Nellis Air Force Base Complex


The Nellis Air Force Base Complex is the southern Nevada military region of federal facilities and lands, e.g., currently and formerly used for military and associated testing and training such as Atomic Energy Commission atmospheric nuclear detonations of the Cold War. The largest land area of the complex is the Nevada Test and Training Range, and numerous Formerly Used Defense Sites remain federal lands of the complex. Most of the facilities are controlled by the United States Air Force and/or the Bureau of Land Management, and many of the controlling units are based at Creech and Nellis Air Force Bases. Initiated by a 1939 military reconnaissance for a bombing range, federal acquisition began in 1940, and McCarren Field became the World War II training area's 1st of 3 Nevada World War II Army Airfields and 10 auxiliary fields. The area's first military unit was initially headquartered in the Las Vegas Federal Building while the WWII Las Vegas Army Airfield buildings were constructed.

Geography

The complex is primarily within the Great Basin physiographic section, and the White River portion east of the Great Basin Divide is in the Colorado River Watershed. Ecology is primarily Tonopah Basin surrounding elevated areas and 6 Tonopah Playas in Antelope Lake's valley, Cactus Flat, Groom Lake Valley, southern Railroad Valley, Sand Springs Valley, and the northwest NTTR corner. The southern part of the complex in the Mojave Desert ecoregion is mostly Creosote Bush-Dominated Basins and Arid Footslopes The complex includes 2 Salt Deserts—in the Coal Valley which has 3 sites of the "ADA activity area" and in Dry Lake Valley. The highest ecoregion is in the Tonopah Bombing Range which includes a Central Nevada Bald Mountains ecoregion in the Kawich Range—the southern Bald Mountains are within the NTTR between the TTR & Wildhorse Management Area. The Logistic Supply Area of the ADA activity area is near the only Wetland ecoregion of the Tonopah Basin—in the Pahrangat Valley near both the Mojave ecotone and the northeast corner of the DNWR.
Traversing the complex is the mid-1800s Utah & New Mexico Territories' dividing line, and the area was used for the 1900–1921 silver rush The region of mining claims was grouped into numbered geographic areas which are used for current names, e.g., "Area 3 Compound" and "Groom Lake Field". The 1941-9 demarcation between the Tonopah & Las Vegas Bombing and Gunnery Ranges is generally along the serpentine Creosote Bush ecotone between the Central Basin and Range ecoregion and "Mojavian flora".

Airspace

The Nellis managed airspace associated with the complex is more than, is the responsibility of the "US Air Force Virtual, A3", and "is composed of the Desert MOA, with overlying Air Traffic Control Assigned Airspace, Reveille North and South MOA and ATCAA, Restricted Areas":
The former Oil Burner/Olive Branch route for Strategic Air Command low-level bomber flights scored by the Hawthorne Bomb Plot extended from a "point west of Elko, Nevada, running southwest to Nuna, Nevada" at flight level "FL130-140"

Wildlife areas

The Nevada Division of Wildlife's Key Pittman Wildlife Management Area has a NOAA weather station, and Wilderness Areas include the "Worthington Mountains, Weepah Springs, Big Rocks, Ash Springs Wildlife Area". Lands for federal protection of natural resources include:
Military operations "when a tortoise is found in harms way" are suspended until it has been removed by an authorized biologist, nesting surveys are conducted prior to military exercises for species protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, and the BLM & USFS provide protections under the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act.
Area Location Facilities/sitesAgencyYearsSize
Nevada Test and Training Range—shares ~ of the Southern Range with the DNWRNorthern Range:
Southern Range: southern Tikaboo Valley, Dogbone Dry Lake in Range 62,
Northern: Tolich Peak ECR, Tonopah ECR
Southern: Point Bravo ECR, Dogbone Lake G&BR, Groom Lake Field in Area 51
USAF1942–present
Nevada National Security Site
•includes Camp Desert Rock FUDS of J09NV0276
Frenchman Flat, Jackass Flats, Yucca Flat, Rainer & Pahute Mesas,10 heliports, 2 "wild horse units... Unit 252 Unit 253", Pahute Mesa Airstrip, Desert Rock Airport, "Yucca Lake UAV testing facility", "Yucca Mountain Underground Facility", :File:NTS - Big Explosives Experimental Facility.jpg|Big Explosives Experimental Facility, :File:Device Assembly Facility.jpg|Criticality Experiments Facility, former Base Camp MercuryDOE1951–present~
Desert National Wildlife Refuge land east of the NTTRFUDS: Former NAFR Areas B-G, e.g., Area F of USFWS1936–present
Tonopah Bombing Range * Stone Cabin, Hot Creek, Railroad, Tikaboo, and Sand Springs valleys USFWS National Wildlife Refuge of ~ at the Kawich Range, Rachel community, Area 51 viewing areas BLM1942–19xx
~
Tonopah Rifle Range

