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CALIFORNIA

In This Issue I
DAMAGING LANDSLIDES RELATED TO THE INTENSE
GEOLOGY RAINSTORMS OF JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1993,
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA , , 123
CALIFORNIA'S LANDSLIDE HAZARD IDENTIFICATION
A PUBLICATION OFTHE
DEPARTMENT OF CONSEAVATION PROJECT . . . 132
DIVISION OF MINES AND GEOLOGY DMG LANDLSIDE PUBLICATIONS . . 140
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
SIal.. 01 C81i1otNa PETE WILSON
Governor AMERICAN GEOLOGIC TERMS OF FOREIGN ORIGIN 141
TEACHER FEATURE , , , , , 142
The ResoufCfl$ A9<'nCY DOUGLAS P. WHEELER
LITERARY PROSPECTS 144
Secretilry fOf Resources
NEW AND REVISED OFFICIAL MAPS OF SPECIAL
Depaltmenl 01 Conse<va1l0n EDWARO G. HEIQIG STUDIES ZONES OF JULY 1, 1993 146
Dir6CIor
CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY SUBSCRIPTION AND CHANGE
0M$>0n ot Mines & Geology JAMES F. DAVIS OF ADDRESS FORM ,.. , , , 147
Stille GeologIst DMG OPEN-FILE REPORT RELEASE 148
DMG PUBLICATIONS REQUEST FORM 148
CAUFOANIA GEOLOGY
CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY ISSUES FOR SALE . 149
Technical EdilQf: Elise Mattison A 15TH CENTURY MINING LEASE .150
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Cover photo: Two of three homes that moved 50 feet (15 m)
downslope on January 18, 1993. The Mystic Hills section of
laguna Beach. The house behind the utility pole is shown on
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993 Volume 46JNumber 5 page 123. Photo by Pam Irvine.
CGEOA 46 (S) 121-156 (1993)

CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER \993


'"
Damaging Landslides Related to the Intense Rainstonns
of January-February 1993, Southern California
ALLAN G. BARROWS, SIANG S. TAN, AND PAMELA J. IRVINE, Geologists
Landslide Hazard Identification Project
Division of Mines and Geology

Photo 1. One 01 three homes that moved 50 feet (15 rn) downslope on JanualY 18, 1993. The Mystic Hills section 01 Laguna
Beach. Photo by Pam Irvine.

INTRODUCTION
In other disastrous VJeI years. such as failures. One possible exception, if attrib-

A
s has happened several limes 1969, 1978, and 1980. deadly debris utable to the stonns. is a sea-cliff rockfall
during recent decades. severe f\oo.vs smashed into homes killing several near Santa Barbara that killed one man
Mnler stonns drenched por- dozen people and causing several hun- and injured another on March 28.
tions of Ianc:lsUde-prone coastal southern dred million dollars of damage. [n con-
California, with predictable results. Para- trast. landslides associated with the 1993 DAMAGE ESTIMATES
doxically. water. like fire. can be both a stonns were mostly deep-seated. rota-
friend and an enemy. In January and Ikloal or translational. slides al'Kl slumps Whenever severe INinter storms strike
February, when most Califomians hailed in cut sklpes. This year's wklespread Califamia. the bulk of the damage and
the end of rigorous water-usage controls. Iandsliding caused extensive damage to loss of life is caused by manifestations of
dozens of homes. mostly in Orange homes. streets, al'Kl utilities, with losses nooding. such as inundation, erosion of
and Los Angeles counties. were being thai may ultimately exceed $60 minion. roacN.rays. destruction of bridges, and
destroyed or damaged by disastrous slope Although flooding during the rainstonns undercutting of dralnage-channel walls,
failures (Photo 0. It was a case of 100 caused 20 deaths in California and as Various kinds of slope failures (collectively
much water for many slopes to accom- many as 34 in nearby Mexico. there were referred 10 as landslides). cause wide-
modate in too short a lime. no fatalities or serious injuries from .slope spread damage as weD. Estimating the

CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMaEFIIOCTOBER 1993


losses due directly to landsliding is a con-
tinual problem because flood and landslide
damages are invariably evaluated toge her (e) Glendale
,
I
by local agencies. With this caution in Studio
10 City ~ 9
=
mind, a preliminary estimate of public
and private property damage due directly
7
8
,e- Pasadena
.I
to landsliding in southern California is
e)

Malibu
~ Los Angeles , /
_s--
$30 million.
LOS ANGELESr ~.
Loss estimates are very differenl if
./' AnaheIm ',,-
they include disruptions of the' economy. ~Hills .
For example, the blockage of the Santa Long ) @ 1a,b \
Fe Railroad tracks by a landslide in Dana Beach,' Anaheim ..
Point forced nearly 6,000 Amtrak pas- @ Santa Ana
...... ,,
sengers traveling between San Diego and L
Los Angeles daily to be bused around the
6
closure for 2 weeks. Another example is ORANGE
the loss of business due 10 blocked access,
as along Pacific Coast Highway in Dana 4
Point where the road was closed because Laguna @5
of a landslide. Even rare or unique inci- Beach
dents contribute to landslide losses. Such 3 /
was the case when a landslide ruptured San e 2;
Clemente
a 26-inch (66-cm) natural gas main near
Castaic on February 24. Aames shot up
00 feet (30 m) and bLUT1ed about an acre Figure 1. Location map of storm-triggered destructive landslides in southern California,
January through March, 1993. Numbers refer to sites discussed in text.
(4,047 m2) of brush.

Twenty-two homes were destroyed


and 137 damaged by slope failures in
southern California during the storm sea- February, 1992 rainstorms) the city lb. Anaheim ·Pegasus Street" Land-
son. Orange County suffered the bulk of hired geologic consultants to investigate slide (Anaheim Hills). On January 18,
the losses as a result of the prolonged the slope stability. Before the geologists 1993, about 2,000 feet (610 m) west
storms tha dumped rain intensely on could complete their studies, January of the •Avenida de Santiago" landslide,
the vulnerable slopes. Geologists with 1993 storms dumped two to three times a slump in a buttress fill at the head of
the Division of Mines and Geology's the normal amoun of rainfall on parts Pegasus Street destroyed the dewatering
Landslide Hazard Identification Project of southern California. On January 17. system that was installed earlier to help
observed most of the failures described 993, the sUde began to move at the rate stabilize a problematic slope. A retaining
in the brief accounts that follow. The of about 1 inch (2 to 3 cm) per day, wall failed and one home was destroyed.
number preceding each account refers Cracks and fissures developed across Damage is about $500,000.
to its location on the map (Figure 1). streets and through houses at the head
and compressional features damaged 2. San Clemente - widespread
DAMAGING LANDSLIDES houses lower on the slope within the problems and heauy damage, January
Orange County landslide (Photos 2 and 3). 17·19. Intense rainstorms dumped a
year's worth of rain in 1 month resulting
1a. Anaheim "Auenida de Santiago" The city evacuated residents from in the wettest January in Orange County
Landslide (Anaheim Hills). The larg- 46 homes on January 18 and a massive history. Concentrated downpours washed
est and most publicized landslide associ- dewatering program was initiated. More debris and vegetation down hundreds
ated with the 1993 rainstorms is in than 100 horizontal and vertical wells of slopes on the graded and terraced
the elevated eastern part of Anaheim. were drilled into the slide mass and, by hillsides that face the ocean (Photos 4
where homes are valued at $400,000 to early April, 12 to 15 million gallons and 5). Initially, 23 homes were posted
1 million. The landslide, named for a (45,420 to 56,775 m 3) of water had as unsafe (no entry) or rendered uninhab-
street near the headscarp, covers about been removed. By mid-April. it was deter- itable (un il repairs could be made). At
57 acres (23 hectares) on a north-facing mined from 10 slope indicators (devices least two $400,000 homes were razed,
dip slope in upper Miocene marine sand- in the ground) the slide was no longer It is estimated thai 117 homes were
stone and silts one (Figure 2). This trans- moving. Three homes have since been damaged during the mid-January storms,
lationallandslide is about 1,300 feet condemned and nine others have major including 3 or 4 condominiums in the
(396 m) wide by 1,900 feet (579 m) long. damage. Most of the remaining homes Colony Cove area directly above Pacific
After minor cracks were observed in have been reoccupied, following repair Coast Highway. Local government
April, 1992, (follOWing the locally intense of utilities. Losses are about $4 million. estimates that storm damage to public

124 CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


I
I
I
I
I

"A e Ida de 5antJago landslide,

.350.000 Losse from I Iandslid WIll dip I pe In locene sand one destroyed
probably ·cecd. 7 million. rhre hom (Cover photo: Photo 1).
On of the homes burned In arch. the
4 Laguna Beach "Mystic Lone o h hom ,spectacularly distorted from
Landslide Early In lh m mlng n J nu m ving 50 r t (15 m) downslope, wer
ary 1 . a remobibz d old I nd lid nd/or Tal d ~ he lire department. 1.0 from
rill failure on il steep c nyon Wi II (llong a this landslIde are about 2 million.

