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Y <br /> Appendix A - Historical Background/Site Conceptual Model <br /> Former MEL BOKIDES PETROLEUM- MOSSDALE <br /> 444 Mossdale Road, Lathrop, California <br /> The site is located on Mossdale Road in an incorporated commercial/agricultural area of Lathrop, <br />' California A new fuel station is presently active at the site There is one structure consisting of an <br /> office and station building, the remaining areas of the site consists of either paved or concrete <br /> surfaces One domestic groundwater well is located on the property and an additional domestic well <br />' is located on the adjacent property to the east of the site <br /> The surrounding sites are used for boat storage/sales and agriculture A California Department of <br />' Transportation road right-of-way is located west and north of the site <br />' REGIONAL GEOLOGICIHYDROGEOLOGIC SETTING <br />' The site is located within the northern San Joaquin Valley which comprises part of the Great Valley <br /> geomorphic province of California The San Joaquin Valley is formed by the Great Valley <br /> geosyncline, which is a large, elongate, northwest-trending asymmetrical structural trough(basin) <br />' It is bordered by the Coast Ranges to the west, the Klamath Mountains and Cascade Range to the <br /> north, and the Sierra Nevada to the east This trough has been filled with sediments derived from <br /> both marine and continental sources Thickness of the sedimentary fill ranges from thin veneers <br />' along the valley edges to greater than 20,000 feet in the south central portion of the valley The <br /> sedimentary formations range in age with the older deposits being primarily marine in origin and the <br /> younger deposits being primarily continental Continental-derived sediments were primarily <br />' deposited in lacustrine, fluvial, and alluvial environments with sources being the mountain ranges <br /> surrounding the valley The site is located on unconsolidated and semi-consolidated alluvium, lake, <br /> playa and terrace deposits of Quaternary age <br />' The Modesto Riverbank and Turlock Lake Formations and overlying Recent alluvium are the <br /> principal sources of domestic ground water in the 13,500-square mile San Joaquin Valley Ground <br />' Water Basin (Basin 5-22) 1l <br />' The San Joaquin River is the nearest surface water feature to the property, located approximately <br /> 1,500 feet east of the site The San Joaquin River is primarily used for commercial and recreational <br /> boating,with agricultural as a secondary and equal use The channel contains water continually and <br />' has a potential tidal effect upon ground water depth or flow direction in the area <br />' UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANK REMOVAL <br /> On 05 February 1998, one 10,000-gallon gasoline UST, one 8,000-gallon diesel USTs and one <br />' 8,000-gallon gasoline UST were removed from the site, the approximate locations of the former <br /> USTs,product piping and dispensers are shown of Figure 2 Soil samples were collected at the UST <br /> locations, the dispensers and product lines Laboratory analytical results detected total petroleum <br />' J <br /> Advanced CeoEnvironmental,Inc <br />