Why The VAST MAJORITY Of Nevada Is Owned By The Federal Government

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  • Опубліковано 8 лют 2025
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    QUICK CORRECTION: As many have pointed out, the Forest Service is NOT under the U.S. Department of the Interior, but rather the U.S. Department of Agriculture. My whoops! Sometimes even things you think you know for sure, should be double checked. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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    Nevada is a truly unique state within the United States. Its geography is predominantly dry and arid and this has left it mostly unsettled throughout history. As such, the federal government of the United States has ended up owning the vast majority of it, rather than the state itself. Here's why the U.S. federal government owns so much of Nevada, and some of the more unique ways it uses that land.
    Stock footage and royalty-free music is acquired from www.storyblocks.com and www.artlist.io.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 891

  • @GeographyByGeoff
    @GeographyByGeoff  Рік тому +32

    Go to ground.news/geobygeoff to stay fully informed on breaking news, compare coverage and avoid media bias. Try it out or subscribe through my link for 30% off unlimited access before August 24 and get it for as little as $5 a month.

    • @ryanjacob8786
      @ryanjacob8786 Рік тому +2

      You beautiful eyes

    • @jimlewis1992
      @jimlewis1992 Рік тому +3

      8:05 to skip right to the answer

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 Рік тому

      Nevada has water enough to be a single large forest. With fire resist species, just needing the waterboxx help on the first years. Zone by zone, atracting more rain because of the new moisture created by the new trees pumping up gound water by the tree roots, same tree roots that open the soil to allow wazter to feed the groundsheets instead of disapearing by evaporation.
      If the chinese are smart enough to be able to reverse the gobi desert, why the americans are not smart enough to reverse the nevada desert? "oh! dont touch on nature natural process!" That excessive puritism are the reason americans dont want to reverse the desert. "Or grazing and logging, or desert" culture.
      The advance of the deserts in USA are not made by climate change... Are made by logging and grazzing suicidle culture. Plant trees, with some extra help, and you stop the advance of the desert, if you dont cut the trees, and stop all the bush fires. Logging and grazzing are not natural as well. Follow the scientists of the rest of the world to learn how they do it.

    • @robw7205
      @robw7205 Рік тому +2

      The fact that visible stories in the sponsor's ad are about UFOs really makes me question what news gets covered.

    • @kurtru5selcrowe607
      @kurtru5selcrowe607 Рік тому +1

      @@jimlewis1992bless you. I just wanted to know why the Federal government owned so much land in Nevada. Instead a got a Wikipedia article regurgitated at me for 10 minutes…

  • @nazukum2
    @nazukum2 Рік тому +241

    As someone who was born and raised in Nevada, this video was both informational and inciteful. So much of my youth was spent wandering the deserts, not knowing the cultural or geopolitical aspects. It is truly a state where you lose yourself to find yourself

  • @rogaineablar5608
    @rogaineablar5608 Рік тому +42

    I'm surprised you didn't mention the reason Nevada is so dry, the rain shadow from the Sierra Nevada.

  • @randallthomas5207
    @randallthomas5207 Рік тому +79

    When Nevada became a State, the New State was given 1/18th of the land. Roughly 6% of the land. Most of Nevada is dry and desolate. You must realize that Nevada was the last State in the lower 48, where you could homestead. No one was willing to homestead it, even when the requirements were loosened to eliminate growing crops, or even fencing. All you had to do was build a residence, and live on the property for five years. There were Damned few takers.

    • @johannae2450
      @johannae2450 Рік тому

      by Trespass and Violence and you wonder why your amerikkkan children shoot up their schools 😂

    • @felixwankel3989
      @felixwankel3989 Рік тому +3

      Is it still possible to homestead there?

    • @randallthomas5207
      @randallthomas5207 Рік тому +5

      @@felixwankel3989 No, they ended it in the mid seventies. I moved to Boulder City in 1974, and had been there about a year when there was an article in the Newspaper, saying it had ended. As the affront edge of the Boomers retired, and started moving from California to Vegas, the BLM suddenly found that people were bidding if they auctioned off parcels in the Vegas Valley.

    • @darealest2exist260
      @darealest2exist260 Рік тому +2

      Arizona was the last in the lower 48

    • @jamesloghry8083
      @jamesloghry8083 Рік тому +4

      Homesteaded there & gov ignored

  • @terreniskelley7191
    @terreniskelley7191 Рік тому +81

    Pretty good video. I grew up in a tiny town named Hawthorne, Nevada. We have a military depot there. Miles and miles of bunkers storing military ammunition. Also, a very big yet shrinking Walker Lake. Growing up in the Great Basin Desert is a unique experience. Fun fact: Most of Boundary Peak is in California only the summit is in Nevada, Wheeler Peak is the tallest mountain that's completely in Nevada.

    • @nodebt6188
      @nodebt6188 Рік тому +8

      Hawthorne has the smallest McDonald's I have ever seen.

    • @superpumpkin1065
      @superpumpkin1065 Рік тому +1

      I've been to that military town many times

    • @terreniskelley7191
      @terreniskelley7191 Рік тому

      @nodebt6188 LOL, true. In 1994, we were so happy to get one.

    • @InterstateKyle
      @InterstateKyle Рік тому

      I literally just did a video of Walker Lake and your town of Hawthorne on my channel. Feel free to check it out if you want.

