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LLNL Emergency Management Plan(EPlan) <br /> Rev 26 <br /> January 2021 <br /> bedrock within Site 300 has been slightly deformed into several gentle, low-amplitude folds. The <br /> locations and characteristics of these folds, in combination with the regional fault and fracture <br /> patterns, locally influence groundwater flow within the site. <br /> Although LLNL's Site 200 and Site 300 are somewhat removed from the largest and most active <br /> earthquake faults in California, both sites are located close to lesser active and potentially active <br /> faults. The most important of these are the Calaveras and Greenville faults. The Carnegie-Corral <br /> Hollow Fault system passes through Site 300 and 3 km east of Site 200. Additional information <br /> regarding earthquake potential is discussed in Section 1.4.2.5 below. <br /> 1.4.2.3 Population Distribution <br /> Following are population density data for areas in and around LLNL Sites 200 and 300, gathered <br /> from the U.S. Census Bureau and based on 2010 survey information: <br /> • Alameda County, CA, 1.5 million; 2,000 people per square mile <br /> • San Joaquin County, CA, 685,000; 493 people per square mile <br /> • Livermore, CA, population 81,000; 3,200 people per square mile <br /> • Tracy, CA,population 83,000; 3,745 people per square mile <br /> 1.4.2.4 Meteorology <br /> The climate at both sites is characterized by mild, rainy winters and warm-to-hot, dry summers, <br /> with strong seasonal wind and rainfall patterns. Wind patterns at both sites tend to be dominated <br /> by the thermal draw of the warm San Joaquin Valley that results in wind blowing from the cool <br /> ocean toward the warm valley during the warm season, increasing in intensity as the valley heats <br /> up. During the winter, the wind blows from the northeast more frequently as cold, dense air spills <br /> out of the San Joaquin Valley. The meteorological conditions at Site 300 are also strongly <br /> influenced by higher elevation and more pronounced topological relief. Approximately 55% of <br /> the rain at both sites falls in January, February, and March and approximately 80% falls in the <br /> five months from November through March, with very little rain falling during the warmer <br /> months. <br /> The average wind speed in 2019 at Site 200 was 2.2 m/s (4.9 mph); at Site 300 it was 5.7 m/s <br /> (12.7 mph), based on data from the LLNL Environmental Report, Table 1-1, dated <br /> October 1, 2020 (UCRL-TR-500027-19). <br /> 1.4.2.5 Natural Phenomena <br /> Tornadoes/High Winds <br /> Tornadoes and high winds are not major concerns for emergency planners at LLNL because they <br /> are rare events and historically have not caused significant damage in Alameda or San Joaquin <br /> County. Since 1950, only three tornadoes have been recorded in Alameda County, CA, <br /> according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Climatic Data <br /> 17 <br />