CAUFOR A GEOlOG SEPTE BERIOCT08ER 1993 25


destroyed and tlu'ee horses had to be freed from deep mud. In
addition. a $40.000 shrub-shredder was aushed by a boulder
entrained in a debris flo.w

Los Angeles County


7. Los Angeles "Castef/ammare Mesa" 1JJndslide (PacIfIC
Palisades'. Ouunic landslide pnXjems haw affected this area.
wt'llch SIts on a remnant of an emergent wave-cut platform
more than 100 feet (30 m) aboue sea IeueI just inland from
Pacific Coast Highway (FIgure 3). Many homes have been dam·
aged or destroyed over the years. During mid..January 1993,
residents of five homes VJ(!re evacuated and three of lhe homes
along CasteUammare Drive destroyed (Photo B). Castellammare
Drive and nearby Porto Marina Way (which is on top of the
sea cliff that abuts Pacific Coast Highway), VJere heavily dam·
aged (Photo 9). Los Angeles implemented a $2.7·million emer·
gency reconstruction program to save the two streets by sinking
rows of SO·foot (24-m) pilings tied together by Wlderground
concrete beams. Piles previously placed in Castellammare now
protrude because landslide debris flov..oed around them during
the January storms. Landslide damage to private and public
property approaches $6 million.

B. Los Angeles -Mandeville Canyon" 1JJndslldes. During


the intense rainstonns or February 22 and 23 l1leTe were several
debris flows on the steep waDs of Mandeville Canyon. Although
two homes ~ damaged by the debris and mu:i. no in;.mes
~ reported. Damage totaled $60.000.

9 Los Angeles -Phoosonl Driue- Landslide (Mount Wash-


Photo 3. looking north aJong oompresslonalleatutes atlhe wesl· ington). In this area of very steep lenain about 4 miles (6 km)
ern margin of !he "Avenida de S3n1Jago"landslide, AnaheIm H.ns. north of the Civic Center, one small older home was destroyed
Overlapping aspha/I paYment and "tented'" SIdewalk resulted from and two others threatened (Photo 10) when a slump occurred on
landslide in January 1993. Photo by Siang Tan. February 19. Damage was about $400.000.

5. Laguna Beach ~Buena Vlsla Way"


Landslide. Saturation from the slonns of
January and February caused a slump-
type landslide on March 12. 1993. It
destroyed one home on Buena Vista Way
(Photo 7) and another home just upslope
on Canyon View Road. Damage is about
$1 million.

6. Santa Ana Mountains ~Moje:ska­


and -Santiago Canyon ~ Landslides.
Several steep canyons dissect the rugged
western slopes of the Santa Ana MQUl-
tains. Mudflows. debris Oa.us. and rock
sIide:s came dc:Mrn the canyon walls in
numerous places during the most intense
rainstonns on January 16. 17. and lB. In
Mojeska Canyon. one 6Q.year~ house
was destroyed and two u.oere damaged.
The damage is estimated to be more than
$ J million including flocxl damage. In Photo 4. The eMecllVene5s of contrasting slope-protectIOn measures is demonstrated along
Santiago Canyon. part of a stable was thiS west·lacing gladed slope above Calle Familia, San Clemente. Photo by Slang Tan.

". CALIFORNIA GEOLOGV SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


10. Los Angeles "Laurie DriveR Landslide (Studio Cay).
On March 14. a home on the northern slopes of the Santa
Monica Mountains was evacuated. By March 24, the home was
severely distorted and the street paving buckled. On lOp of the
slope behind the destroyed house is a JOO-fool-Iong (90-m-long)
headscarp. Damage is probably $600,000.

11. Agoura Hills ~Vio Amistosa~ Landslide. One house


was destroyed and two placed at risk when a slump occurred
along a steep slope in a stabilization fiJi on February 15. Damage
to privale and public prop.erty approaches $700.000. On March
24. about 1 mile (I to 2 kmJ east of the ~Via Amistosa land-
R

slide, a large slump with a 300·foot-long (90-m-long) headscarp


fanned on a west-facing slope above several homes on Provi-
dent Road (Photo 11). No homes have yet been damaged by this
landslide. which lies within the jurisdictions of Los Angeles
County. Calabasas, and Agoura HHJs.

12. Calabasas "Elm Drive~ and ~Valdez Rood~ Land


slides. On March 28, lancIsIides developed in the Santa Mona
Mountains near Mulholland Highway. Another landslide dam-
aged the pavement. destroyed a retaining wall. and threatened
a home along Valdez Road.

San Bernardino County


Rim Forest -Black/oot Trail Eost~ Lands/Ide. (Not shoY.m
on rlgure I.) In late January. one structure on the precipitous Photo 5. Contrast In performance ot brush-planted vs.
grassy slopes along calle Familia, San Clemente.
edge of the San Bernardino Mountains in the village of Rim
PhotobySssng Tan.

Photo 6. The "La Ventana" landslide. San Clemente/Dana Point. view toward north. ocean bluff collapsed the
night 01 Febtuafy 22. 1993 destrOYing lour homes. When landsllde was imminenl. rool and walls o! white struc-
ture on right were CUI with saws In an attempt to salle part 01 structure. Photo by Siang Tan

CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


LESSO S lEAR ED
SlOpe Pro ectlon

d m n tTilt In 101

Mahbu
~1

28 C FOR IAGEO OGY SE BEA!OCTOBE~ 1


rarely developed except. perhaPS. in O'd!f.
steepened road cuts.

One of the places \lJhere .soil slips and


debns flows formed is along the Sleep
south·facing slopes of the Puente Hills in
Yorba Uncia. Surficial soil slip and debns·
now scars are abundant in sltty rocks of
the Yorba Member of me Puente Forma·
tlon along the Whittier Fault Zone. The
rocks' composition (predominantlY silty
sandstonel. the uptihed and sheared beds'
unusual steepness along the recently
active Whittier Fault Zone. and intense
rainstorm activity all contributed to lhe
concentration of surlicial slope failures.
Expensive homes, built at the base of
these hills in recent years. were protected
by well--engineered and well-built debris
basins and dams because of the nearby
slopes' lX'tential for generaling debris
(Photo 12). Awareness of the lX'tential
Pholo 8 "CastellammaJe Mesa~ landslide. Pacific Palisades. los Angeles Home damaged by for slope inStability. and proper planning
landsrlde January 1993. Photo by Slang Tan and engineering. can mitigate the harm-
ful effects of ramszorm-triggered slope
failures.
such as CaIIe Familia. Hen!. the approxi- debris flow are used by 50eflusts 10 MItigation Strategies:
mately SO-fOOl-high (24-m·high). wcst- describe $haftou.rsSope-fallure phen0m- Geologic Report Review
facing slopes had been graded al a slope ena. In recent decades. surfJcial slope
angle of 1-1/2 to 1 labout34 degrees}. railJres. triggered by prolonged and Each natural disaster reminds us that
Techniques used to proteCI the slope intense rainstorms, were wKl.espread in there are steps that can and .should be
materials from erosion or slippage \AIElre southern Califomia This year. despite taken to redoce losses associated WIth it
easy to compare among neighbonng heavy rain in wlnerable areas. floo.us When disruptions to business and travel
properties. Photo 4 shovJs a syslem of
well-constructed drainage ditches and
cnannelways, combined VJith a dense
gTCMld CO'J(!1', protecting the cel'ler prop'
ef!y In contrast. slopes on both sIdes
-p(aflted only with grass \'Jere damaged by
shallow landsliding and by erosion of the
soil mantle. [n Photo 5. the slope on the
left 1,l.a5 planted VJith grass along WIth a
pattern of drought-resistant bushes with
deeper root systems thaI held the slope
intact. The slope to the right. although
planted \lo'lth a feIN deciduous trees. Is
fTlCl6tIy grass <n:i it. 100. IosI much of the
soil cover and grass.

Oebns-Aow Protectlon
Duong the most intense periods
of rain in January and February. ne\lo'S
repol15 VJere filled with references to
~mudslides.~ especially affeCIing PacIfic
co..t H;ghway ana roads'ln the Sarila
Monb MOUQlains. The term Mmudsl~.~
allhOUgh vemacular for the meola, Is a. Pooto 9. "Castellammare Mesa" landslide. PaCIfic Pallsades. Los Angeles. Asphalt pavement·

- misnomer because mud does nOI slid~.


11 flows. Terms such as mudflOVJ or
capped columns (piles) previously positioned to slabilize street. now protrude. Note erach In
stonewor\l. on Iront 01 house Photo by Siang Tan.

CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


'"
are added to actual physical properly belter." A remedy. as proposed by the systems within ancient, but metastable,
damage. losses from California landslides Interagency Hazard Mitigation Team landslides or in larxlslide'prone slopes can
average about $100 million a year. In convened by the Federal Emergency be effective in reducing. if not eliminating.
California, property damage most often Management Agency (FEMA) and Office landslide hazards. How can this be done
occurs to older structures built before of Emergency Services (DES) to investi- where a number of existing homes are
adoption and enforcement of modem gate the California Severe Winter Stonns threatened?
grading codes and ordinances. Neverthe- disaster of January-March 1993. may
less, landslide damage or destruction of be to establish minimum standards for The Beverly Act of 1979 provides lor
so many recently built structures provokes review of geologic reports. possibly the establishment of Geologic Hazard
us to consider what else needs to be done through state legislation. A~t DistriclS (GHADs) as part of
to reduce or eliminate landslide hazards. the2ublic.Resources COOe (0Ishansky.
1986). The..statul.lil allOVJS for the fonnalion
One response to the continuing of local assessment dislricl$ to prevent,
problem of landslide haz- mitigate, abate l or con-
ards in California was the trol geologic hazards.
passage of the Landslide As defined by the Act,
Hazard Identification Act a "geologic hazard~ •
in 1983. It established. includes ~an actual or
via the Public Resources threatened landslide,
Code, the Landslide Haz· land subsidence. soil
ard Identification Pro}ect erosion. earthquake.
within the Division of or any other natural or
Mines and Geology. The unnatural movement
l.:.andslide Project prepares of land or earth."
landslide hazard maps for
Califomia's urban and The first and most
urbanizing areas. The successful CHAD. the
aim is to assist cities and Abalone Cove Landslide
counties in fulfilling their Abatement District in
responsibilities lor protect- Rancho Palos Verdes,
ing public health and was established in 1981
safety from landslide and to dewater, and thus
other unstable slope haz- stabilize. a 600-acre
ards (see page 132. this 1243-hectare) landslide
issue). The maps include that threatened 100
inventories of existing homes. The GHAD
landslides and assessments helped deal with a prob-
of landslide susceptibility lem that extended across
in Wldeveloped terrain. property boundaries.
However. the law autho-
Although the Landslide rizing GHADs is not
Pro}ect maps help local well known to eilher the
government planners public or local officials.
Photo 10. landslide in Mount Washington district of los Angeles dropped the
incorporate safeguards It is evidenl that it needs
small cottage (right of center) 15 to 20 feet (4 to 6 m) and created precipitous
into the Safety Element of slopes (plastic covered) behind two other dwellings. Photo by Slang Tan. to be widely publicized
the General Plan, there to promote additional
are still ~weak links" in the GHADs to mitigate land-
chain of public protection slides or landslide-prone
from slope failures. Most jurisdictions in Mitigation Stralegies- hillsides.
Calilomia require geological or geotech- Hazard Abatement Districts
nical studies prior to development on Homeowners in San Clemente. in
hillsides. Unfortunately, the quality of The catastrophic loss of homes due cooperation with local officials. are fonn-
review of these studies varies greatly. Not to landslides during the January-February ing a GHAD for an area along the ocean
all local governments have qualified staff stonns 01 1993 provides a sad reminder bluffs. Property owners in Malibu have
and/or retain professional consulting that, in many cases. the slopes did not also launched efforts to fonn a GHAD.
finns to perfonn reviews. This variable have 10 fail. The severity of failure could They have already obtained a Plan of
review of plans for development has prob- have been greatly reduced if mitigating Control (an analysis of problems and list
ably contributed 10 some of the slope measures had been taken prior to the of options), which is required before local
fallures in relatively new developments inevitable rainstonns. Installation and government will consider establishment
in areas where "we should have known maintenance of dewatering and drainage of an assessment district.

''0 CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


Photo 11. Ten-lo-l5-f()()( (3-lo-5·m) headscarp ttlal eKtends 300 feet (90 ml aJong large slump formed on March 24 on hillside
al:low! Provident Road in Agoura HIUs. Crews 01 women pnsonefS (in yellow ram gear) are placing plaStIC sheeUng and sanclbags
across the headscarp to prevenl additIOnal water from enlenng the slide mass. Photo by Pam IMne.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful for discussions held


in the field with several geologists IoVOrk-
ing on various landslides. Mark Mcuny
with Eberhart and Stone. Inc. provided
information about the ongoing d0Nater-
ing and investigation of the • Avenida de
Santiago· landslide in Anaheim Hills.
Jim Sosson. of SIosson and Asscw:iales,
disa tSsed landslides in Agoura HiRs. Wes
R_. San Bemanlino County ge0lo-
giSt, prcMded IIlfolTT'lation about the
-Rim Forest- Iandslide_

REFERENCE
Olshansky, R.B., 1986. GeologIC haZard
abatemenl dlSlricls: CALIFORNIA
GEOLOGY, v. 39, no. 7,p.I58·159

Pholo 12. SoIl stlp and debris-flow scars behind new hOmes in Yema Unda. Note cobble
gravel-laced dam buill to Intercepl and retain debris behind home. Pholo by Siang Tan.

CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEM6€RIOCT08€R 1993


'"
California's Landslide Hazard Identification Project
ALLAN G. BARROWS, Senior Geologist and Manager
Landslide Hazard Identification Project
Division of Mines and Geology

>


Photo 1. Landslide damaged homes, Palos Verdes Peninsula, southern California, early 19605. Photo by George B. Cleveland.

INTRODUCTION dlies has increased exposure to landslide DMG established the Landslide Hazard
problems (Photo 1). It is estimated thai Identification Project (lH1P), The primary

U
nderneath California's famous, California landslides cause more than function of the lHlP staff is to prepare
or infamous, lifestyle and rapid- $100 million in 10sses and. on the aver- maps that infonn local government plan-
ly expanding population lies a age, kill five people a year. Experience ners about the distribution of existing
dynamic geclogic environment. Califor- has shoo.vn that better planning and grad- landslides and the relative susceptibility
nians Uve in a region that is al times rest- ing coukI prevent 90% or more of these to landsJiding of aU natural slopes I.Vithin
less, and in places, WlStable, exposed to
geologic hazards ranging from catastroph- """'.
1be recurrence of fatal and costly
their jurisdictions.

ic earthquakes to troublesome landslides. GEOLOGY AND DISTRIBUTION


For more than 30 years. the California landslide disasters in California prompted OF LANDSLIDES
Department of Conservation's Division of the legislature to pass the Landslide
Mines ard Geology (DMG) hM helped Hazard Identification Act (see inset, Why does California have so many
reduce risks from geologic hazards by page 134). It provides a landslide haz· landslide problems? California possesses
generating and disseminating infonnation ard mapping and technical advisory pro- all of the factors and conditions necessary
about geologic factors that affect the lives gram in urban and urbanizing areas state- to produce VJidespread and abundant
and property of Californians. wide. 11le program assists counties and slope-failure problems. A simple map
cities in protecting the public health and depicting relative amounts 01: larrlslK1lng
Accelerated development of poten- safety from landslide and other unstable- in California (Alfors and others, 1973)
tially unstable hillside terrain surrounding slope hazards. As directed by the Act, shows that landslides are generaUy

CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


'"
concentrated in hilly 10 mountainous Mlllio" $ Lasses Perceot Rainfall
regions VJithin 100 miles (160 km) of 200 ,...--------------------~,so
the coast. Since much of Califomia's
population and many of its most rapidly ,so 200

developing areas also lie within this belt.


problems wlth landslides abound.
,so
"Xl
Although 1andsIides can be found
in the Klamath Mountains. the Sierra so '"
Nevada. and the desert regions, they so
• are much more abundant in the Coast
.. Ranges. Transverse Ranges. and
, ,,.. ,
Peninsular Ranges because of: "" "" 1978
Selecied Years of California Disasters
"" ""
• Relief - Sleep. dissected terrain wlth • Million Dollar loss _ .,. Mean Ra,nfall
high slopes;
Figure 1. Relationship between abnormally high rainlall and property losses due to landslides.
DISasters occurred primarily eilher in northern or southern California during a specific year.
1 • Weak earth materials - including a Dollar-loss estimates are normalized to 1982 consumer price indel<.
.. great variety of poorly consolidated
Cenozoic marine sedimentary rocks
containing abundant clay minerals or
highly sheared and deformed Meso- The most difficult part in compiling this nia (Photo 2). Similarly. following
zoic Franciscan Complex rocks: graph was distinguishing flood damages a long drought, southem Califomia was

" . Climate/water - occasional


extremely wet years with intense
from the estimates. For instance. January
1982 San Francisco Bay Area stonns
triggered landslides that caused $66 mil·
inundated by rainfall in 1993, aceom~
panied by a major landslide and flood
disaster (see page 123, this issue).
rainstorms. Coastal mountains trap lion of the $300 million in losses attributed
moisture from clouds blown in from mostly to flooding (Creasey, I988). Many attempts have been made to
the ocean; calculate (or estimate) the annual dollar
Califomia suffered several years of losses caused by landsliding in Califomia.
~rthquakes - trigger slides. lhey drought during the late 19705. Then In preparing the Urban Geology Master
• are symptoms of an active tectonic in 1978 when rainfall was more than 200 Plan 20 years ago, DMG geologists esti-
environment where uplift adds poten- percent of normal, a $1 73·million land· mated statewide landslide Josses primarily
tial energy to slope materials and slide disaster occurred in southern Califor' by extrapolating data from damage
rerIe\AIS elevation of eroding termin.
Folding and faulting fracture (weaken)
rocks:

• Construction activities - steepen


slope angles. remove support, add
loads. and change drainage regimes.

For a detailed discussion of the causes


and distribution of landslides in Califomia,
see the excellent series of articles in the
September through November. 1%7
issues of Mineral (nformation $eroice
(C\eveIand. 1967; Morton and Streitz,
1967a. 1967b).

LANDSUDE DAMAGES
AND DISASTERS

Every year that rainfall is 100 10 200


percent of nonnal. dramatic news of
"mudslides~ and evacuated or destroyed
homes reminds Californians they live in
a "landslide state.~ lhe relationship be-
tween financial losses for several landslide
disasters and excessively wet years dUring Photo 2. Destroyed homes and swimming pool on headscarp 01 rainstorm-triggered slump.
the past 40 years is shovm in F'l9ure 1. Encino, SOUIhern California, March 1978. Photo by F.H. Weoer, Jr.