    • @johannae2450
      @johannae2450 Рік тому

      do you know Joe's Tavern & El Capitan over there my niece lives there & works at the Depot. I'm in Mason Valley aka Wovoka's water camp in a free country. 🐎🦌🦅

  • @mset510
    @mset510 Рік тому +10

    Paiute has a silent "e" at the end.
    Lake Mead is ALSO managed by the National Park Service. It is our nation's 1st National Recreation Area

  • @jwstocker1979
    @jwstocker1979 Рік тому +41

    Great Video Geoff, one correction - The Nevada test site is controlled by the Department of Energy rather than Defense. Some DOD work is done there but it is mostly associated with nuclear stuff.

    • @MrOshirinoana
      @MrOshirinoana Рік тому +3

      They also did nuclear testing up until the early 90's; they didn't stop mid century.

  • @LDR1100RS
    @LDR1100RS Рік тому +6

    I admirably refer to Nevada as "The Big Empty", though it is anything but. Thanks, Geoff. Nevada is one of my favorite places. Lots of room to wander.

  • @patriley9449
    @patriley9449 Рік тому +42

    As a proud Nevadan, I am glad that much of our land is owned by the BLM. Most of these lands are accessible to the public for free camping, hiking and use of off-road vehicles. I recently went on a trip from western Nevada to Wisconsin and back covering 14 states. When I came back home, I was speaking to a friend who lives in California, and he asked which state was my favorite. Without hesitation I named my home state of Nevada. In northern Nevada we have 4 seasons with some snow in the winter and a few hot days during the summer, but most days are sunny and moderate. Our main problem in the state is an infestation of Californians migrating here and bringing their California ways with them. If you want things done like they were done in California, then move back or stay there in the first place. If you want to assimilate, welcome to Nevada.

    • @lauratweed4081
      @lauratweed4081 Рік тому +5

      Out of curiosity can you elaborate on California ways? Can you give examples

    • @Mk101T
      @Mk101T Рік тому

      LOL as if telling people they can't come to Nevada with their California ways is going to deter them from doing just that ?!? We live in an age of showing people they are wrong just to see the look on their face . What rock have you been living under ?
      In which you would have been better off just keeping your pie hole shut about it :O
      Resistance is futile ... YOU WILL BE ASSIMILATED !!!
      Albeit go ahead and keep getting down on your knees to draw those red lines .
      But next time I step across it , I would like to get a shoe shine ;)

    • @pointreyes4272
      @pointreyes4272 Рік тому +4

      I suppose you want more government regulations telling people where they can and cannot move to. Where does it end!

    • @clarabellington
      @clarabellington Рік тому

      Yup! Moved to San Diego for work from Nevada but am moving back soon. Miss it too much

    • @pointreyes4272
      @pointreyes4272 Рік тому

      @@clarabellington That's great news. Thank you for moving out....greatly appreciated. Oh, BTW, please take a dozen or two of your friends with you.

  • @zaiologyy
    @zaiologyy Рік тому +14

    Here in Vegas we always joke that the state tree is those orange road cones lol. We all go out and party on the dry lake beds, federal land is so awesome because you can just do what you want bc no one owns it.! 🥳 Thx for such an insightful & concise summary, much appreciated+

  • @caseclosed9342
    @caseclosed9342 Рік тому +10

    I used to live in Nevada and yeah the Bureau of Land Management is like a second state government there…

  • @FlyingTigress
    @FlyingTigress Рік тому +8

    Fun fact: The only reason that the Federal Government doesn't have control over more of Alaska is that the agreement was made that the nascent State government could pick sufficient land area to place under control for supporting the state's economy. A number of acres was picked by the State's representatives. However, there was no firm information was available as to the number of acres in the defined state boundaries. So, it turned out that when picking a number, they hoped that the requested area for state control wasn't greater than the actual number of acres. Turns out, there was WAY more land area in the state than was requested.

  • @abdallaha92
    @abdallaha92 Рік тому +50

    9:39 The Forest Service is actually part of the US Department of Agriculture or USDA. Apparently the DOI used to be quite corrupt, so Theodore Roosevelt moved them to USDA. There have been many pushes to include the Forest Service in the DOI, since it follows a similar role with other agencies

    • @randallthomas5207
      @randallthomas5207 Рік тому +6

      The Forest Service doesn’t have much in common with the Bovine Love Machine.

    • @chadwells7562
      @chadwells7562 Рік тому +2

      @@randallthomas5207I didn’t know they had that reputation, that’s a hilarious interpretation of the acronym

    • @randallthomas5207
      @randallthomas5207 Рік тому

      @@chadwells7562 both Agencies, have a mission of capitalizing on the resources they manage, to the betterment of the United States. The major thing BLM does, is grazing leases. Which they lease at roughly one third, of the market value for similar private lands, and spend huge amounts of money improving the grazing allotments, such as fencing, developing water systems, etc.

    • @frankmorris4790
      @frankmorris4790 Рік тому

      ROTFLMBidenO! Nothing's changed much, the Forest Circus is still a money grubbing, land grabbing parasites of D.C.

  • @cacogenicist
    @cacogenicist Рік тому +10

    There were definitely people in Nevada earlier than 12k years ago. Not far across the border, in Oregon, there's a site called Rimrock Draw with human activity that has an uncontroversial date of a bit over 18,000 years.

