests. The
Yucca Mountain nuclear storage facility is approximately 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Groom Lake.
The designation "Area 51" is contentious, appearing on older maps of the NTS but not newer ones, yet the same naming scheme is used for other parts of the Nevada Test Site.
The area is connected to the internal NTS road network, with paved roads leading south to
Mercury and west to Yucca Flats. Leading northeast from the lake, the wide and well-maintained Groom Lake Road runs through a pass in the Jumbled Hills. The road formerly led to mines in the Groom basin, but has been improved since their closure. Its winding course runs past a security checkpoint, but the restricted area around the base extends further east. (Unauthorized visitors who travel west on Groom Lake Road are usually observed first by guards located on the hills surrounding the pass, still several miles from the checkpoint). After leaving the restricted area (marked by numerous warning signs stating that "photography is prohibited" and that "use of deadly force is authorized" under the terms of the 1950
McCarran Internal Security Act) Groom Lake Road descends eastward to the floor of the Tikaboo Valley, passing the dirt-road entrances to several small ranches, before converging with
State Route 375, the "Extraterrestrial Highway", south of
Rachel.
Operations at Groom Lake
Groom Lake isn't a conventional airbase, as frontline units are not normally deployed there. It instead appears to be used during the development, testing, and training phases for new aircraft. Once these aircraft have been approved by the
United States Air Force or other agencies such as the
CIA, operation of that aircraft is generally conducted from a normal air force base. Groom is reported, however, to be the permanent home for a small number of
Soviet-designed aircraft (obtained by various means), which are analyzed and used for training purposes.
Soviet spy satellites obtained photographs of the Groom Lake area during the height of the Cold War, and later civilian satellites produced detailed images of the base and its surroundings. These images support only modest conclusions about the base; they depict a nondescript base, long airstrip, hangars and the lake, but nothing that supports some of the claims about underground facilities.
Though no
ICAO identifier for the base appears on any official document, in December 2007, airline pilots noticed that the base had appeared in their aircraft navigation systems' latest Jeppesen database revision as "KXTA".
U-2 program
Groom Lake was used for bombing and artillery practice during
World War II, but was then abandoned until 1955, when it was selected by
Lockheed's
Skunk Works team as the ideal location to test the forthcoming
U-2 spy plane. The lakebed made an ideal strip from which they could operate the troublesome test aircraft, and the Emigrant Valley's mountain ranges and the NTS perimeter protected the test site from prying eyes and outside interference.
Lockheed constructed a makeshift base at Groom, consisting of little more than a few shelters, workshops and trailer homes in which to house its small team. The first U-2 flew at Groom in August 1955, and U-2s under the control of the
CIA began overflights of
Soviet territory by mid-1956.
During this period, the NTS continued to perform a series of atmospheric nuclear explosions. U-2 operations throughout 1957 were frequently disrupted by the
Plumbbob series of atomic tests, which detonated over two-dozen devices at the NTS. The
Plumbbob-Hood explosion on
July 5 scattered
fallout across Groom and forced a temporary evacuation.
As the U-2's primary mission was to fly over the Soviet Union, it operated largely from airbases near the Soviet border, including
Incirlik in
Turkey,
Peshawar in
Pakistan, and
Bodø,
Norway.
Blackbird programs
Even before U-2 development was complete, Lockheed began work on its successor, the
CIA's
OXCART project, a
Mach-3 high altitude
reconnaissance aircraft, a later variant of which became the famed USAF
SR-71 Blackbird. The Blackbird's flight characteristics and maintenance requirements forced a massive expansion of facilities and runways at Groom Lake. By the time the first A-12 Blackbird prototype flew at Groom in 1962, the main runway had been lengthened to 8500 ft (2600 m), and the base boasted a complement of over 1000 personnel. It had fueling tanks, a control tower, and a
baseball diamond. Security was greatly enhanced, the small civilian mine in the Groom basin was closed, and the area surrounding the valley was made an exclusive military preserve (where interlopers could be subject to "lethal force"). Groom saw the first flight of all major Blackbird variants:
A-12,
SR-71, its abortive
YF-12 interceptor variant, and the
D-21 Blackbird-based
drone project. The A-12 would remain at Groom Lake until 1968. Some people say that the Blackbird was scrapped for a new plane called the
Aurora, even though the government claims that the latter is just a myth.
