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Report: Groundwater-qualityMonitoring—July 30,2003: 7500 West Eleventh Street, Tracy, CA. Page 3 <br /> r <br /> An initial phase of site characterization work was completed in May 2000. It included the <br /> installation of seven groundwater-quality monitoring wells (Nos. MW-1 through MW-7) <br /> at the locations shown on Figure 2. An extended phase of site characterization was <br /> initiated on March 25, 2002; it included the installation of an additional eight <br /> groundwater-quality monitoring wells, numbered MW-3A, MW-3B, MW-8 through <br /> MW-12, and MW-12A. It was completed on April 11, 2002, with a round of groundwater <br /> sampling and analysis that encompassed all 15 groundwater-quality monitoring wells by <br /> then extant on the site (The San Joaquin Company, 2002c). <br /> ' 1.4 Geology and Hydrogeology <br /> The subject property and the surrounding area are situated on level terrain on the distal, <br /> northern slope of an alluvial fan. The shallow underlying alluvial sediments are of <br /> Quaternary to Recent age. <br /> The site and the immediately adjacent property along the south side of West Eleventh <br /> Street and the west side of Chrisman Road have been extensively excavated and <br /> backfilled during prior filling station construction and remodeling, utility installation, and <br /> highway expansion. <br /> Beneath the paving and fill, the soils are composed of alluvial materials consisting of <br /> interbedded clays, silts and sands. These materials have been deposited in a complex <br /> lenticular form composed of relatively low permeability clays and silty clays inter- <br /> bedded with permeable silts and sands. The sizes of individual permeable lenses vary <br /> from relatively large features having considerable areal extent to small, localized lenses <br /> of limited extent and thickness. In some instances, these lenses merge into each other to <br /> form semi-continuous permeable strata within the less permeable clayey material. In the <br /> neighborhood of the 7500 West Eleventh Street site it is estimated that these alluvial <br /> materials are some 100 ft. thick. The stratigraphy described above is typical of the <br /> alluvial fan upon which Tracy and the surrounding area are situated. <br /> Beneath the alluvial sediments are the poorly sorted clays, silts sands and gravels of the <br /> Tulare Formation that were primarily derived from the Inner Coast Range hills that rise <br /> along the west side of the San Joaquin Valley. The Tulare Formation is separated into <br /> two members, the Upper Tulare Formation and the Lower Tulare Formation. Both <br /> members of the Formation are, on the regional scale, moderately to highly permeable and <br /> yield moderate to large quantities of water to wells. The Upper Tulare Formation is <br /> separated from the Lower Tulare Formation by the low-permeability, lacustrine Corcoran <br /> Clay,which acts as a confining bed within the regional groundwater basin. At the subject <br /> site, the top of the Corcoran Clay is estimated to be at a depth of approximately 230 ft. <br /> beneath the ground surface and to be some 100 ft. thick. The total thickness of the <br /> underlying Lower Tulare Formation is not well documented; however, estimates suggest <br /> that it ranges in thickness from 300 ft. to greater than 1,400 ft. <br /> The depth to groundwater beneath the site varies seasonally between 7 and 11 ft. <br /> Regionally, the general direction of groundwater flow is to the north toward the Old <br /> sic <br />