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ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0011012
Environmental Health - Public
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3500 - Local Oversight Program
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PR0545039
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ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0011012
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Last modified
12/10/2019 7:50:18 PM
Creation date
12/10/2019 11:31:33 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
3500 - Local Oversight Program
File Section
ARCHIVED REPORTS
FileName_PostFix
XR0011012
RECORD_ID
PR0545039
PE
3528
FACILITY_ID
FA0010186
FACILITY_NAME
DEL MONTE FOODS PLNT #33 - DISCO WH
STREET_NUMBER
110
Direction
N
STREET_NAME
FILBERT
STREET_TYPE
ST
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95205
APN
15702009
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
110 N FILBERT ST
P_DISTRICT
001
QC Status
Approved
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KLEINFELDER <br /> 2 SITE SETTING <br /> ti <br /> 2.1 SITE LOCATION <br /> The Disco Site is located at the southeast corner of Filbert Street and Myrtle Street in Stockton, <br /> California (see Plate 1). The address of the site is 110 North Filbert Street, Stockton, California. <br /> The site is located in Section b (extrapolated), Subsection M, Township 1 North Range 7 East, <br /> Mount Diablo Base and Meridian. <br /> 2.2 GEOLOGY AND HYDROGEOLOGY <br /> The site lies within the Great Valley Geomorphic Province of California. The valley is <br /> approximately 400 miles long and averages about 50 miles wide, and comprises about 20,000 <br /> square miles. The valley has been filled with a thick sequence of marine and non-marine <br /> sediments from the late Jurassic to Holocene. The uppermost strata of the Great Valley <br /> represents, for the most part, the alluvial, flood, and delta plains of two major rivers (Sacramento <br /> and San Joaquin Rivers) and their tributaries. <br /> The valley deposits are derived from the Coast Ranges to the west and the Sierra Nevada to'the <br /> east. Granitic and metamorphic rocks outcrop along the eastern and,southeastern flanks of the <br /> valley. Marine sedimentary rocks outcrop along most of the western, southwestern, southern, <br /> and southeastern flanks; and volcanic rocks and deposits outcrop along the northeastern flanks of <br /> the valley. The valley geomorphology includes dissected uplands, low alluvial plains and fans, <br /> river flood plains and channels, and overflow lands and lake bottoms. <br /> Site specific geologic information was obtained from a document prepared for Del Monte by <br /> CH2M Hill titled, "Additional CPT Investigation and Monitoring Well Installation Report, Del <br /> Monte Disco Property, Stockton, California" (dated March 2002), and past documents pertaining <br /> to the installation of other monitoring wells on the site. According to the CH2M Hill reports, the <br /> site is underlain by unconsolidated alluvial sediments. The soils encountered during subsurface <br /> investigations show clay, silt, sand, and gravel. The predominant soils are interbedded sandy <br /> clay and silty sand. The majority of the native sediments near the site consist of Miocene to <br /> Holocene continental rocks and deposits of a heterogeneous mixture of interbedded, generally <br /> poorly sorted clay, silt, sand and gravel. <br /> Water level information was also obtained from the CH2M Hill groundwater reports. The <br /> direction of groundwater flow has been predominantly to the southeast. Historical groundwater <br /> information obtained by CH2M Hill indicates that in 1991 groundwater elevation beneath the site <br /> I was approximately -53 feet msl with a direction of groundwater flow to the northwest. Due to <br /> ceasing the operation of three Del Monte production wells and numerous city municipal wells in <br /> the area the groundwater elevation has risen approximately 33 feet to its present elevation. <br /> 12280.MON 15T04R397 Page 4 of 13 <br /> 2004,Kleinfelder,Inc May 11,2004 <br />
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