Have Blue/F-117 program
The first
Have Blue prototype stealth fighter (a smaller cousin of the
F-117 Nighthawk) first flew at Groom in December 1977. Testing of a series of ultra-secret prototypes continued there until mid-1981, when testing transitioned to the initial production of F-117 stealth fighters. In addition to flight-testing, Groom performed radar profiling, F-117 weapons testing, and was the location for training of the first group of frontline USAF F-117 pilots. Subsequently, the still highly classified active-service F-117 operations moved to the nearby
Tonopah Test Range, and finally to
Holloman Air Force Base.
Later operations
Since the F-117 became operational in 1983, operations at Groom Lake have continued unabated. The base and its associated runway system have been expanded, and the daily flights bringing civilian commuters from Las Vegas continue. Some commentators, after examining recent satellite photos of the base, estimate it to have a live-in complement of over 1000 people, with a similar number commuting from Las Vegas. In 1995, the federal government expanded the exclusionary area around the base to include nearby mountains that had hitherto afforded the only decent overlook of the base. Subsequently, limited views of the area are available only from the summits of several distant mountains east.
Aircraft that have been tested at Groom include the
Northrop Tacit Blue stealth demonstrator, various classified
UAVs, and a stealthy
cruise missile (most likely the
AGM-129 Advanced Cruise Missile). Other rumored Groom test programs include a small stealthy
VTOL troop-transport aircraft, the
Aurora hypersonic spy plane, a "
Stealth Blimp", a secret USAF
spaceplane codenamed
Blackstar, and replacements for the SR-71 and F-117A.
Area 51 commuters
Defense contractor
EG&G maintains a private terminal at
McCarran International Airport in the
Las Vegas metropolitan area. A number of unmarked aircraft operate daily shuttle services from McCarran to sites operated by EG&G in the extensive federally controlled lands in southern Nevada. These aircraft reportedly use JANET radio call signs (for example, "JANET 6") (the JANET airplanes are now using either call sign "Bland" or "JANET" on the radio, and "WWW" on their flight number identifier), said to be an acronym for "Joint Air Network for Employee Transportation" or (perhaps jokingly) "Just Another Non-Existent Terminal". EG&G advertises in the Las Vegas press for experienced military pilots, requiring applicants to be eligible for government security clearance, and that successful applicants can expect to always stay overnight at Las Vegas. These aircraft, painted white with red trim (the livery of now defunct
Western Airlines), include six
Boeing 737/
T-43As and several smaller turboprops. Their tail numbers are registered to the
U.S. Air Force. They are reported to shuttle to Groom,
Tonopah Test Range, to other locations in the NAFR and NTS, and reportedly to
Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake. Observers tracking the number of departures and cars in the private EG&G parking lot at McCarran estimate several thousand JANET commuters each day. These shuttle flights were previously operated by
Key Air, which had flown 22,000 passenger trips on 300 flights from
Nellis Air Force Base to Tonopah Test Range per month from 1982 until early 1991.
Commuter service is provided along Groom Lake Road by a bus, catering to a small number of employees living in several small communities beyond the NTS boundary (although it isn't clear whether these workers are employed at Groom or at other facilities in the NTS). The bus travels Groom Lake Road and stops at
Crystal Springs,
Ash Springs, and
Alamo, and parks at the Alamo courthouse overnight.
Runways
The airbase, given the
ICAO airport identifier code of
KXTA and listed as "Homey Airport" in aviation
GPS databases, has seven
runways including one that now appears to be closed. The closed runway, 14R/32L, is also by far the longest with a total length of approximately 7,093 meters (23,270 feet), not including stopway. The other runways are two asphalt runways, the 14L/32R with a length of 3,658 meters (12,000 feet) and 12/30 with a length of 1,652 meters (5,420 feet), and four runways located on the salt lake. These four runways are 09L/27R and 09R/27L, which are both approximately 3,489 meters (11,440 feet), and 03L/21R and 03R/21L, which are both approximately 3,057 meters (10,030 feet).
