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Area 51 : The worst kept secret around

SSGcommandoPAK

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Less than 100 miles from Las Vegas, Nevada is the most famous secret military installation on the planet. Rumors swirl around this base, much like the mysterious aircraft that twist and turn in the skies overhead. Although it’s known by many names, most people call it by the Atomic Energy Commission’s (AEC) designation: Area 51.



area-51-1.jpg

Area 51 is surrounded by warning signs like this one.
There are several theories about how Area 51 got its name. The most popular is that the facility borders the Nevada Test Site (NTS). The AEC used the NTS as testing grounds for nuclear bombs. The NTS is mapped as a grid of squares that are numbered from one to 30 (with a few omissions). Area 51, while not part of this grid, borders Area 15. Many say the site got the name Area 51 by transposing the 1 and 5 of its neighbor. Another popular theory is that the number 51 was chosen because it was not likely to be used as part of the NTS system in the future (in case the NTS expanded later on).

The first documented use of the name Area 51 comes from a film made by the company Lockheed Martin. There are also declassified documents from the 1960s and 1970s that refer to a facility called Area 51. Today, officials refer to the facility as an operating location near Groom Lake when speaking to the public — all official names for the site appear to be classified.

What’s In A Name?Area 51 is known by many names. Kelly Johnson, who was responsible for the facility’s construction, named it Paradise Ranch (he was being sarcastic). Other names for the base include The Ranch,Watertown Strip, The Box, Red Square, The Farm,Groom Lake, Dreamland and the romantic name Air Force Flight Test Center, Detachment 3.
The name alone inspires thoughts of government conspiracies, secret “black” aircraft and alien technologies. Facts, myths and legends weave together in such a way that it can become difficult to separate reality from fiction. What exactly goes on in this installation? Why did the government alternatively acknowledge and deny its existence until the 1990s? Why is the airspace over it so restricted that even military aircraft are forbidden from flying through it? And, what does it have to do with Roswell, New Mexico?

Each question seems to have a million different answers. Some answers are plausible, while others stretch credulity so far that if someone said it out loud, you might feel the urge to back away from them slowly. In this article, we’ll look at the facts as far as anyone outside of the facility can determine them and examine the more popular theories about Area 51.

Where is Area 51?

Area 51’s coordinates are 37°14’36.52″N, 115°48’41.16″W. You can get a great view of it using Google Earth. Just type “Area 51” into the “Fly To” field and the map does the rest. For decades, the base remained hidden from almost everyone, but in 1988 a Soviet satellite photographed the base. Several publications acquired the photos and published them. The secrecy of the base is still of paramount importance, but as far as satellite coverage is concerned, the cat is out of the bag.


A satellite view of Area 51
A dry lake bed called Groom Lake borders the base. To the west is the NTS. The closest town is Rachel, Nevada, which is 25 miles north of the base. The base itself occupies only a fraction of the more than 90,000 acres it sits on. It consists of a hangar, a guard shack, a few radar antennas, some housing facilities, a mess hall, offices, runways and shelters. The shelters are “scoot and hide” buildings, designed so aircraft can quickly move under cover when satellites pass overhead. Some allege that what you can see on the surface is only a tiny part of the actual facility. They believe that the surface buildings rest on top of a labyrinthine underground base. A few claim the underground facility has up to 40 levels and that it is attached via underground railways to other sites in Los Alamos, White Sands and Los Angeles. Skeptics are quick to point out that such a massive construction project would require an enormous labor force, the removal of tons of earth that would have to go somewhere and the need for a huge amount of concrete and other construction material. The lack of evidence convinces skeptics that, for the most part, what you see is what you get. Believers, on the other hand, dismiss the skeptics’ doubts.

So what goes on at this base? According to the Air Force, the facility’s purpose is for “the testing of technologies and systems training for operations critical to the effectiveness of U.S. military forces and the security of the United States.” All specifics regarding the facility and the projects housed there are classified. What is known is the Air Force, the CIA and Lockheed have used the base as a staging ground for test flights of experimental, secret aircraft, also known as black aircraft. The base served as the development and testing facility for cutting edge aircraft technology from the U-2 spy plane to the F-117A Stealth Fighter.