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 Рік тому +35

    Geoff, a correction: the US Forest Service is NOT in the Department of Interior. It is in the Department of Agriculture.
    There's another important fact you never explained. The federal government wanted people to come settle Nevada, so they offered to give nearly all of the land in the state to anybody who came to live on it. Like the rest of the west, they used the Homestead Act to try and give the land away. The feds still own so much of the land simply because nobody would come and take it: it's just not land that can grow enough food to feed settlers, so the settlers never came, even when they could get the land for free.
    What we now call "BLM land" basically consists of the rest of the land in the arid west that settlers wouldn't take when the government offered to give it to them.

    • @lourias
      @lourias Рік тому +6

      This guy did not explain why the US government still owns the land. Thank you for explaining that.

    • @johndoe-lr9if
      @johndoe-lr9if Рік тому +4

      First thing I thought about... all the stolen land

    • @stananderson4524
      @stananderson4524 9 місяців тому

      People don't realize, most of these big western states have a lot land that is not suitable for growing crops, or even grazing.

  • @glenstephenson6787
    @glenstephenson6787 Рік тому +14

    Thank you Geoff for another great informative video!

  • @mattgoettl6796
    @mattgoettl6796 Рік тому +17

    I love this channel! Ever since I discovered it I'm a "watch the day it's uploaded" kinda guy with your videos. You have interesting topics, great visualizations, and a voice that's nice to listen to. I'm glad you're making content on UA-cam! Keep up the great work and I'll keep watching!

  • @dogpatch75
    @dogpatch75 Рік тому +13

    An informative video. Clarification: US Forest Service is under Agriculture not Interior. It is easy to mix up who does what in government agencies and many folks don't know the difference between agencies and their purposes! Its not uncommon to hear folks confuse state parks with national parks, national parks with national forests, etc.

  • @johnchedsey1306
    @johnchedsey1306 Рік тому +56

    Over the years I've driven almost every major highway that crosses Nevada. As such, I instantly knew why the land is owned by the federal government. There just isn't much out there, which is precisely the beauty of it. I will also say for anyone who wants to explore the non-Reno/Vegas parts of the state, fill your gas tank whenever you have a chance and if you're vegan, you're going to miss out on some great steak and rib places.
    You can also stay at the Clown Motel in Tonopah.

    • @graham974
      @graham974 Рік тому +5

      That clown motel looks creepy as hell! 🤡

    • @johnchedsey1306
      @johnchedsey1306 Рік тому +2

      @@graham974 Yeah, I haven't got the nerve to actually stay there. The Comfort Inn just up the road seemed like a much more peaceful choice.

    • @newdefsys
      @newdefsys Рік тому +3

      The only thing creepier than a clown is a mime.

    • @MrTrapaholic33
      @MrTrapaholic33 Рік тому +2

      I’m sorry but that just goes to show that ur tastes is bad. There’s literally no good restaurants in Nv outside of vegas. And I wouldn’t even say the food is any good there.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 Рік тому +1

      Nevada has water enough to be a single large forest. With fire resist species, just needing the waterboxx help on the first years. Zone by zone, atracting more rain because of the new moisture created by the new trees pumping up gound water by the tree roots, same tree roots that open the soil to allow wazter to feed the groundsheets instead of disapearing by evaporation.
      If the chinese are smart enough to be able to reverse the gobi desert, why the americans are not smart enough to reverse the nevada desert? "oh! dont touch on nature natural process!" That excessive puritism are the reason americans dont want to reverse the desert. "Or grazing and logging, or desert" culture.
      The advance of the deserts in USA are not made by climate change... Are made by logging and grazzing suicidle culture. Plant trees, with some extra help, and you stop the advance of the desert, if you dont cut the trees, and stop all the bush fires. Logging and grazzing are not natural as well. Follow the scientists of the rest of the world to learn how they do it.

  • @jkh2180
    @jkh2180 Рік тому +4

    Joshua Trees can be found in the Great Basin Desert too. Even on the outskirts of it.

  • @diegomontoya8889
    @diegomontoya8889 Рік тому +1

    Due to my extensive travels between Washington State and Arizona, I have traversed almost every part of Nevada. I still enjoy the eastern Nevada highway 93 and the high desert city of Ely (pronounced EEE-lee) and one time I decided to go straight north of Tonipah, to see the Toiyabe Mountain Range, before getting to America's loneliest highway, US 50, and ultimately heading north to Winnemucca, and thento Southeast Oregon and the Steen Mountains. My last bucket list area is the Ruby Mountains and Elko. I have heard Elko is a really cool place, maybe even a niceplace to retire.

  • @ioio5993
    @ioio5993 Рік тому +11

    Arizona is not too far behind with about 85% of the state owned by federal and state along with native american reservations.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Рік тому +1

      It's even worse yet with the most recent federal land grab under the guide of making a new national monument.

  • @blech71
    @blech71 Рік тому +1

    The geology of Nevada is what got me into it. There’s so much to talk about and most interesting is how all the grabens that make up Nv have a tie into the Yellowstone hotspot moreover the thinness of the crust that makes up Nv is also interesting on how Ca & Nv were squashed together and as the plates to the west subducted under spread both out to how wide they are today. Naturally thats just a small snapshot in geologic time and there’s so much more that happened and is going on now.

  • @henlohenlo689
    @henlohenlo689 Рік тому +9

    Vegas and reno are the 2 main developed areas because both near big bodies of water and still relatively close to califormias farms. Other than that trees water and animals make for more ideal situation to inhabit humans to coexist. So most of nevada is not ideal condition to develop it for humans.

  • @FreedomIsntFree2023
    @FreedomIsntFree2023 Рік тому +10

    Thank you for saying NEVADA the correct way!! We appreciate it!