U.S. government's positions on Area 51
On July 14th, 2003 the Federal Government admitted the facility's existence, tacitly conceding that the Air Force has an "operating location" near the lake, but doesn't provide any further information. The base is conspicuously absent from Federal publications and inquiries to the government regarding the facility are rejected for reasons of national security.
Unlike much of the Nellis range, the area surrounding the lake is permanently off-limits both to civilian and normal military air traffic. Radar stations protect the area, and unauthorized personnel are quickly expelled. Even military pilots training in the NAFR risk disciplinary action if they accidentally stray into the exclusionary "box" surrounding Groom's airspace.
Perimeter security is provided by uniformed private security guards working for EG&G's security subcontractor
Wackenhut, who patrol in desert camouflage
Jeep Cherokees and
HMMWV vehicles, and more recently, champagne-colored
Ford F-150 pickups and gray Chevy 2500 4X4 pickups. Although the guards are armed with
M16s, no violent encounters with Area 51 observers have been reported; instead, the guards generally follow visitors near the perimeter and radio for the
Lincoln County Sheriff. Deadly force is authorized if violators who attempt to breach the secured area fail to heed warnings to halt. Fines of around $600 seem to be the normal course of action, although some visitors and journalists report receiving follow-up visits from
FBI agents. Some observers have been detained on public land for pointing camera equipment at the base. Surveillance is supplemented using buried motion sensors and by
HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters.
The base doesn't appear on public U.S. government maps; the USGS topographic map for the area only shows the long-disused Groom Mine, and the civil aviation chart for Nevada shows a large restricted area, but defines it as part of the Nellis restricted airspace. Similarly the National Atlas page showing federal lands in Nevada doesn't distinguish between the Groom block and other parts of the Nellis range. Although officially declassified, the original film taken by U.S.
Corona spy satellite in the 1960s has been altered prior to declassification; in answer to freedom of information queries, the government responds that these exposures (which map to Groom and the entire NAFR) appear to have been destroyed.
Terra satellite images (which were publicly available) were removed from web servers (including
Microsoft's "Terraserver") in 2004, and from the monochrome 1 m resolution USGS data dump made publicly available. NASA
Landsat 7 images are still available (these are used in the
NASA World Wind). Higher resolution (and more recent) images from other satellite imagery providers (including Russian providers and the
IKONOS) are commercially available. These show, in considerable detail, the runway marking, base facilities, aircraft, and vehicles.
Nevada's state government, recognizing the folklore surrounding the base might afford the otherwise neglected area some tourism potential, officially renamed the section of
State Route 375 near Area 51 "The Extraterrestrial Highway", and posted fancifully illustrated signs along its length.
Although federal property within the base is exempt from state and local taxes, facilities owned by private contractors are not. Area 51 researcher Glenn Campbell claimed in 1994 that the base only declares a taxable value of $2 million to the Lincoln County tax assessor, who is unable to enter the area to perform an assessment.
Environmental lawsuit
In 1994, five unnamed civilian contractors and the widows of contractors Walter Kasza and Robert Frost sued the
USAF and the
United States Environmental Protection Agency. Their suit, in which they were represented by
George Washington University law professor
Jonathan Turley, alleged they'd been present when large quantities of unknown chemicals had been burned in open pits and trenches at Groom.
Biopsies taken from the complainants were analyzed by
Rutgers University biochemists, who found high levels of
dioxin,
dibenzofuran, and
trichloroethylene in their body fat. The complainants alleged they'd sustained skin, liver, and respiratory injuries due to their work at Groom, and that this had contributed to the deaths of Frost and Kasza. The suit sought compensation for the injuries they'd sustained, claiming the USAF had illegally handled toxic materials, and that the EPA had failed in its duty to enforce the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (which governs handling of dangerous materials). They also sought detailed information about the chemicals to which they were allegedly exposed, hoping this would facilitate the medical treatment of survivors. Congressman
Lee H. Hamilton, former chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee, told
60 Minutes reporter
Leslie Stahl, "The Air Force is classifying all information about Area 51 in order to protect themselves from a lawsuit."