CAUfOANIA GEOI..OGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


'"
records in the Los Angeles area. They GOALS AND OBJECTIVES OF the hazard. 2) commitment of local gov-
concluded, uUnder present conditions. it THE LANDSLIDE PROJECT ernment to share the costs, 3) existence
is estimated that losses due to landsliding of data, and 4) need for more infonnation
will total almost $10 billion in California The goals of the LHIP are to reduce on landslide hazards to support mitigation
between 1970 and the year 2000~ landslide hazards in order to prevenl or programs.
(Alfors and others, 1973). The annual loss reduce property losses in developing
would, accordingly, approach $33 mil- areas, and 10 improve public safety by To accomplish the task. LHIP geolo-
lion. This estimate was made with the identifying and delineating areas subject gists typically prepare a group of maps.
assumption that nothing would be done to the dangers of rapid slope failures, designated by LHIMft (Landslide Hazard
to reduce landslide hazards, such as estab- such as debris nOVJS and "mudslides.~ Identification Map number), consisting of
lishing and enforcing grading codes. It two to four plates. depending on local
appears that, when the landslide losses The objectives of the LHIP include slope conditions and adequacy of existing
along the stale's roads are included in 1) identifying and invenlorying existing geologic maps. These include:
estimates. Callfornia's losses are about landslides. deposits, and related slope-
$100 million annually (Brabb. 1989). failure features. 2) analyzing and evaluat- • Plate A - Relative Landslide
ing the relative landslide susceptibility of Susceptibility Map (interpretive.
DMG's Urban Geology Master Plan terrain subject to urbanization. 3) aiding symbolic) (Figure 2)
(Allors and others, 1973) concluded that local government and state agendes in
land·use planning and site evaluation of • Plate B - Landslides and Related
90 percent of the projected landslide Slope Features Map (inventory 01
losses could be prevented if steps such facilities. 4) providing infonnation used
for review of building-pennit applications, existing failures) (Figure 3)
as these VJere taken.
5) answering landslide hazard questions • Plate C - Geologic Map (optional)
• Map landslides and landslide-prone from the public and private sectors, and (displays rock units that affect slope
6) aSSisting public safety agencies by stability)
areas at 1:24.000 (1 inch - 2,000
feet) or larger scale. inspecting and assessing slope-failure
hazards in terrain affected by wildfires. • Plate 0 - Relative Debris-Row
intense rainstorms or earthquakes. Susceptibility Map (optional) (records
• l.!lse the planning process to guide propensity for dangerous, rapid fail-
development in those areas with the ures) (Figure 4)
fewest uncorrectable problems.
HIGHLIGHTS OF LANDSLIDE
HAZARD IDENTIFICATION ACT
Since the relative landslide susceptibil-
• Require developers to use engineer- ity of an area depends on severallactors.
ing geology meth<x:ls. Adds Chapter 7.7, DIVISIOn 2. Sec- the observational data recorded on Plates
tion 2670-2666 to the California B and C should pennit the map reader to
• Establish a grading division in local Public Resources Code follow the reasoning used in preparing the
government to enforce the grading susceptibility map. Furthermore, the map
ordinance (Chapter 70 of the Uni- Mandates establishment at a land- 01 landslides and related features docu-
fonn Building Code). slide Hazard IdentIficatIOn Program ments existing slope failures and serves as
within DMG
a guide for review of site-specilic reports
LANDSLIDE HAZARD when required by local building and safety
Includes·A mapping and technical
IDENTIFICATION ACT advisory program to assist local and departments that issue building permits.
state agencies in their land use and
Given the landsliding and associated permitting decisions in areas sub· The maps are generally produced at a
hazards in California, and stimulated by ject to landslide hazards." scale of 1,24,000. This scale is preferred
the dramatic 1982 Bay Area disaster, the by planners because it is compatible with
legislature passed the Landslide Hazard ReqUIres maps 1) show •...landslide other kinds of source data used in making
Identification Act. In the context of gener- hazards within urban and urban· land·use decisions. However, maps al
ally recognized landslide-hazard mitigation izing areas althe state. 2) •.. .iden· 1: 12,000 (1 inch ... 1,000 feet) have also
strategies such as those previously listed, tify landslide hazards and be at a
scale suitable lor local planning be€n prepared where landslide density or
the state's role in helping local govern- purposes: slope conditions justify it. Furthermore.
ment deal with landslide hazards should after the LHIP staff gained experience,
be in the fonn of mapping and advice it became clear that different and innova-
to planners. LANDSLIDE HAZARD tive approaches to mapping were desir-
IDENTIFICATION MAPS able to increase the area mapped or the
One important approach to mitigating rate of mapping, or to provide informa-
landslide hazards involves land-use plan- The primary activity of LHIP geolo- tion tailored to local government needs
ning. California requires that local govern- gists is to prepare maps of landslide haz- and concerns. Therefore. some of the
ments adopt a General Plan, which must ards in urban and urbanizing areas of the studies released or completed by geolo-
contain a Safety Element including rec- stale. The Landslide Act specifies land- gists in more recent years do not contain
ommendations for dealing with landslide slide hazard mapping priorities that renect maps typical of the earlier open-file
hazards. the I) criteria that address the severity of reports produced by the LHIP.

,,.. CAUfORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


u

,
u

, .

I
Scale: 1:24,000
o 0.5
I
I I I
o 0.5 1 Kilometer

Figure 2. Sample relative landslide susceptlbllity map. 4 " most susceptible; 3 " generally susceptible;
2" marginally susceptible: and I " least susceptible. Portion of LHIM 112. west-hair Newhall quadrangle,
Los Angeles County. Plate 2Al, From Trotman, 1986.

CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993 ,os


F
SYMBOLS
A- oertnlte landslide
B- Heodwol 01 slump Of block glide
C- Probable landslide
o- Questionable IondSltde
E- SmoU landSlide
F - Mulliple S/TlOlllOndslk:les
G - Earlhllow
H - EorthllOw complex
I - Smon earlhllow
J - Debfis llow
K - Debfls-llowamphitheater/siope
l - Soil creep


Figure 3 Sample landslides and related slope features map from northern Cahforma Portion of LHIM 11'13 south ollnlerslale BO, Cordelia·
Valllllo area. Solano and Napa counties. Plate 138 (scale 124,000). From Manson, 1988.

,,. CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBEAIOCTOBEA 1993


'pring",


A
u

Scale: 1:24,000
0.5
I
I I
0.5 1 Kilometer
A

FIQure 4. Sample relative debrls-!low susceptibility map. Compare with same area shown in Figure 2.
C = most suscepllble: B = marginally susceptible; and A '" least susceptible. PortIOn of LHIM #2. west-half
Newhall quadrangle, Los Angeles County. Plate 2A2. From Treiman. 1986.

CAliFORNIA GEOLOGV SEPTEMBERlQCTOBER t99J


Landslide Hazard • Released as Open-FIIe Reports

..... _
lhrough 1992
Identification Maps u<w
,,

........_, ..........,
....
"'
...............
W'2_~

....
.........."
P_ol o.tlk>_ eo-. ~
,•
---
EJ2v.v.w~

_____1
•, En_a.-....,
.."•
s.ru
Rwacho

Nl2o-~~
snF~c.......,
F. a.-ongIe

..........
"
.."". ~JoM HiII; ..... ell
Cor~lIIlI,o
v...... _VICltllly
Are.

lake AnOWheadJ9ig ae. laI<' ..... ",


lllI_21
M"
11917

..""
Clear lek' _ Vocntv
e...von
..
NI2 Blad< SlaI 00·19
.","
Quadrangle
V~ .. ftl F . ~lItlQIe$
Cac!'40"" and Vieini1y
ro NI2 CaIabasM Ouadrangle 8918
u..rmool Valley _ V""""Y
"" V*" Ai"
91.02

..
$OnI 00·17
C"V oll.lk~ 91-16
"
".""
~ SanV"*'l1 ~ e.-angIIf

3" EJ c.,on 0..-....,


l .........'8Jfon HoI Spnng$ 0uacIr......
9211
3

'"
....... ~a.-Ingle

.... """-
"'-"'~T"!N'l'''' LIl~ ....
112-12

... PrOJects In Progress or Initialed


ll'l1992

"""
................
• SEi.. _ ~ a . -
~p-~

32 3 """
~
San ........ e...-.~
T... ~ ' P _ ~
Elr_ V..,_W'2 w_
e.-a.-angIM
a.-.v-
• o...a~w San Diego e-vy

27 21 "
~ EJ2o.. . ~
" " I a.-&'>QIIea--NW $an o.cI<> Coony

sc
30
31

9
5
26
2
22 7 20

7
34
15 4
FtgUfe 5. Index map of landslide Hazard Identification Maps.
Numbers on map refer to LHIM numbers.
6
33 25

". CAUFOANIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


Since the Landslide Hazard Identifica- LANDSLIDE PROJECT ACTIVITIES quake landslide reconnaissance and map-
tion Act went into effect, 26 Landslide ping, 2) rainstoml-trigge:red landslide event
Hazard Identification Maps, ranging in In addition to preparing maps, LHIP response/evaluation, 3) evaluation of de-
area from 14 to 280 square miles (13 to geologists provide information to local. bris-flow potential in wildfire-bumed areas,
725 km2) and tota/ing 1,875 square miles state. and federal agencies, especially and 4) advice to the Governor's Office of
(4,856 km2j, have been published as during and fol!oYJing natural events that Emergency Services (DES), Federal Emer-
DMG Open-Rle Reports (Rgure 5)_ Maps trigger landslides. They also provide gency Management Agency (FEMA), and
of an additional 1,100 square miles information 10 the public. Examples of local government planning departments.
(2,849 km2) are being compiled_ LHIP activities include: 1) post-earth-

REFERENCES

A1fors, J.T" Burnett, J.L., and Gay, Jr., Creasey, C.L, 1988, Landslide damage: MOf1on, D.M., and Streitz, Robef1, 1967b,
T.E" 1973, Urban geology master plan A costly outcome of the storm in Elleo, Landslides, part 2: Mineral Information
lor california: Division of Mines and S.D. and Wieczorek, G.F., ed~ors, Sefvice, v. 20, no. II, p. 135-140.
Geology Bulletin 198, 112 p. Landslides, floods, and marine ellects Smith, T.C., and Hart, E.W.. 1982, land-
Brabb, E.E.. 1989, Landslides: Exteot and
01 the storm 01 January 3-5, 1982, in the slides and related storm damage
san Francisco Bay region, California: January, 1982, San Francisco Bay
economic significance in the Un~ed
U.S. Geological Survey Professional region: CALIFORNIA GEOLOGV,
States In Btabb, E.E. and Harrod,
Paper 1434, p. 195-203. v. 35, no. 7, p. 152.
B.L., editors, Landslides: Extent and
economic significance: Proceedings Manson, M.W., 1988. Landslide hazards
Treiman, JA. 1986. Landslide hazards
28th International Geological Congress in Cordelia-Vallejo area. Napa and n the west 1/2 of of the Newtlal1 quad-
Symposium on Landslides, washington Solano counties, california (land-
rangle, Los Angeles County, California
D.C., 17 July 1989: AA Balkema Pub- slide Hazard Identification Map No. 13): (landslide Hazard Identification
lishers, Rotterdam. p. 25-50. California Department of Conservation, Map No.2): California Department of
Division of Mines and Geology Conservation, Division of Mines and
Cleveland, G.B., 1967, Why landslides?:
Minerallnlormation 5eMce, v. 20, no. 9, OFR 88-22. Geology OFR 86-6.
p.l15-117. Morton, D.M, and Streitz, Robert, 1967a,
Landslides, part 1: Mineral Information
service, v. 20, no. 10, p. 123-129.

