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Report:Groundwater-quality Monitoring—October 27,2004, 7500 West Eleventh Street, Tracy,CA" Page 6 <br /> has resulted in the following interpretation of the distribution of hydrocarbons in the <br /> subsurface. <br /> 1.5.1 Primary Plume <br /> The site is affected by a primary plume of diesel and gasoline that has affected both soil <br /> and groundwater. As is shown on Figures 3 through 9, it emanates from the area where <br /> the pump islands were formerly located on the 7500 West Eleventh Street property and <br /> extends north-northeast down the groundwater gradient. When it was at its maximum ' <br /> i extent, the long axis of the plume measured some 750 ft down the groundwater gradient. <br /> The main body of the plume includes groundwater affected by both gasoline and diesel, <br /> but ahead of that mass is a fringe of groundwater affected solely by MTBE. <br /> ii <br /> E Historically, in the interior of the primary plume, LNAPL in the form of free floating <br /> product was present beneath the pump islands of the former fueling station at the Navarra J <br /> } Site where it had leaked from piping, and by April 2002, it had migrated down_gradient i <br /> k as far north as groundwater-quality Monitoring Well MW-7 (see Table 2). The locations <br /> of the pump islands at the former fueling station and of Monitoring Well MW-7 are both � <br /> shown on Figure 2. <br /> Pumping of floating product and heavily contaminated groundwater from the pits from <br /> which the underground tanks were exhumed in December 1998 successfully eliminated <br /> floating product from the area around Monitoring Well MW-3. Based on consideration of <br /> the hydraulic conductivity and hydrostratigraphy of the subsurface and the subsequent <br /> i <br /> reduction in analytes of concern in Monitoring Well MW-3 and at other locations along <br /> the south side of West Eleventh Street, it was estimated that floating product and <br /> groundwater containing high concentrations of components of fuel hydrocarbons were <br /> removed from the groundwater over a radial distance of some 70 to 100 ft (The San <br /> Joaquin Company Inc. 2004a, 2002c). <br /> That assessment has been confirmed by data obtained by analyses of groundwater <br /> samples recovered from Monitoring Well MW-13, which was installed in the median of <br /> 1' West Eleventh Street in April 2004. The results show that concentrations of petroleum- <br /> and diesel-range hydrocarbons are significantly lower than those of similar analytes in <br /> Monitoring Well MW-7, which is further down-gradient from the release of <br /> hydrocarbons to the subsurface. <br /> The floating product that accumulated in Monitoring Well MW-7 over the period April <br /> 2002 to October 2003 was eliminated by a program of purging of LNAPL from that well ; <br /> in late 2003 and early 2004. However, given the small 2-in. casing diameter of <br /> Monitoring Well MW-7, it is unlikely that the intermittent rounds of LNAPL purging <br /> have remediated more than a limited area within close proximity to that well. In fact, <br /> concentrations of components of fuel hydrocarbons in Monitoring Well MW-7 have had <br /> an increasing trend since January 2004 when the quality of the groundwater in that well <br /> was first analyzed following completion of the purging program. <br /> i; sic <br /> 19 ; <br />