DUGWAY
PROVING GROUND
THE NEW GROOM LAKE?
Dugway Proving Ground is located 80 miles southwest of Salt Lake
City and covers an area of approximately 800,000 acres in the Great
Salt Lake Desert. It is by far the most secretive facility in Utah
as well as the most controversial. Many residents feel threatened
and unsure of its close location to Salt Lake City, especially because
of the type of testing that takes place there.
The primary mission of Dugway Proving Ground is to plan, conduct,
analyze, and report the results of technical tests and studies;
especially in the areas of chemical defense, biological defense,
incendiary, smoke and obscurant systems, and environmental technology
testing. Dugway also provides test expertise, services and support
for all authorized customers, including United States and foreign
governments, as well as non-governmental organizations. In addition,
Dugway is a major range and test facility for chemical and biological
defense testing and a reliance center for the U.S. Department of
Defense.
With the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the United States and
its military forces suddenly realized a need for increased military
capability in many areas, which included expanded knowledge in chemical
and biological warfare.
Dugway Proving Ground was authorized to fill the need for testing
weapons and defenses against chemical and biological agents. Over
the years, the proving ground has undergone various name changes
and periods of deactivation and reactivation.
Dugway is now part of the U.S. Army Test and Evaluation Command
(TECOM), headquartered at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. TECOM
is a major subordinate command of the U.S. Army Material Command,
headquartered at Alexandria, Virginia. At present, Dugway Proving
Ground encompasses 798,855 acres. In addition to chemical and biological
defensive testing and environment characterization and remediation
technology testing, Dugway is the Defense Department's leader in
testing battlefield smokes and obscurants. The installion currently
consists of more than 600 buildings with a total value of more than
$240 million.
UFOs at Dugway?
Lately there has been an increase in activity at the Utah facility,
both on the ground and in the airspace above Dugway. Reported last
year, was the construction of a new 15,000 feet runway which is
now known to be for the testing of NASA's next generation space
shuttles, including the X-33. Also, unusual aerial objects emitting
mysterious vapor contrails lends support to Dugway being a secret
test facility for new aircraft.
Security at the installation has also been increased quite dramatically.
Warning signs have been established along the perimeter of the base
and if someone happens to wander to close to the restricted zones,
expect to see unmarked "black" helicopters challenge your presence
in the area.
It has also been revealed that an unusual facility within Dugway
may house experimental craft, possibly of alien origin. During the
1950s and 1970s, the facility was constantly under armed guard.
During this time period, convoy trucks had been seen entering the
hangar with their cargo covered by tarpaulins. One truck was seen
which was carrying something oval or circular in shape and being
about 30 feet wide. The truck was accompanied by five men. Could
this have been a flying disc-shaped craft? Three concentric fences
were later built around the hangar.
Rumors persist as to what is housed in the hangar, a more common
one being that it is a storage facility for a SLR-1 portable nuclear
reactor. However, there is unusual evidence which may suggest that
the flying disc was of a very secretive nature. The five men who
were seen with the truck all happened to mysteriously die within
a year of delivering the cargo to Dugway. Two of them died in a
single plane crash from Chicago to Denver. The third died in an
auto wreck when his car fell off a cliff in Northern California,
presumably because of brake failure. The fourth committed suicide
by hanging himself with a necktie, for no apparent reason. The fifth
man simply was reported missing one day after leaving home for work.
Of course, the above story could simply be disinformation, to
distract people from a different project at Dugway Proving Ground.
But whatever the truth, the base is alive with strange and unusual
activity.
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