Desert plants bloomed profusely


after last winters rains. Photos by
C.L Pridmore.

CAUFOANIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBEA/OCTOBEA 1993 ",


DMG Landslide Publications (Exclusive of llilMs)
DMG reports and maps aTe indicated by initials: B ... Bulletin; SR ... Special Report; SP ... Special Publication: PR ... Preliminary Report: MS •
Map Sh~t: QFR .. Open-File Report: CG ... California Geology: and MIS ... Minerallnformalion Service. predecessor to eG. An asterisk (') indI-
cates an ool--of-print publication (see box below). CG and MIS lilies are included in the lists below. TItles and prices of other publications are in the
List of Publicotions Available from the Division oj Mines alld Geology, which can be ordered at no charge. DMG publications other than OFRs
can be ordered on the Publicalions Request Fonn on page 148 (altach list if IlCcessary). Order OFRs from Publications and Infonnation.
801 K Street, MS 14-33. Sacramento. CA 95814·3532.

ALAMEDA' Coastal Zone Geology Near Gualala, SAN MATEO"-Geologlc Hazards Along the
COLUSA-Landslide and Flood Potential California (CG February 1977); MS 9: Coast South of San Francisco (eG Febru-
Along Cadle Creek {eG May 1990} OFR 76-03, 76·04, 82-19, 83·S, 83·14, ary 1975): Progression Of Some Landslides
CONTRA COSTA-MS 16: PR 19 83·15,83·16,83-20,83·21,83-31,83-32, Along Coast Highway 1 Between Thornlon
DEL NORTE---OFR 81-01, 82-21, 83-04, 83·33,83·38,83-39,83·40,83-41,84-12, Beach and Mussel Rock, a Picture Story
83-18.83·19,84-07,84-08 84-13,84·14,84-17,84·18.84·19,84-20, (CG February 1975); Geology of Mussel
EL DORADO-1983 U,S. Highway 50 84-40, 84·41, 84·42, 84·43, 84·44, 84·4S, Rock Landslide (CG March 1987): MS 8
Landslide Near Whitehall, California 84·46,84·47,84-48 SANTA BARBARA-Sea Cliff ErOSion; A Major
(CG November 1987) MODOC-Surprise Valley Fault Dilemma (CG Augusll990): OFR 80·05
HUMBOLDT"-Geology 101' Timber Harvest (CG Det:embef t 974} SANTA CLARA"-MS 8: OFR 78·11, 78-12,
Planning, North Coastal California (CG MONO-$R 150 80·11,90·06; PR 17, 18: SP 104
September 1977); MS 31; OFA 80·09, MONTEREY"-Fire ~ Rain" MUdllows: BI9 SANTA CRUZO-----eoaSlline Erosion. Santa
82·20, 83·03. 83·06, 83·17, 83·22, 83·23, Sur, 1972 (CG June 1973): Landslide on Cruz County (CG Apnl 1979): Impact of
83·2S. 83·26. 84·09, 84-10, 84-11. 84-34, Stale Highway 1; Julia Pfeiffer-Bums Slale 1983 Storms on the Coastline, Northern
84-3S, 84·36, 84-37, 84-38, 84·39, 8S-01, Park JCG June 1984); OFR 77-12. 80-07 Monterey Bay (CG August 1983): Beatty
8S-02, 8S-03, 8S-04, 8S-0S, 8S-06 ORANGE"-Bluebird Canyon Landslide of Landslide (CG February 1989): Coastal
LAKE"-Lanclslide and Flood POlential Along October 2, 1978, Laguna Beach, Calilornia Landslides Caused by the October 17,
Cache Creek (CG May 1990); MS 9 (eG January 1979}, Slope Failures in 1989 Eanhquake (CG April 1990); Earth-
LOS ANGElES"-B 196: Seismically Triggered Orange County Due to 1978 Rains (CG quake Damage in Soquel Demonstration
landSlides Above San Fernando Valley September 1980): Landslide HazardS in Stale Forest (CG January 1991);
(CG April/May 1971): Slope Instabilily and California: History of Verde Canyon land- OFR 72-21, 84-06, 90-06; SP 104
Debris Flows. Los Angeles Area (CG Janu- slide-San C1emenle (CG AugusI1984); SONOMA"-$onoma Counly Hillslides (CG
ary 1979); AE,G. Building Code Review- OFR 79-04. 79-08. 83·34. 84-24, 84·27, June 1972); Geology and Slope Stablhly In
MudffowlDebris Flow Damage, February 84·28,84·57,84·58: PR 10; SR 98, 110. The Geysers Geothermal Aesources Area
1978 Storm -los Angeles Area (CG Ill, 126, 127 (CG July 1978): Blucher Valley Transta-
January 1979); MS lS, 27, 28, 30, 33; RIVERSIDE-B 178: MS 19 tional Landslide, Sebastopol (CG August
OFR 64-01, 66-01, 79-04, 79-12, 82-26, SAN BENITo-MS 5 1983): MS 9, 10. OFR 68·12, 79-15, 81·12;
83·03,83·16,83-24,84·01,8449,86·04: SAN BERNARDINO"-MS 1S: OFR 83-3; PR 16,20: SR 142
SR tOO, 15.2 SR 113 TRINITY-MS 12, 31
MARIN--B 202; MS 11; OFR 72-22, SAN DIEGO"-B 200; MS 29; OFR 68-IS, VENTURA"-Geology and Land Developmenl
76·02, n·1S, 84-22 82-12.83-3: SR 98 In Ventura Coonty (CG November 1974)'
MENDOCINO"-eoastal Zone Geology Near SAN FRANCISCO" Landslides in Ventura Avenue Oil Field
Mendocino, California (CG October 1976); SAN LUIS OBISPO"-OFR 80·0S, 80·06, (MIS May 1953): OFR 72-23,76-05,79·04,
78-17 83-16,84-01

"The following titles are out of print and not MENDQCINo-Geology and Slope Stabilily SANTA CLARA-Seismic Hazatds and Urban-
available for purchase. 01 the Fort Bragg Area (CG March 1986): ization in Santa Clara County (CG OClober
Engmeering Geology of The Geysers Ge0- 1975); Geology of the San Jose·Mount
ALAMEDA-Landslides and Related Storm thermal Resources Area; Lake, MendocIno, Hamilton Area, California (B 157): Poten~al
Damage, January 1982, San Francisco and Sonoma Counties, California (SR 122) Seismic Hazards in Santa Clara County,
Bay Region (CG July 1982) MQNTEREY-Marble Cone Rre...Effec! on California (SR 107): Studies 01 the San
HUMBOLDT--Geology 01 Eel River Valley Erosion (CG December 1977) Andreas FaUll Zone in Northern Ca~fornia
Area, Humboldt Coonly, California ORANGE--Geo·EnVlronmenlal Maps of (SR 140)
(B 164): Short R9COfd of a landSlide Orange Counly, Calilornla (PR 15); GeoI· SANTA CRUZ-$anta Cruz Mountain Study
(CG June 1972) ogy 01 Burruel Ridge, Northwestern Santa (CG JL:ne 1972); landslides and Related
LAKE-Engineering Geology or The Geysers Ana Mountains, California (SR 21) Storm Damage, January 1982, San
Geothermal Resoofces Area: lake, SAN BERNARDINQ---Geology 01 the San FranCISCO Bay Region (CG July 1982):
Menclo<:ino, and Sonoma Counties, Bernardino Mountains North of Big Love Creek landslide Disaster, January 5,
Calitornia (SR 122) Bear Lake, California (SR 65) 1982 (CG July 1982); Flooding and Slope
LOS ANGELE5--Geology and Mineral SAN DIEGQ--Sea·Cliff ErOSion at Sunsel Failure DUring the January 1982 Storm
Deposits 01 San Femando Quadrangle, Cliffs, $an Diego (CG February 1973) (CG July 1982)
Los Angeles, California (B 172) SAN FRANCISCO-landSlides and Related SONOMA-Landslides and Related Storm
MARIN--Geology of the Marin Headlands Storm Damage, January 1982. San Damage, January 1982, San Francisco
(CG April 1974): landslides and Related Francisco Bay Region (CG July 1982) Bay Region (CG July 1982): Engineering
Storm Damage, January 1982, San SAN LUIS OBISPo-Geology of lhe Arroyo Geology of The Geysers Geothermal
Francisco Bay Region (CG july 1982): Grande Quadrangle, Cahfornla (MS 24) Resource Area: Lake, Mendocino, and
Landslicfes of Southern Poinl Reyes SAN MATEO-Role of Geotechnical Consult· Sonoma Counties (SR 122)
National Seashore (MIS July 1969); Geol-
ogy and Geologic Hazards 01 the Novato
Area, Marin County, Calilornia IPR 21)
ants and Reviewers for the County 01 San
Mateo (CG Augus11975), Landslides and
Related Slorm Damage, January 1982,
San FranCISCO Bay Region (CG July 1982)
VENTURA-Geology and Mmeral Resources
Sludy 01 Southern Ventura County,
California (PR 14) -
CAUFOANIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTD8ER 1993
'"
PUZlLE
American Geologic Teaan.
of Foreign Origin
~ geologic .am in the lJriIBI_ origInllIod in _ ~ EnglllllSr='*lI ......... baders.lIIllI
trappers narr*1g an ' geograpt*: feature SOiI. . . .es boiiOutBI from -.adler ......... beta- they feud no
arpr<lIlriale wcnl in their IIDaIIdaoy a non-EngjIsh wcnl_ '*""'Ill in -1ocaI!I Geok9'" haw aclorI<d
wads from ""'" longo_lor _,"""" ft Is ooI",p'*'lI thal ""'" glodaIlIIllI_ from .....
guages 01 AIpne roorle. ""'" arid desert Ierms ... _ a Sronlsh.lIIllI ""'" "**'II boo 110m the
Cornish .......

