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Site Background Information <br /> IDEALEASE <br /> 1137 South Stockton Street, Stockton, California <br /> The site is situated in an industrial and commercial area of west Stockton, San Joaquin County, <br /> California. Prominent features on the site include an office building, truck wash facility, fuel <br /> dispenser area and a single I 2,000-gallon diesel above ground storage tank (AST). The surface <br /> primarily consists of asphalt and cement. A canopy covers the truck wash and dispenser area <br /> (Figure 2). <br /> During the removal and replacement of concrete southeast of the fueling islands,petroleum-impacted <br /> pea gravel was encountered, suggesting a subsurface leak of diesel from the AST fueling system. <br /> Elite IV Contractors was contacted to remove concrete overlying the subsurface product piping and <br /> evaluate for leakage.Upon removal of the concrete and exposure of the subsurface product piping, <br /> Elite IV noted leaking"clamshell' couplings in the area of the dispensers. Free product was noted <br /> within the shallow excavations and removed via a sump pump.It is our understanding that more than <br /> 60-gallons of free product was pumped from the shallow excavations.Elite IV subsequently repaired <br /> the piping and backfilled the excavations. <br /> REGIONAL GEOLOGIC/HYDROGEOLOGIC SETTING <br /> The site is located within the southern 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 more 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 sediment sources being the mountain <br /> ranges surrounding the valley(Olmsted and Davis, 1961).The site is located on unconsolidated and <br /> semi-consolidated alluvium,lake,playa and terrace deposits of Quaternary age(California Division <br /> of Mines and Geology, 1977). <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). <br /> Advanced GeoEnvironmentel,Inc. <br />