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LLNL Emergency Plan <br />Rev-23 <br />October 2017 <br /> <br /> 17 <br />conference space and collaboration facilities that connect industry with LLNL and Sandia <br />National Laboratories/California partners. The LVOC is modeled after research and development <br />campuses found at major industrial research parks and other DOE national laboratories with <br />campus-like security, including a set of business and operating rules devised to enhance and <br />accelerate international scientific collaboration and partnerships with U.S. government agencies, <br />industry, and academia. <br />1.4.2 Physical Attributes of the Sites <br />1.4.2.1 Geography <br />LLNL consists of two sites, the main Laboratory site located in Livermore, California (Site 200) <br />in Alameda County, and the Experimental Test Site (Site 300) located near Tracy, California, on <br />the border between San Joaquin and Alameda counties (see Figure 1.1). <br />The Livermore site is located approximately forty miles east of San Francisco in the Livermore <br />valley in southern Alameda County, State of California. The downtown area of the City of <br />Livermore lies about three miles to the west of the Livermore site. In addition to Livermore, <br />notable urban areas to the west of LLNL are the cities of Pleasanton, Dublin, Danville, and San <br />Ramon, and the densely-populated San Francisco Bay Area. <br />Urban areas lying in the general northerly direction from the Livermore site are the cities of <br />Concord, Walnut Creek, Brentwood, Oakley, Pittsburg, and Antioch; while Tracy, Manteca, <br />Stockton, and Modesto are to the east. To the southwest lie the densely-populated cities of Santa <br />Clara County, including San Jose. <br />Site 300 covers approximately 11 square miles or 7,000 acres and is located 18 miles southeast <br />of Site 200, approximately 6.5 miles southwest of downtown Tracy, California. <br />1.4.2.2 Topography and Geology <br />Site 200, which is roughly one square mile, is located in the southeastern part of the Livermore <br />valley within the eastern boundary of the City of Livermore. The valley is situated in a section of <br />the California coast range that lies between San Francisco Bay on the west and the northern San <br />Joaquin valley to the east. The Livermore valley is primarily of low relief, although it does <br />contain scattered groups of hills that rise from 300 to 600 meters above the valley floor. <br />Site 300 is located in the southeastern Altamont Hills of the Diablo range. The topography of <br />Site 300 consists of a series of steep hills and canyons generally oriented northwest to southeast. <br />The site is underlain by gently dipping sedimentary bedrock dissected by steep ravines. The <br />bedrock consists of interbedded conglomerates, sandstones, siltstones, and claystones. The <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.