-
--
3 8 I ••• lind . . . . . . . . .
....a •••• ~
7 Seo .,10 " ..

• Buiii*d"'" bIadl (OennM)

--
11 ~wdC:O'W . . . . ~
12. GbMng cbId ~*) C2 WOIdI}

11 A IPIIIII tal group ~

.-
14 ........ _~"**III
1& T~ ........ _ ... gIIlCiII

" ...... lIWc::lnIdIpi III ~ (GermwI)


22 ExIInItve ~ . . (FNnch)
23. GlIIdIr or hOle ~
24.QlKW (F~

--,
2&, Long d\IlIn of _ _ (MI*:)
28. Iron hi! (ComIIh)
28. SIIy (prObIbIy wtl_"1dtlIowl_mn) ~
30 DlMp era In. _ _ (FNnch)
31. "'WIndClw"In,...,.,.
(German)

-.
, - Rough'" (lIs 1I1an)

-7.c:.n.-_-_
2. EtOlllar'lll aI ~
3. SmII pUonc rocIl

. 0 - . -.... _ ,
5. All. . . . till (FNnm)
.. ~.,. group (AuIIIIn)

"a.Nc_"'~'111
,lL Low ai
_ _.. ~

13. Srnoclth . . . (I ,. III•• 19. Productol d ~


1$ Ic:a""~
... _ _ (NoI.. _ .
20. <MrIIruM CfNncI'4
21, CrplIII rodl C8IlIW' ~

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,.. 81M_ w 1IIInd MIl nIIIIn- 211. 01 1'111

CAUFORNIA GEOlOGY SEPTEMBERIOCTOBEFI 1993 ,.,


TFAOIER FFAnJRE

GEOLOGIC HAZARDS SLIDe SETS

Unique sets of 3Smm slides depicting


geologiC hazards throughout the workl
are available from the NalK>nal Geophysi-
cal Data Center (NGOC). These special
slide sets provide an affordable educa·
tional tool for students, scientists. and
f10Illcchnical adults.

Each slide set consists of 20 color


and/or block and white slides. Back·
ground material. dates. locations, and
descriptions of effects are induded

MISCELLANEOUS SUOE SETS


lBndsl_
Oeplcts diverse types of landslides
and mass wastll19 in the Uruted SCates.
Canada. Ausualia. Peru. and 5.wltzerland.
Of partlCUaT interest are 1I'leWS of the
famous 1903 rock slide at Frank.
Toe of skA'np.type landslide that destroyed home on Buena VISta Way. Laguna Beach.
Aberta. Canada. which COYefed the CaJdOff1la. March 12. 1993 (ThIS pholo nol part of any slide set) Photo by Slang r...
town in 2 minutes, and the 1970 earth-
quake-induced snowsIide that buried the
tQlU.o1lS of Yungay and Ramrahirca in EARTHQUAKES Oakland Bay Bridge and the Nimitz
Peru. (color 647·All-0(6) Freeway a-88O) resulting from the
Earthquake Damage - General October 1989 earthquake are included.
Tsunamis - General Illustrates effects caused by 11 earth- (b&w/color: 647-A 11-{)()4)
quakes in seven countries and four of the
Depicts advancing waves. harbor Earthquake Damage
United States. Pictures show surface fault-
damage. and structural damage from MexICO City. Mexico, September 1985
ing. landslides, soilliquefactlOO. and struc-
seven tsunamis since 1946 in the Pacific
tural damage. This set gives an overview Shows types of damaged buildings
region. 1ne set includes before-and'after and summary of earthquake effects. and major killds of structural failure,
vkMrs of Scotch Cap Ughthouse {the
1ooIo<,647-All-OOI) (color: 647-A 11-003)
Aleutian Islandsl. which was washed
away by a wave of more than 100 feet Earthquake Damage Earthquake Damage
(30 m). (b&w/color: 648-All-<X>1l San Franctsco, Cahlomia to Schools
April 18, 1906
Rebel Gobe Slides Nine: destNCliYe earthquakes in the
locludes a panorama of San Francisco United States and eight ea~ Ir'I
ConlalOS 14 global views of earth in
in flames a feu.r hours after the earth· other countries from 1886 to 1988 are
hjI coIof shaded relief. sha.vlng land and
quake tb/w: 647-Al1-O(2) depicted The seI graphically illustrates the
undersea terrain. The planet is seen from
danger maJOr earthc,.Jakes pose to schocX
vantage points over the poles and each
Earthquake Damage structures. (b&w/ooIor: 647-A11-<>OS)
major ocean and mass. Also included is
to Transportation Systems
a rectangular Mercator pro;eetion of the
Earthquake Damage
whoie earth. as......ell as displays of crustal Depicts earthquake damage to streets. Great Alaska Earthquake
plates and lheir relationship 10 world highways, bridges, overpasses. and rail- March 1964
seismic aetMty. The images are com- roads caused by 12 eal'1tq.Jakes in Guate-
puler-generated from a digital database
of oceanic: bathymetry and land topogra-
phy. (color: 931-Al1-oo1)
mala. Japan, Mexico, Annenia, and five
sites in the Uniled States, Views of struc-
tural damage to the San FranciscO""
Shows geologic: changes, damage to
structures. transportation systems, utilities,
and tsunami damage. Feafures the effects
-
CAUFORNIA GEOLOGV
'" SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993
teacher feature continued.. _
section of lhe Nimitz Freeway (1-880) Hawaii Volcanism: Impact on
of fOlJr major landslides in Anchorage where 41 deaths occurred the Environment
inclu::ling Fourth Avenue and Turnagain (color 647-AII-013)
Heights. (color: 647-Al1-007) l11ustrates impact on communities.
Earthquake Damage vegetation. marine life, roads, and coast-
Earthquake Damage Northern Iran, Engineering Aspects lines. Illustrates benefits of volcanism such
Southern California, 1979-1987 June 21, 1990 as geothennaJ poy.oer, increase in land
area of the islands, and opponunities for
Shows eanhquake damage from the Depicts damage resulting from inten- viewing and studying volcanism in relative
following events: Imperial Valley. 1979; sive ground motion and soilliquefaclion. safety, Inclu::les views of eruptions that
Westmorland, 1981: Palm Springs, It shows damage to buildings of various took place in the 19805 at Kilauea and
1986: and Whinier. 1987, Collapsed types, including unreinforced masonry, Mauna Loa. (color: 739-A 11-005)
buildings caused by the Whinier NarrOlAlS steel structures, and concrete buildings,
eanhquake are included. Damage to infrastructure is also shQ\IJTI. The Eruption of Mount Saint Helens.
(color: 647-A 11-008) (color: 647-AI1-014) May 1980

