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Phase II Site Assessment Work Plan <br />BIER PROPERTIES <br />Various Parcels, Stockton, California <br />1.0. INTRODUCTION <br />At the request of Mr. Wayne Bier, Advanced GeoEnvironmental, Inc. (AGE) has prepared the <br />enclosed Phase II Site Assessment Work Plan for the property located on five parcels on Main Street <br />between Market Street and Wilson Way in Stockton, California (the site). The work is being <br />performed as part of a due diligence for a property transfer. A plan of the site is illustrated on <br />Figure 1. <br />This work plan was prepared as required by the San Joaquin County Environmental Health <br />Department (EHD) for the procurement of soil boring permits, and is in accordance with <br />Appendix A-Tri-Regional Recommendations - Reporting prepared by the Central Valley Regional <br />Water Quality Control Board for the investigation of underground storage tank (UST) sites. <br />2.0. BACKGROUND <br />The site is in an industrial area located on Main Street between Market Street and Wilson Way in <br />Stockton, California. The site is comprised of the following APNs and corresponding addresses: 153- <br />111-01 (no address listed), 153-040-03 (1881 East Market Street), 153-040-11 (1555 East Main <br />Street), 153-040-14(1531 East Main Street) and 153-040-15(1523 East Main Street). APN 153-111- <br />01 is a small triangular parcel with a scale and scale house, APN 153-040-03 has existing <br />commercial structures, and APNs 153-040-11, 153-040-14, 153-040-15 are vacant land utilized by <br />a tow yard. The prominent features on the subject property are depicted in Figure 1. <br />2.1. REGIONAL GEOLOGIC/HYDROGEOLOGIC SETTING <br />The site is situated within the southern portion of the Great Valley Geomorphic Province of <br />California, a large, elongate, northwest trending, asymmetric structural trough; the northern and <br />southern portions of the Province have been designated the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys, <br />respectively. The Province is bordered by the Coast Ranges to the west, the Klamath Mountains and <br />Cascade Range to the north, and the Sierra Nevada to the east. <br />The Great Valley has been filled with sediments derived from both marine and continental sources. <br />Thickness of the sedimentary fill ranges from thin veneers along the valley edges to more than <br />20,000 feet in the south central portion of the valley. The sedimentary formations range in age from <br />Jurassic to Recent, with the older deposits being primarily marine in origin and the younger deposits <br />being primarily continental. Continental-derived sediments were primarily deposited in lacustrine, <br />fluvial, and alluvial environments with sediment sources being the mountain ranges surrounding the <br />valley (Olmsted and Davis, 1961); the site itself is located on unconsolidated and semi-consolidated <br />Advanced GeoEnvironmental, Inc.