Citing the
State Secrets Privilege, the government petitioned trial judge U.S. District Judge Philip Pro (of the
United States District Court for the District of Nevada in Las Vegas) to disallow disclosure of classified documents or examination of secret witnesses, alleging this would expose classified information and threaten national security. When Judge Pro rejected the government's argument,
President Bill Clinton issued a
Presidential Determination, exempting what it called, "The Air Force's Operating Location Near Groom Lake, Nevada" from environmental disclosure laws. Consequently, Pro dismissed the suit due to lack of evidence. Turley appealed to the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, on the grounds that the government was abusing its power to classify material.
Secretary of the Air Force Sheila E. Widnall filed a brief that stated that disclosures of the materials present in the air and water near Groom "can reveal military operational capabilities or the nature and scope of classified operations." The Ninth Circuit rejected Turley's appeal, and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear it, putting an end to the complainants' case.
The
President continues to annually issue a determination continuing the Groom exception. This, and similarly tacit wording used in other government communications, is the only formal recognition the U.S. Government has ever given that Groom Lake is more than simply another part of the Nellis complex.
An unclassified memo on the safe handling of F117 material was posted on an Air Force website in 2005. This discussed the same materials for which the complainants had requested information (information the government had claimed was classified). The memo was removed shortly after journalists became aware of it.
1974 Skylab photography
In January of 2006, space historian
Dwayne A. Day published an article in online aerospace magazine
The Space Review titled "Astronauts and Area 51: the Skylab Incident." The article was based around a recently declassified memo written in 1974 to
CIA director
William Colby by an unknown CIA official. The memo reported that astronauts on board
Skylab 4 had, as part of a larger program, inadvertently photographed a location of which the memo said
"There were specific instructions not to do this. was the only location which had such an instruction." Although the name of the location was obscured, the context led Day to believe that the subject was Groom Lake.
The memo details debate between federal agencies regarding whether the images should be classified, with
Department of Defense agencies arguing that it should, and
NASA and the
State Department arguing against classification. The memo itself questions the legality of unclassified images to be retroactively classified.
Remarks on the memo, handwritten apparently by DCI (
Director of Central Intelligence) Colby himself, read:
» He did raise it - said State Dept. people felt strongly. But he inclined leave decision to me (DCI) - I confessed some question over need to protect since:
#
USSR has it from own sats » #
What really does it reveal?
#
If exposed, don't we just say classified USAF work is done there?
The declassified documents don't disclose the outcome of discussions regarding the Skylab imagery, but were not placed in the
federal government's archive of satellite imagery along with the remaining Skylab 4 photographs.
UFO and other conspiracy theories concerning Area 51
Its secretive nature and undoubted connection to classified
aircraft research, together with reports of unusual phenomena, have led Area 51 to become a focus of modern
UFO and
conspiracy theories. Some of the unconventional activities claimed to be underway at Area 51 include:
- The storage, examination, and reverse engineering of crashed alien spacecraft (including material supposedly recovered at Roswell), the study of their occupants (living and dead), and the manufacture of aircraft based on alien technology.
- Meetings or joint undertakings with extraterrestrials.
- The development of exotic energy weapons (for SDI applications or otherwise) or means of weather control.
- The development of time travel technology.
- The development of unusual and exotic propulsion systems related to the Aurora Program (see Aurora aircraft).
- Activities related to a supposed shadowy one world government and or the Majestic Twelve organization.
Many of the hypotheses concern underground facilities at Groom or at nearby Papoose Lake, and include claims of a transcontinental underground railroad system, a disappearing airstrip (nicknamed the "Cheshire Airstrip", after Lewis Carroll's Cheshire cat) which briefly appears when water is sprayed onto its camouflaged asphalt, and engineering based on alien technology. In 1989, Bob Lazar claimed that he'd worked at a facility at Papoose Lake (which he called S-4) on such a U.S. Government flying saucer.