Earthquake Damage VOLCANOES Includes pre-May 18th (1980) erup-


Central California. 1980-1984 tions. the major May 18th eruption, and
Volcanoes in Eruption. Set I devastation caused by the major eruption.
ShcMrs eanhquake damage from the Shows effects of the eruption including
follovJing events: Uvennore. 1980: Depicts explosive eruptions. lava the blast area. mud flows, ash fall, and
Coalinga. 1983: and Morgan Hill. 1984. fountains and flQ\AlS. Sleam eruptions. altered terrain.
Collapsed buildings in Coalinga's doum- and fissure eruptions from 19 volcanoes (color: 739·A 11-004)
tQ\IJTI are included, in 13 countries. Volcano types include
(color: 647-A11-009) Slrato. cinder cone, complex. fissure vent, Hawaii Volcanism: lava Forms
lava dome. shield. and island·fonning.
Views of Kilauea's fire fountains, a night Includes views of lava fountains. lakes,
Earthquake Damage
eruption of Paricutin. and the 1980 erup- cascades, flows. spatter. and lava entry
The Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic,
tion cloud of SI. Helens are included, into the sea from eruptions occurring in
December 1988
(b&w/coIor: 739-A 11-001) the last 30 years. (color: 739-A 11-006)
Includes damage photographs taken in
and around the devastated cities of Spitak Volcanoes in Eruption, Set II Mount Pinatubo; the June 1991
and Leninakan where there were 25,000 Eruptions
deaths. Illustrates vulnerable structural Depicts ash clouds. fire fountains,
lava flows, spaller cones, glowing ShovJs the early stages of the eruption
types, Shows that Inadequate building
avalanches, and steam eruptions from phase, the cataclysmic eruption of June
construction combined with shaking from
18 vokanoes in 13 countries. Volcano 15. and its aftelTT\3th. Subsequent calami-
a moderate eanhquake can result in high
types include: strata, cinder cone. basal- ties caused by the ash, pyroclastic flows.
death tolls and tremendous economic
tic shield. complex, and island-forming. mud flOVJS. and flooding are also shown.
loss, (color: 647-A11-011l
Highlights include a night exposure of (color: 739·A 11-007)
Earthquake Damage electrical discharge accompanying an
eruption, and an eyewitness drawing of SOON TO BE RELEASED
Lorna Prieta, October 1989
Set 1- Loma Prieta Vicinity the famous eruption of Krakatau in • The Crater Peak (M!. Spur)
1883. (Slides in this set do not duplicate Alaska Eruptions of 1992
Includes damage in Boulder Creek. those In Set I. however several of the
Aptos. Los Gatos, San Jose. Santa Cruz, same volcanoes are represented in both • Environmental Hazards and
Scott's Valley, and Watsonville. The slides sets.) (b&:w/color: 739-A11-003) Mud Volcanoes in Romania
depict earth cracks and structural damage • Cape Mendocino Earthquakes
to homes in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Volcanic Rocks and Features of April 25 and 26. 1992
(color: 647-Al1·.Ql2)
lIIustrates eruption products and
Earthquake Damage features resulting from volcanism in The slides arc $30.00 per set except
Loma Prieta, October 1989 Australia. the Canary Islands. New for the Relief Globe Slides, which are
Zealand. Scotland. and the United States. $45 per set All orders musl be prepaid.
Set II - San Francisco and Oakland
Examples of lava types, ash, cinders. For more Information or 10 ploce an
Highlights the damage in the Marina bombs, necks. dikes, and siUs. Aerial order, conracl:
District of San Francisco. The set also views of Devils TOUIeT, Wyoming. and
includes photographs of the damaged Ship Rock. New Mexico, landmark volca- National Geophysical Data Center
325 Broadway, E/GC 1, Department 897

-.
bui\mngln"1MClmI~.h()( Market Street nic neck remnants. and Diamond Head.
Boulder, CO 80303-3326
where five deaths occurred. the now famous tuff cone on the island of Oahu. '8' (303)497-6277 or (303)497-6419
famous damage to the San Francisco- are of special interest. FAX (303) 497-6513
Oakland Bay Bridge, and the Cypress (color: 739-A 11·002)

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993
CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY
'"
Coastal Studies tive discussion outlines the many variables
that cannot be included in such theory.
UVING wm; TI-lE CAUFORNIA This is intended to present a word of
COAST. Edited by Gary Griggs and warning against using the theoretical
Lauret Savoy. 1985. Duke University approach without due thought for the
Press, Box 90660, Durham, NC 27708- problems as a whole. There are many
0660.(9191687·3600.394 p. $18.95, variables in nature and W€ should view
soft cover, $37.00 hard cover. coastal problems with this in mind.
Structures and/or utilities are threat- The book covers the traditional topics
ened along 125 miles of er<Xling coast- of wave motion, beach processes, coastal
Landslides line, and unplanned development contin- erosion, and coastal structures but also
LANDSUDfS/lANDSUDE MmGA- ues on scattered stretches. The editors describes some of the newer techniques
nON. Reviev.>s in Engineering Geology collected discussions of coastal processes, such as the use of geotextiles. The last
VoIwne lX. Edited by James E. Slosson, problems, damage mitigation, and plan- chapter discusses the direction of coastal
Arthur G. Keene, and Jeffrey A. Johnson. ning and regulation SO Californians could engineering. The lext presents many new
1993. The Geological Society of make infOl1T'led de<:isions about building, concepts which are the result of research
America, loc.. P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, buying, and living on the coast. The done from the rnid-1970s to the present.
CO 80301. (800) 472-1988.120 p. 1, 110-mile coast is evaluated in 12 sec- By bringing both new and old concepts
$45.00 iocluding shipping and handling tions, with maps delineating hazardous together in one volume. the book is both
(prepa~nt required). hard cover. areas and erosion rates. References and an update and a review.
sources of coastal infonnation are listed
This volume is a collection of case in appendices. Arid Lands
histories of landslides and legal cases
affecting engineering geology. Subjects COASTAL STABIUZAllON: [nnova- DESERTS AS DUMPS?: The Disposal of
include compound landslides, surficial tive Concepts. By Richard Silvester Hazardous Materials in Arid Ecosystems.
slope failures in residential areas, the and John R.C. Hsu. 1993. Prentice-Hall, Edited by Charles C. Reith and Bruce
coocept of ~reasonable care, ~ and Inc., Order Processing Center, P.O. Box M. Thomson. 1992. University of New
property evaluations and treatments. 11073, Des Moines, 1A 50381-1073. Mexico Press, 1720 Lomas Boulevard
Pariicular landslides studied include (515) 284-6751. 578 p. $%.00, hard N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87131-1591.
the Mameyes (Puerto Rico, 1985). (505) 277·4810. 330 p. $29.95 soft
Topanga (California, 1978). Abalone cover; $39.95 hard cover.
Cove (California. 1974, 1978), and Coastal stabilization involves a knowl-
Thistle (Utah, 1983). One paper covers edge of fluid mechanics, wave theory. Waste accumulation is a global
recent developments in mitigation tech- sediment characteristics, and the change- problem, and the improper disposal of
niques; otners address mitigation using ability of the sea. This book presents the hazardous materials is a threat 10 public
horizontal drains (Padfic Palisades, various theories involved in longshore health and environmental quality. The
Califomia) and ground-water disposal drift and associated fluid motions. Despite effective, safe, and pennanent isolation
(Palos Verdes Peninsula, California). the mathematical sophistication, descrip- of wastes in arid lands is addressed in this

This slope in Agoura Hills,


California. was covered with
plastic sheeting in an effort
to protect homes Irom further
slumping. Photo by Siang
Tan.

'" CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


more prospects... I They cover familiar topics such as irriga-
tion and water storage as well as lesser
knoum topics such as desalinization and
many visible light and SEM photographs,
line drawings. tables. and 56 color photo-
graphs. 11 is written for the serious mineral
volume It is the first multidisciplinary cloud seeding. collector.
exploration to ascertain if deserts are
uniquely suited to be chemical or radiO- Many case histories from the Middle Finding zeolite information has alwaY'S
active waste sites. East are given. and although not always been diffkult. Old publications are hard to
directly applkable to the United States. obtain and lack information on new zeo-
they have useful aspects. The authors lite species and localities. Most new infor-
The essaY'S in this volume are the first
scientific recognition that hazardous state that the key to success is nexibility, mation is in technical publications and in
wastes may be more secure in the desen and throughout the book they retum to languages other than English.
than anywhere else. They also posit that the notjon that successful adaptations in
intensive research in geology, engineer- arkllards are characterized by an appre- Zeolites 0/ the World fills the gap
ing. and biology must accompany site
ciation of the vagaries of the natural by describing 4 1 zeolite species. 1he
selection to ensure that the facility is environment. discussion of each species includes;
safely designed and operated. chemical formula, type locality, nomen-
Depositional Systems clature. structure. phY'Sical propenies.
Deserts as Dumps? is divided into optical propenies, morphology (including
DEPOsmONAL SYSTEMS; An Intro- crystal drawings). chemical composition,
two sections. The first sets forth basic duction to Sedimentology and Stratigra-
science and engineering principles identification hints, species-specific clean-
phy. By Richard A. Davis. Jr. 1992. ing, origin, occurrence, and worlch.vide
involved in waste management: the Prentice-Hall, Inc., Order Processing
second presents case histories of three localities. Also included is a list of zeolite
Center. P.O. Box 11073. Des Moines. IA synonyms and an outstanding reference
hazardous waste projects in arid lands: 50381-1073. (515) 284-6751. 604 p.
I) near-surface disposal in Beatty, section containing over 1.000 publica-
$58.67. hard CO\lCl. tions. Review by Mel Stinson.
Nevada: 2) the cleanup of uranium mill
tailings: and 3) the proposed deep-geo- This textbook on sedimentation
logic disJX)S<ll of transuranic waste near and stratigraphy differs from the older GEMMOLOGY. By Peter G. Reac!.
Carlsbad. New Mexico. standard texts in that it emphasizes the 1991. ButteTWOnh-Heinemann Ud..
dynamics of depositional environments 80 Montvale Avenue, Stoneham, MA
WATER RESOURCES IN THE ARID and their analogs in the rock record. 02180.18001366-2665.358 p. $67.95.
REALM. By Oive Agnew and Ewan A depositional system is an assemblage hard cover.
Anderson. 1992. Routledge, 29 West of process-relaled sedimentary materials
35th Street. New York, NY 1000 l. that includes numerous sedimenta'Y envi- Gemmology is an authoritative guide that
(515) 284-6751. 329 p. United States: ronments. Each environment is charac- closely follo.vs the syllabi for Greal
$29.95. soft cover: $72.50. hard cover. terized by its 0UIIl sediments, fauna. and Britain's Gemmological Association's
Canada; $37.50, soft cover: $90.95, flora as well as the processes to which Prellmina'Yand Diploma courses. Sub-
hard cover. they are sub;ected. Each depositional jects include gemstone occurrence, chemi-
system is therefore made up of a group cal composition. phY'SicaI and optical
Population grOVJlh. industrialization, of genetically related rock types. characteristics. enhancement. and fash-
environmental mismanagement, and ioning. Synthetk gemstones, gemstone
consequent land degradation have led to 1he book is well iUustrated VJith line simulants, and organic gem materials
droughts. poveny. and famine of such draVJings and photographs. A suggested are also covered. In addition, there is
magnitude that the need for space, food, reading list is presented at the end of each a chapter on the hand lens. microscope,
and natural resources has become the chapter, and extensive references and and Chelsea fUter.
most critical issue in global management. glossary are provided.
Nowhere is crisis more apparent than in ROCKS AND MINfRAlS. By Joel
arid lands. In this third of the world. Gems and Minerals Arem. 1991. Geoscience Press, Inc.,
population has more than doubled in two 12629 N. Tatum BM:I. Suite 201.
decades and poverty and human suffer- ZEOlITES OF n;E WORLD. By RlXiy Phoen~. AZ. 85032.16021 953-2330.
ing are endemic. In these diverse areas W. Tschemkh. 1992. Geoscience Press, 160 p. $8.95. soft cover.
water resources provide the key to c(:o- Inc" 12629 N. Tatum Blvd" Suite 201.
nomic and environmental development. Phoenix, AZ 85032. (602) 953-2330. The book is a brief but useful color
563 p. $84.95. hard cover. photographic guide providing basic infor-
Written by an applied climatologist mation on rocks and minerals in one
and a hydro-geomorphologist. this book Zeolites 0/ the World is an impressive easy-to-use volume. Beginners and collec-
is an exceflent collection of the tech- book. Tscnernich is a zeolite specialist tors alike VJililearn about the composition.