"Sand -Tikaboo Valleys"

1941-tbd
Area A north and northeast of NTTRformer ranges 46-56 "returned to public domain" by 1941 EO9019 and 1957 EO10355BLM~
Tonopah Test Range"Cactus and Gold Flats, Kawich Valley, Goldfield Hills, and the Stonewall Mountains", Cactus Flat, Antelope Lake ValleyTonopah Test Range Airport, Operations Control Center, Area 10 airfield/strip, Mellan Airstrip,DOE1957–present~
Humboldt National Forest"Total Acreage" includes "217,086" acres not federally-owned
Wildhorse Management Areabordered on 3 sides by the NTTR Northern Range and on the north, Tonopah Bombing Range BLM
Nellis Air Force BaseLas Vegas Valley adjacent to North Las VegasArea I: Airport, "Nellis Control", Suter Hall
Area II: former Lake Mead Base
Area III: Armory, family housing
USAF1941-6, 1947–present
Nellis Small Arms Range ComplexLas Vegas Valley & Mojave Arid Footslopes of Sheep Mountain, "north of the main base of Nellis AFB" and adjacent to "World War II Gunnery Range " on west and northactive area:
inactive :
USAF
tbd
1941–present
1941-65
Tonopah Air Force Base BLM1942–195x
Creech Air Force Baseadjacent to Indian Springs, Nevada and FUDS J09NV0399 Joint Unmanned Aerial Systems Center of Excellence
UAV-Logistic and Training Facility
USAF1942-5,
Patriot "Radar/Communications activity area", part of eastern DNWRCoal V, Delamar V, Dry Lake V, Pahranagat V, Sand Springs V, Six Mile Flat,Logistics Support Area at Alamo Airfield & 13 sites each
BLM2008–present+
Las Vegas Air Force Station Lathrop Wells radar site
Red Mountain VORTAC site
FAA radar facility
Former GATR & Soviet radar site

west of Indian Springs
near Boulder City, Nevada
in Esmeralda Co.
"near the former" TAFS
Former Phoenix ADS radar site
Former Phoenix ADS radar site
Former Phoenix ADS radar site
2 radar platforms at former Reno ADS site
Former Reno ADS site
FAA
FAA
USAF
1956-69
1956-70
Regional Training Complex ~15 miles south of Indian Springs on US9512 small arms ranges, MOUT village, bare base tent city, maneuver area-
Tonopah VORTAC near Nye County's Tonopah Airport FAA
Hawthorne Bomb PlotBabbitt, Nevada former ":Category:United States automatic tracking radar stations|USAF Radar Station" for RBSUSAF
US Navy
1962–1985
1993
Delamar Dry Lake Test Annex Delamar Valley
Sunrise Mountain Machine Gun Range
"North Las Vegas Station" near Nellis AFB
"Key Pittman WMA station"
average precipcipitation/year
"
Climatology monitoring sites NOAA1951–present
1964–present

History

The original 1940 area named Tonopah Bombing Range was split during WWII and 1 of the 2 subdivisions was named Tonopah Bombing and Gunnery Range in 1947. In 1999 a different area was named a FUDS with the original name--"Tonopah Bombing Range" —and the different FUDS J09NV1112 was given a new name --"Tonopah Army Airfield Practice Bombing Ranges"—by 1999.