Following the launch of Corona satellites in the 1960s, the US National Foreign Intelligence Program determined that there was a need for calibration under the Controlled Range Network. Working with the Arizona Real Estate Office, the US Army Map Service was directed to lease land for office space in Casa Grande, Arizona. Land was leased in parcels, with access to a road. Large concrete Maltese crosses in the ground, each in width, were in place by 1967. The crosses were arranged in a grid. Each of the targets has a manhole on the west arm of the cross, the manhole has a cement cover and steel reinforcement bars. According to Gary Morgan, member of the Cold War Museum in Warrenton, Virginia, the six pieces of rebar, which protrude at an equal distance from each other, may have been used to hold a laser designator to provide the Corona satellites a more accurate fix on each target. The majority of the targets were abandoned when the program ended in 1972. By the late-1970s, the US Army Map Service considered the targets to be obsolete for their use due the land on which they were situated had subsided because of groundwater extraction. Land lessees were then given the option of having the targets removed and dumped near Eloy, Arizona., at least 143 targets remain in place, unless they have been removed because the location has been redeveloped.
Images
The Corona Satellite Calibration Targets pictured in the image gallery are two of the few remaining ones in the Sonoran Desert. The first one is located on the southeast corner of South Montgomery and West Cornman Roads. The second one is located on the northeast corner of West Cornman Road and Carmel Boulevard.
Links
- Google map of the locations of all targets, identified as Present, Damaged, or Missing.
— Google map of 145 remaining markers which formed a grid, used from 1959 to 1972 to calibrate the Corona spy satellite cameras, by Andrei Conovaloff, 2018.
, Arizona Republic, July 2, 2016. — "Corona spy satellite timeline"; "How Casa Grande crosses calibrated spy-satellite camera"; "How Casa Grande crosses helped fight the Cold War".
, National Public Radio, October 11, 2016. - "Decades-Old Mystery Put To Rest: Why Are There X's In The Desert?"