In the next section, we’ll look at the known security measures at Area 51.Area 51 Security and Secrecy

To say access to the base is limited is an understatement. The base and its activities are highly classified. The remote location helps keep the activities figuratively under the radar, as does the proximity to the NTS. After several land seizures, the base is surrounded by thousands of acres of empty desert landscape. The Air Force has withdrawn lands from public use to help keep the base hidden from snooping eyes. For many years, observers could hike to elevated vantage points like White Sides Peak or Freedom Ridge, but the Air Force seized those lands as well. Today, the only way you’ll catch a glimpse of the base in person (assuming you aren’t working there) is to take the strenuous hike to the top of Tikaboo Peak, which is 26 miles from the facility.

For many years, mapmakers wouldn’t include the facility on any maps. It fell within the borders of Nellis Air Force Range, but the road leading to the facility was never shown. Today, the location of the base is general knowledge, but for many years officials went to great lengths to obscure its location.

area-51-3.jpg

A map of the Area 51 facility
Everyone who works at Area 51, whether military or civilian, must sign an oath agreeing to keep everything a secret. Buildings at the site lack windows, preventing people from seeing anything not related to their own duties at the base. By some reports, different teams would work on similar projects at the same time, but their supervisors would keep each team ignorant of the other team’s project. When testing a secret aircraft, officials ordered all uninvolved employees to stay inside until the test flight was over and the aircraft returned to its hangar.

 
.
Less than 100 miles from Las Vegas, Nevada is the most famous secret military installation on the planet. Rumors swirl around this base, much like the mysterious aircraft that twist and turn in the skies overhead. Although it’s known by many names, most people call it by the Atomic Energy Commission’s (AEC) designation: Area 51.



area-51-1.jpg

Area 51 is surrounded by warning signs like this one.
There are several theories about how Area 51 got its name. The most popular is that the facility borders the Nevada Test Site (NTS). The AEC used the NTS as testing grounds for nuclear bombs. The NTS is mapped as a grid of squares that are numbered from one to 30 (with a few omissions). Area 51, while not part of this grid, borders Area 15. Many say the site got the name Area 51 by transposing the 1 and 5 of its neighbor. Another popular theory is that the number 51 was chosen because it was not likely to be used as part of the NTS system in the future (in case the NTS expanded later on).

The first documented use of the name Area 51 comes from a film made by the company Lockheed Martin. There are also declassified documents from the 1960s and 1970s that refer to a facility called Area 51. Today, officials refer to the facility as an operating location near Groom Lake when speaking to the public — all official names for the site appear to be classified.

What’s In A Name?Area 51 is known by many names. Kelly Johnson, who was responsible for the facility’s construction, named it Paradise Ranch (he was being sarcastic). Other names for the base include The Ranch,Watertown Strip, The Box, Red Square, The Farm,Groom Lake, Dreamland and the romantic name Air Force Flight Test Center, Detachment 3.
The name alone inspires thoughts of government conspiracies, secret “black” aircraft and alien technologies. Facts, myths and legends weave together in such a way that it can become difficult to separate reality from fiction. What exactly goes on in this installation? Why did the government alternatively acknowledge and deny its existence until the 1990s? Why is the airspace over it so restricted that even military aircraft are forbidden from flying through it? And, what does it have to do with Roswell, New Mexico?

Each question seems to have a million different answers. Some answers are plausible, while others stretch credulity so far that if someone said it out loud, you might feel the urge to back away from them slowly. In this article, we’ll look at the facts as far as anyone outside of the facility can determine them and examine the more popular theories about Area 51.

Where is Area 51?

Area 51’s coordinates are 37°14’36.52″N, 115°48’41.16″W. You can get a great view of it using Google Earth. Just type “Area 51” into the “Fly To” field and the map does the rest. For decades, the base remained hidden from almost everyone, but in 1988 a Soviet satellite photographed the base. Several publications acquired the photos and published them. The secrecy of the base is still of paramount importance, but as far as satellite coverage is concerned, the cat is out of the bag.


