NEVADA IMACS SITE FORM - BLM - blm 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the NEVADA IMACS SITE FORM in the editor.
  2. Begin by filling out the eligibility section. Select 'Unevaluated', 'Not eligible', or 'Eligible' based on your assessment.
  3. Complete the Administrative and Environmental Data section, including fields such as State Site No, County, Project Name, and Site/Property Name.
  4. In the Site Class field, choose from Prehistoric, Historic, or Ethnohistoric. Provide details about the site area and depth of cultural fill.
  5. Describe the site in detail under 'Site description' and provide justification for National Register inclusion if applicable.
  6. Fill in elevation, township/range information, landowner details, and attach any required photographs or logs.
  7. Record artifact summaries and feature descriptions meticulously to ensure all culturally modified materials are documented accurately.

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When Nevada became a state in 1864, its constitution explicitly said that the state wouldnt claim any public land that wasnt spoken for. This left the vast majority of Nevadas land in the public estate, managed by the federal government.
Nevada | Bureau of Land Management.
Out of all of the states, Nevada has the highest percentage of federally owned land. The federal government owns more than 80% of the states 70,264,320 acres of land. The majority of the federal land is owned by the National Park Service.