  • @RWM56
    @RWM56 Рік тому +2

    I live in Elko, Nevada for 4 years as a well driller. We did wells for gold mine and for oil rig the one thing they don’t mention the oil, houses too

  • @theinfant
    @theinfant Рік тому +33

    Awesome video! On the topic of empty land, I'd love to see a video on the Canadian territories. Think it would be super cool!

    • @gmw3083
      @gmw3083 Рік тому

      They burned down. End of story?

    • @ya8158
      @ya8158 Рік тому +2

      @@gmw3083 that’s like a tiny little fraction of Canada. Canadas humongous and yet it’s majority populated right near the United States at its southern border mostly in the south east of Canada with another bit of population in the south west. The rest of Canada is almost entirely empty meaning that it’s probably owned by the government hence the question what goes on there in a land larger than the US with like 90% empty land

  • @venpeddapalli7189
    @venpeddapalli7189 8 місяців тому

    Reminds me of a trip we took way back in 2013 on the Christmas eve from Twin Falls, Idaho to Las Vegas, Nevada in an all night drive on Route 93 while the temperatures plummeted to negative(minus) 43 degrees. There were zero people and vehicles on the road(due to Holiday or otherwise) and I was so scared we were going to freeze to death in the middle of nowhere. My Jeep GC was the MVP for the night.

  • @jahrasta4907
    @jahrasta4907 Рік тому +2

    New to this channel but subscribed already. Good stuff, well presented.

  • @jonkaminsky8382
    @jonkaminsky8382 Рік тому +11

    Nevada was one of the last states I had left to explore after traveling around the country for the past 20 years. It didn’t take long for me to realize that it’s one of the most beautiful places on Earth.

    • @JeffreyBezosi
      @JeffreyBezosi Рік тому

      Traveling the country is not “earth”

  • @fredharvey2720
    @fredharvey2720 Рік тому

    Waiting to get my official notification of getting on the list to tour the Nevada Test Site. YEAH BABY

  • @maisiestar3696
    @maisiestar3696 Рік тому +4

    Great video Geoff! Boundary Peak is not in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, it is instead in the White Mountains

  • @Jake-yx7ct
    @Jake-yx7ct Рік тому +10

    Very informative about state vs Fed land ownership. I have plans to drive HiWay 50 the Loneliest Road in America before end of this year.

    • @jag92949
      @jag92949 Рік тому +4

      It’s completely empty. Gas stations are 100 miles apart.

    • @johnchedsey1306
      @johnchedsey1306 Рік тому

      It's a unique drive! I've done it about 3 times now. Just be sure to pay attention to your gas gauge and be aware in the winter, those mountain passes can get a little treacherous in a snow storm. Ely has some good restaurants, incidentally.

  • @workaholic5318
    @workaholic5318 Рік тому +6

    Why does the federal government own large swaths of Nevada? Because they cannot seem to pry their grubby paws off the levers of control. The state of Nevada and nevadans can easily administer these lands.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist Рік тому

      You hate democratic government of, by, and for ALL the people, not just you.

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Рік тому +1

      they own it because when it became the property of the United States, there was no "State of Nevada". It was a territory. Learn a little American history before posting.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist Рік тому +1

      @@danstrayer111That is true of most states. Cite links instead of expecting people to blindly believe you.

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Рік тому

      @@theontologist the question was "Why does the federal government own these lands".
      The answer to that is NOT "because they can't take their grubby hands off of control'.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist Рік тому +1

      @@danstrayer111 You are projecting again. Ask yourself why the whole world around you looks grubby. It's in the eye of the beholder.

  • @williamweigt7632
    @williamweigt7632 Рік тому +4

    Answer begins 8:06

  • @SharksSJ408
    @SharksSJ408 Рік тому +2

    Same reason a lot of southern AZ is owned by the Feds. Plenty of open land to use as military proving grounds. If you scroll through the area on Google maps you’ll see tons of dirt roads leading out to mock airfields and buildings that the Air Force uses for target practice.

  • @wingingittracy8508
    @wingingittracy8508 Рік тому +2

    by the us constitution the federal government may not own more than 10 squaremiles per state , Art I, Sect. 8, Clause 17 .

  • @jesse_-
    @jesse_- Рік тому +4

    How can the government own land? That would make it the peoples land, making it public land. When someone owns land, it’s considered private. Do you mean that the federal government controls that land?

  • @Cwarnershapes72
    @Cwarnershapes72 Рік тому +1

    51 years I’ve seen lots along the TRI state & into Baja ‘ northern Mexico 🇲🇽 I have off roaded and seen everything except lake Powell

  • @jssomewhere6740
    @jssomewhere6740 Рік тому +11

    Nevada is the most mountainous state in the lower US.
    Nevasa is a truly amazing place. It produces more gold than all but 4 or 5 countries in the world. It also has large copper and silver mines. Lithum is another that is in Nevada due to a vast majority of the State having once been covered by a huge fresh water lake. Pyramid Lake contains a fish species that are found in only one other place on the planet. They also take 20+ pound cutthroat trout out of that lake. Tahoe is in Nevada and California and is the 6th largest natural lake in the country behind the great lakes. Tahoe is also very deep at over 1600 feet in places. The Truckee river is one of the few rivers that never makes it to the ocean. It flows out of Tahoe and into Pyramid. Pyramid lake has no outlet so it is an alkaline lake it's considered fresh water but it tastes bad. With all the mining in Nevada there are more man made moutains in Nevada than anywhere else also. They mine an area and when they have sifted all the value out of the soil they build a new mountain out of it. There are small towns in Nevada that have never been connected to the power grid so the only electricity available is produced by the residents themselves. They have old style windmills that pumo water to towers that provide water to a group of homes or a ranch. Nevada is a very interesting place my family has lived in the state for more than 5 generations, so they were here before it was a state. We have been in the Truckee Meadows for 3 generations now. Most of the family has no intention of going anywhere any time soon.
    There are many more wonders in Nevada. Rhe difference between Nevada and most other places is you need to look a bit harder to see past the desert. Also be sure to bring along more than just a little water.😆😅🤣

