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Report: Groundwater-qualityMonitoring—July 27,2004: 7500 West Eleventh Street,Tracy, CA. Page 8 <br /> 2.0 JULY 2004 GROUNDWATER-QUALITY MONITORING ROUND <br /> ! On July 26 and 27, 2004, SJC conducted the fifteenth round of groundwater-quality <br /> monitoring at the 7500 West Eleventh Street site. The depth to groundwater was <br /> measured in all 27 extant wells, including Floating product monitoring wells MWFP-1 <br /> through MWFP-5, but sampling for groundwater-quality analysis was restricted to the 22 <br /> monitoring wells MW-1 through MW-19, which are at the locations shown on Figure 2. <br /> 2.1 Groundwater Elevations and Flow Direction <br /> To initiate the July 2004 sampling program, the depth to groundwater in each of the 27 <br /> monitoring wells was measured using a conductivity probe on July 26, 2004. The water <br /> table elevations were computed relative to mean sea level (MSL). Those measurements <br /> and the computed groundwater table elevations are recorded in Table 1. <br /> In the period from April 30, 2004, the date on which the depths to groundwater in the <br /> monitoring wells were last measured, to July 26, 2004, the groundwater table rose <br /> between 0.52 ft. and 1.03 ft in the 24 monitoring wells that are screened in the near- <br /> surface aquifer beneath the site. (See Figures 4 through 9 for aquifers and well screen <br /> intervals.) As has been observed previously, the greatest rise in the groundwater table <br /> was observed in the wells in the approximate southern half of the well array, while the <br /> rise diminished with distance north from there and was least in Monitoring Well MW-19. <br /> In the monitoring wells that are screened in the first aquifer that is located deeper than the <br /> near-surface aquifer(i.e., Monitoring Wells MW-3A and 12A), the piezometric head rose <br /> by approximately one foot. In the deepest aquifer that is monitored at the site (by <br /> r: Monitoring Well MW-3B) there was no more than a slight increase in the piezometric <br /> I»' head(0.03 ft.). <br /> �..;: The observed changes in depths to groundwater in the groundwater-quality monitoring <br /> wells that were observed between April 30 and July 26, 2004 reflect the fact that, as SJC <br /> has noted in previous reports, agricultural irrigation dominates variations in groundwater <br /> elevations in the area around Tracy. When crops are being irrigated, very large volumes <br /> I= of water are imported to the fields around Tracy via the Delta-Mendota canal, and water <br /> pumped from deep agricultural wells is being,discharged to shallow aquifers. This <br /> activity begins in the spring of each year and typically continues through early- to mid- <br /> September,when it stops and groundwater levels in shallow aquifers begin to fall. Except <br /> in unusually wet winters, levels usually continue to fall until some time in February or <br /> March. Inspection of Table 1 shows that the rise and fall in the groundwater table <br /> elevation beneath the 7500 West Eleventh Street site usually occurs with little or no <br /> relationship to seasonal precipitation in the San Joaquin Valley where little rain falls <br /> between May and September of each year. <br /> The groundwater elevations presented in Table 1 were used to generate the groundwater <br /> contours shown on Figure 2. <br /> is <br /> SJC <br /> f= i <br />