Another hypothesis is that Area 51 is a place which simulates the environment of the moon. In 2000-2001,
Fox Television broadcast a show about
Apollo moon landing hoax accusations, in which it was suggested that the entire moon landing in 1969 was a hoax and was filmed in parts of Area 51.
Others, however, claim that during the mid 1990s, the most secret work previously done at Groom was quietly moved to other facilities, including
Dugway Proving Ground in
Utah, and that the continued secrecy around Groom is largely a successful attempt at
misdirection.
The 1996 documentary
Dreamland directed by
Bruce Burgess included an interview with a 71 year old mechanical engineer who claimed to be a former employee at Area 51 during the 1950s, working on a "flying disc simulator" built to train US Pilots, based on a disc originating from a crashed extraterrestrial craft. During his career at Area 51 he claimed to have worked with an extraterrestrial being whose name was "J-Rod", described as a telepathic translator.
Dan Burisch (real name, Dan Crain) claims to have worked on cloning alien viruses at Area 51, also with the alien "J-Rod".
In July 1996, a man named "Victor" announced on
Art Bell's
Coast to Coast AM radio show that he'd a videotape of an alien interrogation that took place in Area 51. He claimed that he'd made a copy of the tape during a scheduled transfer of analogue videotape files on the base into digital form, and had then smuggled the copy out of Area 51. The video appears to show the head of an alien creature in a dark interrogation room, allegedly using telepathy to communicate with military personnel and scientists. The footage was eventually included in a video documentary entitled .
Area 51 in popular culture
Popular culture usually portrays Area 51 as a haven for aliens. The numerous conspiracy theories surrounding Area 51 have granted it a fairly high profile in popular culture, specifically in the area of science fiction. There have been literally dozens of movies or television shows which deal with fictionalized events or happenings at the site. Perhaps the most well known example is the 1996 action film
Independence Day, in which the complex is shown to have been studying the crashed scout ship from the
Roswell UFO incident of 1947. The heroes of the film later make their final attack from the airstrips at the base, and in a nod to established fact,
Randy Quaid's character Russell Casse at one point refers to the base not being shown on a state map of Nevada.
The 1998-2001 television series
Seven Days took place largely inside the Area 51 complex itself, with the base depicted as being run by a covert
National Security Agency operation which used time-travel made possible by alien technology recovered from the 1947
Roswell UFO incident.
Also, in the game
RollerCoaster Tycoon 3, one of the parks is called 'Broom Lake' and is run by a group of CIA operatives, and in the MMORPG
World of Warcraft, a town in the zone Netherstorm is called 'Area 52'.
Lara Croft infiltrates Area 51 in
Tomb Raider 3. While searching for an Infada Artefact in the Nevada Desert, Lara crashes a Quad Bike. She is recovered, unconscious, by two Military Police. She is dragged to a High Security Compound; of which is in involvement is some sort of trading with
Area 51. Lara escapes the compound hidden within the cargo of a lorry. This then takes Lara to Area 51 where the cargo is shipped. Lara discovers the artifact there, and raids it.
In the popular video game, Area 51 (parodied as Area 69 in the game) is placed in a large open tract of land, designated as a No-Fly Zone in the Map included in the game case and simply unnamed on the in-game map. A few missions include this zone, with most, if not all, involving secret military projects and relations to extraterrestrial contact. Outside of the missions, this entering or flying over this area results in an immediate jump to the 5th "Wanted" level and ordinarily death via
surface-to-air missiles, Military-Controlled
Harriers, and armed guards. This denotes a direct reference to the high level of security and secrecy surrounding Area 51.
In the beginning of
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, "Hangar 51" is revealed to be the location of the
government warehouse where the
Ark of the Covenant was stored at the end of
Raiders of the Lost Ark, and where
KGB agents go to recover the remains of the Roswell alien.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Groom Lake'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://area_51.totallyexplained.com">Area 51 Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |