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Preliminary Site Assessment Work Plan <br /> Former QUICK N' SAVE ARCO <br /> 7200 South El Dorado Street, Stockton, California <br /> .0. INTRODUCTION <br /> At the request of Mr.Aurangzeb(Zeb)Khan,Advanced GeoEnvironmental,Inc.(AGE)has prepared <br /> this Preliminary Site Assessment Work Plan for the property located at 7200 South El Dorado Street, <br /> Stockton, California. The location of the site is illustrated on Figure 1 and a plan of the site is <br /> illustrated on Figure 2. <br /> This work plan is prepared at the request of the San Joaquin County Environmental Health <br /> Department(SJCEHD).Procedures outlined within the work plan are described in accordance with <br /> the California Regional Water Quality Control Board - Central Valley Region (CVRWQCB) <br /> guidelines for the investigation of underground storage tanks (UST) sites. <br /> 2.0. BACKGROUND <br /> A gasoline station and mini-mart previously occupied the site. Three USTs and two associated <br /> dispenser islands operated on the site for approximately forty years. The USTs were removed from <br /> the site in 1999 by Stockton Service Station Equipment Company, Inc. <br /> 2.1. SITE DESCRIPTION <br /> The site is a wedge-shaped parcel,bounded on the west by South El Dorado Street,on the north and <br /> east by an abandoned portion of Seventh Street, and on the south by undeveloped property. No <br /> structures are presently located on the property. It is AGES understanding that the former mini-mart <br /> building was recently demolished. <br /> 2.2. REGIONAL GEOLOGIC/HYDROGEOLOGIC CONDITIONS <br /> The site is situated within the Great Valley Geomorphic Province of California, a large, elongate <br /> northwest tending, asymmetric structural trough. The Great Valley Province has been filled with <br /> thick sequences of sediment ranging in age from Jurassic to recent, creating a nearly flat lying <br /> alluvial plain,which extends from the Tehachapi Mountains in the south to the Klamath Mountains <br /> in the north. The western and eastern boundaries of this province are comprised of the California <br /> Coast Range and the Sierra Nevada, respectively. Rocks composing the basement complex of the <br /> province have not been completely defined but are believed to be of metamorphic and igneous <br /> origin. The Great Valley Province has been subdivided into two major divisions identified as the <br /> Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys. <br /> Advanced GeoEnviron mental,Inc. <br />