    • @cassiespencer6134
      @cassiespencer6134 Рік тому

      "you need to look a bit harder to see past the desert" That's the truth! Because if not you won't last long. I've climbed all of the highest MTMs in the U.S. including Boundary Peak in NV (during the summer no less) which was not a good idea at the time, given the temp, since I had been in AK the previous seven months, climbing high altitude, glaciated Mts.

  • @LiizChiita
    @LiizChiita Рік тому +2

    thank you for these videos!!!!

  • @erents1
    @erents1 Рік тому +1

    Surprising how many people squat on Federal Land in Nevada. I lived on the Nevada State line for 40 years and I think I learned more about it here in this ten minutes.

  • @pkrangersf3072
    @pkrangersf3072 Рік тому +21

    The US Forest Service is not under the Department of the Interior. It is under the Department of Agriculture. You also forgot the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, who is the third land agency under the Department of the Interior and manages the National Wildlife Refuges in the state.

    • @jeffhildreth9244
      @jeffhildreth9244 Рік тому

      No fair posting facts.. don't want to contest the ill informed charlatan presenter.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 Рік тому

      Nevada has water enough to be a single large forest. With fire resist species, just needing the waterboxx help on the first years. Zone by zone, atracting more rain because of the new moisture created by the new trees pumping up gound water by the tree roots, same tree roots that open the soil to allow wazter to feed the groundsheets instead of disapearing by evaporation.
      If the chinese are smart enough to be able to reverse the gobi desert, why the americans are not smart enough to reverse the nevada desert? "oh! dont touch on nature natural process!" That excessive puritism are the reason americans dont want to reverse the desert. "Or grazing and logging, or desert" culture.
      The advance of the deserts in USA are not made by climate change... Are made by logging and grazzing suicidle culture. Plant trees, with some extra help, and you stop the advance of the desert, if you dont cut the trees, and stop all the bush fires. Logging and grazzing are not natural as well. Follow the scientists of the rest of the world to learn how they do it.

  • @led_farmer
    @led_farmer Рік тому +1

    On behalf of all the west coast.. thank you for pronouncing NevAda correctly!

  • @bpark222
    @bpark222 Рік тому +5

    That's interesting. I would have though that, despite its size, a higher percentage of alaska would be federally owned considering how it wad obtained, its landscape and weather, and abundant natural resources, though the general lack of exploitable land in nevada does lend itself to being federally managed for other purposes as you explained.

  • @ctguitarguy8510
    @ctguitarguy8510 Рік тому +2

    That's where a lot of military bases are, including area 51 and others. They don't want regulars living their much outside of vegas anyway.

  • @TheUrbanOrganism
    @TheUrbanOrganism Рік тому +12

    Such an excellent channel Geoff. Well done!

    • @jeffhildreth9244
      @jeffhildreth9244 Рік тому +2

      You swallowed the kool aid.. he is at best ill informed. I seriously doubt he has ever set foot in the state.

    • @TheUrbanOrganism
      @TheUrbanOrganism Рік тому

      @@jeffhildreth9244 present the content then. Debate on content. Why you gotta be so destructive/negative? As if that's in short supply...
      Geoff puts his best foot forward to create interesting content for niche topics. Geography ain't exactly mainstream, right? So, rather than tear him down (the easy job), present your opposing view. That's how debate works.

  • @edgarsnake2857
    @edgarsnake2857 Рік тому +2

    News to me. Great video. Thanks.

  • @Wcamp172
    @Wcamp172 Рік тому +2

    Could you imagine having videos like this during school when you had to write a report on Nevada or any of his other videos.

  • @du24pont70
    @du24pont70 Рік тому +2

    It's written in the Constitution, that the government is to own only 5 square miles per state and 10 square miles in D.C. So why do they own 86% of Nevada???

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Рік тому

      No, it is not in the Constitution. Read it again

  • @brentwilbur
    @brentwilbur Рік тому +3

    You didn't really discuss _why_ it is owned, only _that_ it is owned.

  • @MrOshirinoana
    @MrOshirinoana Рік тому +3

    Area 51 is only called Area 51 because the DOE has the land divided into grid points on their map for the entire Test Site. Groom Lake happens to be in Area 51 so that's how the name got stuck. The research facility is not called Area 51.

  • @EdandEdGoFishingWithoutEd
    @EdandEdGoFishingWithoutEd Рік тому +2

    Correction: Boundary Peak is not in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. It is in the White Mountains. You also need to find out how to pronounce Paiute.

  • @sallysorrentino4013
    @sallysorrentino4013 Рік тому +2

    I was so excited to find ur channel & binge watch ur geography videos until I quickly realized MY BRAIN CANT KEEP UP WITH HOW FAST U TALK 😳😔

    • @Mike-ge7pe
      @Mike-ge7pe Рік тому +2

      You can reduce the video’s speed in the settings menu. Not much loss of quality at 75% playback speed

  • @edithbrown2134
    @edithbrown2134 Рік тому

    Great Job..
    Feel like I was there Learned so much.
    Thanks..