A satellite view of Area 51
A dry lake bed called Groom Lake borders the base. To the west is the NTS. The closest town is Rachel, Nevada, which is 25 miles north of the base. The base itself occupies only a fraction of the more than 90,000 acres it sits on. It consists of a hangar, a guard shack, a few radar antennas, some housing facilities, a mess hall, offices, runways and shelters. The shelters are “scoot and hide” buildings, designed so aircraft can quickly move under cover when satellites pass overhead. Some allege that what you can see on the surface is only a tiny part of the actual facility. They believe that the surface buildings rest on top of a labyrinthine underground base. A few claim the underground facility has up to 40 levels and that it is attached via underground railways to other sites in Los Alamos, White Sands and Los Angeles. Skeptics are quick to point out that such a massive construction project would require an enormous labor force, the removal of tons of earth that would have to go somewhere and the need for a huge amount of concrete and other construction material. The lack of evidence convinces skeptics that, for the most part, what you see is what you get. Believers, on the other hand, dismiss the skeptics’ doubts.

So what goes on at this base? According to the Air Force, the facility’s purpose is for “the testing of technologies and systems training for operations critical to the effectiveness of U.S. military forces and the security of the United States.” All specifics regarding the facility and the projects housed there are classified. What is known is the Air Force, the CIA and Lockheed have used the base as a staging ground for test flights of experimental, secret aircraft, also known as black aircraft. The base served as the development and testing facility for cutting edge aircraft technology from the U-2 spy plane to the F-117A Stealth Fighter.

In the next section, we’ll look at the known security measures at Area 51.Area 51 Security and Secrecy

To say access to the base is limited is an understatement. The base and its activities are highly classified. The remote location helps keep the activities figuratively under the radar, as does the proximity to the NTS. After several land seizures, the base is surrounded by thousands of acres of empty desert landscape. The Air Force has withdrawn lands from public use to help keep the base hidden from snooping eyes. For many years, observers could hike to elevated vantage points like White Sides Peak or Freedom Ridge, but the Air Force seized those lands as well. Today, the only way you’ll catch a glimpse of the base in person (assuming you aren’t working there) is to take the strenuous hike to the top of Tikaboo Peak, which is 26 miles from the facility.

For many years, mapmakers wouldn’t include the facility on any maps. It fell within the borders of Nellis Air Force Range, but the road leading to the facility was never shown. Today, the location of the base is general knowledge, but for many years officials went to great lengths to obscure its location.

area-51-3.jpg

A map of the Area 51 facility
Everyone who works at Area 51, whether military or civilian, must sign an oath agreeing to keep everything a secret. Buildings at the site lack windows, preventing people from seeing anything not related to their own duties at the base. By some reports, different teams would work on similar projects at the same time, but their supervisors would keep each team ignorant of the other team’s project. When testing a secret aircraft, officials ordered all uninvolved employees to stay inside until the test flight was over and the aircraft returned to its hangar.


I wanna discuss about this topic as i have seen a lot of documentaries and movies about this base and do these extraterritorial activities really happen or not ?
 
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Flying saucer is as real unicorns. They are just some concoctions of an useless brain.
One must sit and enjoy all these conspiracy theories...The best evidence they have a blurred video or image that can interpreted in a thousand ways.

I wanna discuss about this topic as i have seen a lot of documentaries and movies about this base and do these extraterritorial activities really happen or not ?
No they do NOT except for movies. But it is not bad once in while to believe in such things to keep our imaginations and fantasies alive....but unfortunately...we are alone in this universe.
 
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So this is where Jadoo is hiding :lol:
 
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One must sit and enjoy all these conspiracy theories...The best evidence they have a blurred video or image that can interpreted in a thousand ways.


No they do NOT except for movies. But it is not bad once in while to believe in such things to keep our imaginations and fantasies alive....but unfortunately...we are alone in this universe.

