Nevada Code § 533.492

Subsisting right to water livestock: Manner of proof; marking of location of right
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1. A subsisting right to water livestock
may be proven by an owner of livestock by one or more of the following items of
evidence for the number of livestock and date of priority:
(a) As to water rights on open range, whether
public lands or unfenced private lands or a combination of these:
(1) A statement of priority of use
submitted to the Taylor Grazing Service, predecessor to the Bureau of Land
Management, to show the numbers of livestock grazed upon the open range, for
years from 1928 to 1934, inclusive, if accompanied by evidence of changes or
absence of change since the date of the statement;
(2) A license issued by the Taylor Grazing
Service for use upon the open range; or
(3) A statement of priority of use, or a
license, issued by the United States Forest Service for the grazing of
livestock before 1950.
(b) As to water rights on other privately owned
land:
(1) An affidavit concerning the number and
kind of livestock by a person familiar with the use made of the lands;
(2) A record of livestock assessed to the
claimant of the right, or the claimants predecessor, by a county assessor;
(3) A count of livestock belonging to the
claimant or the claimants predecessor made by a lender; or
(4) An affidavit of a disinterested
person.
2. The location of a subsisting right to
water livestock and its extent along a stream may be shown by marking upon a
topographic map whose scale is not less than 1:24,000 or a map prepared by the
United States Geological Survey covering a quadrangle of 7 1/2 minutes of
latitude and longitude and by further identifying the location or extent by
one-sixteenth sections within a numbered section, township and range as
certified by a registered state water right surveyor.

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