  • @rogerpenske2411
    @rogerpenske2411 Рік тому +1

    My understanding is that area 51 and Creech air force base are both under the authority of Nellis Air Force Base

  • @Historyhitstime
    @Historyhitstime 9 місяців тому +2

    so if we own the government as the ppl, then the land belongs to us.
    The government shouldn't be allowed to own anything.
    That is not the purpose of government.
    To be governed means to be controlled.
    Remember that.

    • @RealJeep
      @RealJeep 7 місяців тому

      The land does belong to us Einstein, government agencies just manage those lands.

  • @pkrangersf3072
    @pkrangersf3072 Рік тому +6

    Boundary Peak is not apart of the Sierra Nevada. It is a part of the White Mountains.

    • @jeffhildreth9244
      @jeffhildreth9244 Рік тому +1

      Consider the source, Robot Man who is clueless about the state.

    • @rodprops
      @rodprops Рік тому

      LoL

  • @Havilah_Springs
    @Havilah_Springs Рік тому

    Just a point of interest: Nevada's moto is "Battle Born," and the reason it became a state was it is rich in silver and the Union did not want the silver and it's riches to fall into the hands of the South. Being a former member of the USAF and stationed at Nellis AFB, NV, I can tell you that the military owns a lot more of the state than has been revealed.

  • @CandycaneBeyond
    @CandycaneBeyond Рік тому

    Its also one of the most popular places to go in the winter for RV'ers.

  • @WilliamNewberryTheHandyRealtor

    My family has owned almost 32 acres in Dixie valley for 30 years now the navy is forcing my mother to sell to the navy.

  • @robinboyle5667
    @robinboyle5667 Рік тому

    I had an incredible UFO experience in Nevada in 1958. I'll never forget it.

  • @dhrracer
    @dhrracer Рік тому +5

    Does the federal government own anything or do they just control and manage it? If you think of the federal government as "The People" then yes.

  •  Рік тому +2

    If you clicked for the answer to the question, start at 8:30

  • @ShadowOfTheVoid
    @ShadowOfTheVoid Рік тому +9

    Actually, the Constitution does not have any population requirements for statehood. The 60,000 people requirement was mandated by the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. I'm not sure if that's still in force, but it most certainly isn't something required by the Constitution.

  • @realstatistician
    @realstatistician Рік тому +3

    Hi Geoff. From what I know, the state was required to hand over it’s land when it became a state. The western (newer) states had a lot less negotiating power than the early ones, so they acquiesced, with the promise that the land remaining after the homestead act would be given back to the state. (You’ll notice that the western states have way more public land than the eastern and and Midwest states.)
    Much land was not claimed, as it was difficult to homestead because of the desert climate (requiring significant water management and maintenance, like canals and reservoirs).
    Fast forward 200 years, and the land still remains in the possession of the federal government. Which is unfortunate, because states manage their land better than the federal government does.
    It’s as straightforward as leverage and a broken promise.

  • @adrees
    @adrees Рік тому +1

    This is a very cool video. Thanks!

  • @mcswain04
    @mcswain04 Рік тому

    Interesting video. Heads up that the U.S. Forest Service is part of the Department of Agriculture (it's actually on that logo you posted) rather than the interior.

  • @richardbirger2245
    @richardbirger2245 Рік тому +1

    you left out 3 other significant public land holdings managed by US Dept of the Interior; Stillwater National Wildlife Refuge, Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge and Desert National Wildlife Refuge which was created in 1936 to provide habitat and protection for desert bighorn sheep and other desert wildlife, Desert NWR is the largest wildlife refuge outside of Alaska. At 1.6 million acres (643,000 hectares), the refuge can cover Rhode Island twice - and still have enough room left over for a quarter of a million football fields. Teeming with diversity over a vast landscape, Desert NWR boasts over 500 plant species as it transitions from the Mojave to the Great Basin Desert.

  • @paulsholar9356
    @paulsholar9356 7 місяців тому

    Another funny historical fact about about Nevada is, after Nevada Territory was split off from the larger Utah Territory, its eastern boundary was moved to the east (thus reducing the size of Utah Territory) two different times by Congress to punish the Utahns (maybe for their stubborn adherence to polygamy). One of those boundary changes happened after a large mineral deposit was discovered close to that border in western Utah Territory.

  • @bobs2809
    @bobs2809 Рік тому +2

    Actually around 14% of Nevada is privately owned as is 60% of the United States. Seems strange that there is no mention of private ownership in such a video.

  • @davidcisneros1429
    @davidcisneros1429 Рік тому +1

    Why can't things be 100% factual?
    We're sick of the idea that a little bit of untruth is alright.
    Life and science should be fact based, and one ought never compromise!

  • @Frankybroadcast
    @Frankybroadcast Рік тому +2

    The federal government has no right to any land.

  • @joycegonzalez4704
    @joycegonzalez4704 Рік тому +1

    Lived in Vegas for 20 years... learned more in this video that I knew for the lady two decades

  • @heathersmith6305
    @heathersmith6305 Рік тому +1

    That was a great video. I just subscribed.

  • @DovahTank
    @DovahTank Рік тому +1

    Just fyi, you said the the other Tribe names so nicely but Paiute is pronounced py-oot / paiju:t/ . Thank you!