If there isn't any thing special in the base then why is it the most hidden and secure base in the world , and why do the workers travel in a private airline called JANNET in and out of the base , they can use the highways instead to travel back to home , why do the employees hide there identity they are not part of CIA or any agency , This proves that something fishy is going around .
 
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If there isn't any thing special in the base then why is it the most hidden and secure base in the world , and why do the workers travel in a private airline called JANNET in and out of the base , they can use the highways instead to travel back to home , why do the employees hide there identity they are not part of CIA or any agency , This proves that something fishy is going around .

It proves that they work in a high security military facility. Groom Lake tests some of the most clandestine USAF equipment that is still in development. To keep prying eyes, ears and mouths shut and away, they implement a host of security protocols to avoid leaks and espionage.

Programs at Groom have included the U-2

u2-pilote.jpg


Have Blue and F-117

Have_Blue_bottom_view.jpg


The F-22

1920px-F22_Area51.jpg


And programs to test and evaluate foreign systems gained through various means.

4477th_Test_and_Evaluation_Squadron_MiG-21_in_flight.jpg


...

I work for the United States Navy as a researcher. When I go to work (on days I don't work from home) I turn over my car keys, cell phone and undergo a security check on my way in and out of the facility to ensure I'm not bringing in illicit items like cameras, USBs or taps, and to ensure I don't leave with classified info either.

What goes on a Groom Lake and other classified R&D centers is normal security for such places.

...

And yes, I'm with the CIA and am posting this to throw you off our trail:D.

cialogo2.jpg


Thank you for your cooperation citizen.
 
.
If there isn't any thing special in the base then why is it the most hidden and secure base in the world , and why do the workers travel in a private airline called JANNET in and out of the base , they can use the highways instead to travel back to home , why do the employees hide there identity they are not part of CIA or any agency , This proves that something fishy is going around .
I think it is a highly secret military facility and they are doing some strange stuff there and this secrecy has lead people to speculate all sorts of stuff. But most of the stuff is either totally false or based on limited observation and fooling of senses.
 
.
It proves that they work in a high security military facility. Groom Lake tests some of the most clandestine USAF equipment that is still in development. To keep prying eyes, ears and mouths shut and away, they implement a host of security protocols to avoid leaks and espionage.

Programs at Groom have included the U-2

u2-pilote.jpg


Have Blue and F-117

Have_Blue_bottom_view.jpg


The F-22

1920px-F22_Area51.jpg


And programs to test and evaluate foreign systems gained through various means.

4477th_Test_and_Evaluation_Squadron_MiG-21_in_flight.jpg


...

I work for the United States Navy as a researcher. When I go to work (on days I don't work from home) I turn over my car keys, cell phone and undergo a security check on my way in and out of the facility to ensure I'm not bringing in illicit items like cameras, USBs or taps, and to ensure I don't leave with classified info either.

What goes on a Groom Lake and other classified R&D centers is normal security for such places.

...

And yes, I'm with the CIA and am posting this to throw you off our trail:D.

cialogo2.jpg


Thank you for your cooperation citizen.

Thanks for the info .
 
.
Let me put it this way.........

Someone once told me a long time ago,

"If you know the agency by name, they are not as secretive as you think"

When you talk about something that does not exist on paper, they will not have a name to go with it, and what you think CIA, NSA or any alphabet agency is this secretive, chances are, you are being duped to look the other way, when you are watching this alphabet guy work their magic, people without name and agency without phonetic would have work under your nose and you have no clue because you are watching the FBI, CIA, NSA.....

That is the same thing behind all magic tricks, did the magician magically disappear or because you are looking at something else you lose your concentration and the magician simply walk off in front of you without you noticing?

If you get what I meant, then............

And I did worked (past tense) with NSA before, so I too, am not trust-worthy.......You have to decide whether or not I am lying here or lying then........lol, ain't that great?
 
.
Area 51 is a tourist trap. So far it works pretty good. :lol:

Now...See if you can find Area 52.
 
. . . .

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