  • @missjddrage1111
    @missjddrage1111 Рік тому

    Oooooo... I have too much to say in this one. I'ma rewatch before tho. Appreciate the content! 💐🏆🐐🔥

  • @jessiesheldon-huffey1824
    @jessiesheldon-huffey1824 Рік тому +5

    One of the biggest reasons the federal government has seized land in the western United States ( the government was not ever intended to own land BTW) is that that land and the resources ( mining, etc) is being used as collateral in several government loans - France, Russia and China were lenders- which is scary to think about) hope we don't default on the loans, that would open the door to the collateral being taken by these other countries

    • @revenadawson3910
      @revenadawson3910 Рік тому +3

      That explains all the questions I have had over this land grab by foreign countries in the USA.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist Рік тому

      False, unsubstantiated gossip. Cite factual sources, please.

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Рік тому

      the US government has NEVER "seized" lands. They own these lands from a variety of treaties and purchases. Louisiana Purchase, Mexican war, and British Treaty dealing with northwestern territories. ALL of these federal lands became part of the US BEFORE these were states.

    • @jessiesheldon-huffey1824
      @jessiesheldon-huffey1824 Рік тому

      @@danstrayer111 I guess they didn't seize these lands from the native Americans either.... wow.....

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Рік тому

      @@jessiesheldon-huffey1824 they did. what does that have to do with it? The point is, none of it ever belonged to the individual states. They did not exist as political entities.
      Land in the northwest was British, then US government. Louisiana purchase was French, then US gov't. The rest belonged to Mexico, which we actually paid for, like Louisiana Purchase. At no time were there any states from which the US government "seized" land. This is a right wing fairy tale.

  • @2Oldcoots
    @2Oldcoots Рік тому +15

    Nevada has no State Income Tax!!

    • @HyenaEmpyema
      @HyenaEmpyema Рік тому +1

      Give the Californians a few more years, and once the tax cuts for huge businesses and stadium subsidies create huge shortages, they'll say "do it for the CHILDREN" and guilt trip the voters to enact a "small" tax. Anyone who opposes the tax will be "against children" so the choice will be so easy

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
    @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 Рік тому +4

    Now I'll have to look up those mountain ranges. I had no idea. Thanks for the fresh brainfood. Cheers.

    • @scottanos9981
      @scottanos9981 Рік тому +1

      Highway 50 is nicknamed "the loneliest highway" and passes through a bunch of old mining towns in Nevada. A once in a lifetime drive for someone wanting to escape the world for a while

    • @TuddsCrapshoot
      @TuddsCrapshoot Рік тому +2

      Nevada has the most mountain ranges of any state! And most of them have what is called an “island in the sky” meaning a wetter, greener place in the cooler higher elevations. Endless exploring to be done, and so many hidden gems. Most underrated state by far

    • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
      @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 Рік тому

      @@TuddsCrapshoot I'm Canadian and a winter creature. I never thought I'd have a reason to go to a baking desert State. But I love hiking. 😋
      Those ranges look amazing.

    • @TuddsCrapshoot
      @TuddsCrapshoot Рік тому +1

      @@hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 it’s only hot in the valleys! The higher up you go, the nicer it gets! Also, in the winters the valleys are perfect

  • @sli-fox
    @sli-fox Рік тому

    I just drove through Nevada this week. Worst roads I’ve experienced. Vegas freeways are nowhere near flat. It was like driving over waves frozen in the road. Very unimpressed with Nevada.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist Рік тому

      Great highways require either high state population to pay adequate taxes, or higher federal taxes.

  • @Marqk-
    @Marqk- Рік тому +1

    Video starts at 7:55

  • @aaaaaa2206
    @aaaaaa2206 Рік тому +2

    In Nevada there is Area 51, S4. Nuclear testing grounds, D.U.M.B.S. This is why the government owns the land.

  • @acp7328
    @acp7328 Рік тому +1

    Does The Fed pay property tax to Nevada Counties which collect such tax?

  • @toe_moss
    @toe_moss Рік тому

    as the u.s. forest service emblem states it is part of the u.s. department of agriculture NOT the u.s. department of interior

  • @keithsparling5537
    @keithsparling5537 Рік тому +2

    Idaho is 62% federally owned.... So they let all the forest go.... never maintaining them, and the wonder why they burst into flames! So what IS the plan for this federally owned land? I'd like to hear the reasonning for the Federal government
    Owning this unused land.... Id like to hear the plan behind it all....

  • @engine6944
    @engine6944 Рік тому +1

    The BLM and NPS are dept of the interior. The Forest Service is Dept of Agriculture. Please update your information.

  • @ZenHulk
    @ZenHulk Рік тому +2

    I use to like you, but when you did my home state, Nevada you hit me. First being a 3rd generation local of northern Nevada, we only accept Vegas as part of Nevada as far as it keeps people from coming north. My mother grew up on an Indian Colony/Reservation they call it now in Winnemucca in the 50s and she watched Nevada grow until her death in 2019. Northern Nevada was stuff of dreams in the 70s when i was growing up until people in San Francisco discovered that dream and Reno where we lived exploded from 70,000 to 400,000 in my high school years. I think the one thing you really left out which Nevada is most known for is the wild mustangs running all over the state, its beautiful and dangerous to see them out there. Also Burning Man is a hippy scourge on our state, that leaves more destruction than its worth. Also i don't know how you do a show like this without experiencing it, so you're pretty much reading WIKI whatever its called now, and making a video. I challenge you to drive hwy50 from Tahoe in Nevada to hwy95 and south and experience it. I will let you know in HIKE Nevada i have witness a UFO while traveling to Disneyland from Elko as a child, but we found out a decade later they were testing flying the F117 Stealth fighter and F14 out of Groom Lake. Nevada needs to be experienced not at 80mph or sitting on a chair playing slots. North of Austin Nevada about 30 miles there's a place names Skull Creek, a farm in my family, that i have not been to in decades can you believe in the middle of a hostile desert, there are 50,000 Hereford Cattle and several thousand acres of Alfalfa, and so many miles of fencing, it took more than a day to drive it, that's where i learned to drive, driving a Swather or Alfalfa cutter, avoiding snakes and other things that wanted to hurt us. That ranch due to a very old man has a cement bunker in it, with mounts for a world war 1 machine gun, because he thought in World War 2, the Japanese were going to attack the middle of nowhere Nevada. Its peaceful, its wild, and its Nevada.

    • @daetsmaj
      @daetsmaj Рік тому

      I really appreciated your comment. You’re right about Nevada needing to be experienced. It really is one of a kind in natural beauty. And hidden treasures all across the landscape

  • @allon33
    @allon33 Рік тому +3

    Not saying it is aliens, but it is aliens.

  • @StephenReynolds_MasterMind
    @StephenReynolds_MasterMind Рік тому +3

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    08:07 🏞️ Nevada's vast federal land ownership: 86% owned by federal government, unique due to historical factors and unsuitable terrain for farming.
    10:12 🛸 Area 51: Secrete US Air Force facility in Nevada with UFO conspiracy theories; showcases federal land's use for military secrecy.
    10:54 🎪 Burning Man Festival: Annual event in Black Rock Desert on Bureau of Land Management land, emphasizes large-scale public events on federal land.
    02:18 🏜️ Nevada's history: From Native American tribes to Spanish exploration, Mexican-American war, Comstock silver discovery, statehood, and economic shifts.
    04:22 🗺️ Diverse Landscapes: Nevada's varied geography includes mountains, valleys, deserts, lakes; federal land ownership plays role in preservation and culture.
    Made with HARPA AI

    • @DugrozReports
      @DugrozReports Рік тому +2

      Seems like the video could probably skip huge chunks of the 1st 8 minutes and still be fine

  • @David_Lloyd-Jones
    @David_Lloyd-Jones Рік тому +2

    One of the most unique states?
    Yup. 17.3% uniquer than North Dakota.

  • @terrycarver1255
    @terrycarver1255 Рік тому

    The real reason is GOLD. If anyone hits a major gold vein, politicians will come in and take it from you.

    • @theontologist
      @theontologist Рік тому

      False. We already know from detailed surveys that there is no gold.

  • @straightto8
    @straightto8 Рік тому

    Live near Tahoe, live this area, wish I moved here sooner.
    Enjoyed your video.

  • @kurtru5selcrowe607
    @kurtru5selcrowe607 Рік тому +1

    I just wanted to know why the Federal government owned so much land in Nevada. Instead a got a Wikipedia article regurgitated at me for 10 minutes…

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Рік тому

      the feds own it because they fought the war from which it was gained...the Mexican American war. Nevada was NOT a state at that time.

  • @samc8002
    @samc8002 Рік тому

    Thanks Geoff, great video. One correction: Forest Service is part of the Department of Agriculture, not the Interior.

  • @larrybrinley8222
    @larrybrinley8222 Рік тому +1

    How does the Federal Government OWN land in the self governed States ? And why?

    • @akejonsson2863
      @akejonsson2863 Рік тому

      Nevada History is a requirement in the Univ of Nevada system. Can take it twice for credit, just use a different prof. Learn all about the federal acquisitions, which are a big part of Nevada politics and economic realities. Nevada was carved out of the Utah Territory, as a consequence of the Mormon Rebellion. Which brought us the Fancher Party's unfortunate end at Mountain Meadows. Plenty of support for spanking Brigham Young. First capital was in Genoa, which still exists as an artsy kind of tourist town. The robber barons were prevalent after the Comstock Lode, Sen. Clark's story is truly amazing, which drove the pre-war landscape. E.g, the State has no desire to take on the clean up of the various left over mines, as they are all toxic waste sites. Post war politics drove the desire for a small populace that would support or at least ignore the development of the Test Site, and its nuclear mission. The State has no real tax base, which leads to a lot of unhappy State employees in the 2 metro areas, as their pair is not commensurate with the local agencies. And how else could the casino industry be allowed to dominate an economy? An informed and well-educated populace is not in the interests of the big players for sure. Most definitely an exclusive club that runs the State

  • @thom7440
    @thom7440 Рік тому +1

    Great video! Can you do one like this for Utah? ... Thnx

  • @philorlowski2681
    @philorlowski2681 Рік тому +1

    ...same reason for all the National Parks -- somewhere for the Sasquatch things to live (or did you actually believe it was the Government preserving beauty for the benefit of the people?)

  • @AdrianBoyko
    @AdrianBoyko Рік тому +1

    So, can we revert Nevada back to territory status if its becoming a state was unconstitutional?

    • @mcflurrybutts4927
      @mcflurrybutts4927 Рік тому

      When we make Puerto Rico a state because it actually meets all the requirements.

  • @dalmatiangirl61
    @dalmatiangirl61 Рік тому

    You missed the Treaty of Ruby Valley, the Shoshone tribe just gave the federal government access to the land, the gov't did not get clear title till the 80's?, and the tribe still contests that decision.