- niques used and problems faced in the


Middle East arx:l Australia. The chapters
on enhancing water supplies are espe-
cially applicable in the American West.
who has studied occurrences and collec-
tions workhvide and published numerous
technical papers. The book is beautifully
illustrated with over 600 figures including
structure, and properties of rocks and
minerals. More than 200 color photo-
graphs revealing the intrinsic beauty of
these geological formations are included.

CAUFORNIA GEOlOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993 ,os


NEW AND REVISED OffiCIAL MAPS OF
SPECIAL SnJDIES ZONES OF JULy 1,1993
Supplement 1 10 DMG Special Publication 42
1992 Edition
Official Maps issued July 1, 1993
(map numbers keyed 10 index map):
1. Mark West Springs
2. MI. George
3 Cordelia

. \ ' ... ,
) ...... ,
'~;..:.
"
' ,-
o 4, Fairfield South

" >',
o 5, Vine Hill (formerlv Port Chicago)

~
.r-_ .r "-\ t::,'
• - . ~~",'" ,-..... • 6, Walnut Creek
. . ,~' \ •.• '1.~---'..! " ...... It -,)0.. • 7, Clayton
.. "E!..,····r; ---. ,.,.,...
.. ' . . ./, .....,\"
,'. o B, Landers

'; """-",-/','r'
,.~_~--- ~-
9, Yucca Valley Nonh

>
~$.'
o
'. "2" I.~ ...i .,.J ,', - '- '10. Yucca Valley South
11\ '--" \_• ·::....)f..
~ ...,. ,.1.. !~1
4 ·.r·.r· ,..,," .,'.' \,

-F '.• ,- / ••••••• ,"'-, '-'" lL Joshua Tree South

• Revised zone map

Cilies and counties affected by


new or revised Special Studies
Zones shown on Official Maps
ofJu/y I, 1993:

Cities Counties
Benicia Contra Costa
Concord Riverside
Fairfield San Bernardino
Walnut Creek Solano
n' Yucca VaHey Sonoma

WlTHDRAWN SPEClAL
STUDIES ZONES MAPS
Ollicial Maps of Special
Studies Zones listed below are
,- withdrawn effective July 1. 1993
(map letters keyed to index map).
A. Antioch South
B. Antioch North

Special Studies Zones shown


on these mllps no longer llffect
the city of Antioch llnd the
,,
county of Com.., Costa.
\.---- .-_:.. 1_--•• -··-"_·'
The Official Maps of new and revised Special Studies Zones are issued pursuant to the Alquist-Priolo Special Studies Zones Act and are effee·
live July I. 1993. Revised maps supersede earlier Official Maps.
Review copies of these maps are in the offices of the affeeted cities and counties. and at the DMG offices listed. Copies may be purchased from
Blue Print Service Company, 1147 Mission Street. San Francisco, CA 94103. (415) 512·6550.
For information on Official Maps of Special Studies Zones previously issued. and for provisions of the Alquist·Priolo Special Studies Zones Act.
see DMG Special Publication 42. ~Fault-Rupture Hazard Zones in California." [t is available from DMG. P.O. Box 2980, Socramlm\o. C,b., 95814
for $3.00 including tax and shipping.

Publications and Information Office


801 K SlIeet, MS 14-33
Sacramento. CA 95814·3532
(916) 445·5716
Bay Area Regional OfIice
185 Berry Street, SUite 3600
San FWlCisco. CA 94107
(415) 904·7707
Southern Catirornia Regional Office
107 South Broadway, Room t065
Los Angeles, CA 90012
(213) 620·3560
-
'" CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBERfOCTOBER 1993
MINING lATIN AMERICA Solution to crossword puzzle on page 141
Challenges in the Mining Industry
May 10-14. 1994 -Sanliago de Chile

1he Institution of Mining and Metallurgy. the lnsliluto de Ingenieros


de Minas de Chile. the Sodedad Nacional de Mineria. and Mineria
Chilena y Latinomineria will host this international conference.
Topics will include:

• Exploration • Rotation
• Underground and opencasl • Refining and smelting
mining • Marketing
• Crushing. conveying, arKl dump • Project financing
~YOU' • Technical and social
• Leaching and solvent extraction tours will also be offered.

For more information. contact:

The Institution of Mining and Metallurgy


44 Portland Place
London Wl N 4BR
England
1l" 011 4471 580 3802 FAX 011 44 71 436 5368

I------------------------~--
MINING 94 I CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY
I Subscription and Change of Address Fonn
l.ltemalional Mining Exhibition
I NAME (Please prinl or type) _
Birmingham. UK I STREET ~ _
May 23·26. J 994
I CITV STATE "P _
All aspects of deep arKl surface
mineral and melal mining, and the
area of processing, refining, and con-
II 0 I y•. $1000
(6 issues) o 2 yrs $19.00
(12 issues) o 3 yrs. $28.00
(18 ISsues)
version IAlill be CO\lered in this exhibi- I SOOscrlpllOll rates Include posrage anct sales tillr
tion sponsored by the Association 01
10
:0
NEW SUBSCRIPTION: Allow 60 days for delivery ollirst ISSue.
British Mining Equipment Companies.
For more information. contact: RENEWAL: To receive your mag<lZlne Without interruptioo, seod in renewal
60 days belore the expuatiOl'l dale on the address label. (Example'
Richard West EXP9506 means that the subscnptlOn expires on receJpt 01 May/June
28 Church Street 1995 issue.) Please anach an address labellrom a recenllSSue
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I
CORRECTION: I
March/April 1993, page 42
I
ATTACH lABEL
The Quartz Hill veins are associ- I
ated with a major transcrustal fault I
(the Soap Cr~k Ridge Faultl. nOI
a transcurrent fault. Its dip is shallow
I
and to the east and mineralization is II 0 ADDRESS CHANGE: Send a recent address label and your new address.
Allow 60 days to renact address change.
in the footwall block (Elder. Don. and
Cashman. S.M" 1992. Tectonic I A CHECK OR MONEY ORDER MUST ACCOMPANY THIS ORDER. All non·U S orders must be paid
Control and RuK! Evolution in the I Wllh an Inlemaloonal money order or draft payable In U S dollars and made OVIIO DIVISION Of MINES
AND GEOLOGY 5end aU orders and/or address ctlange 10,
Quartz Hill. California. Lode Gok:I
Deposits: Economic Geology. v. 87.
I "'J' DIVISION Of MINES AND GEOLOGY
I A P 0 Bo~ 2980,
p.1795-1812). L ~~~~~~~~ _

CAUFORNIA GeOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 199:1


'"
Prospecting in Areas of Extractive Industry Geology '94
Glaciated Terrain Sheffield. England - April 17·20. 1994
September 5-7. 1994
5t Petersburg. Russia This conlerenr::e. sp:msored by the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy and the
Geological Society. will have technical sessions as well as field tTips. Planned
This conference is sponsored by the
topics are:
Institution of Mining and Metallurgy. It will
be held at the 51. Petersburg's Mining [nsti- • Planning • Super quanies
tute. which was founded in 1773. Topics •
• Land, mineral, and waste owner- Future development ot mineral
will include: Coasts in areas of glaciated ship and rights resources
terrain: diamond exploration; geochemistry:
applied geophysics: exploration planning
and the environment: permafrost mapping:


Legislation
Pro,iect evaluation
·• Advances in extractive techniques
Transportation and minerals

remote sensing; data processing. Field trips


• Computer design applications handling

to the Kola Peninsula. the Arkhangelsk area. • Environmental monitoring and • Landfill and other aspects of
control restoration
and the 51 Petersburg area will be offered.
For more infonnation, contact
For more information. contact:
The Conference Office
The Conlerence Office
The Ins~tullOn 01 Mlnmg and Metallurgy
The InstitutiOn 01 Mming and Metallurgy
44 Portland Place
44 Portland Place
LondonW1N4BR
LondonW1N4BR
England
'B' 011 44 71 580 3802 England
FAX 011 4471 436 5388 'B' 011 4471 5803802 FAX 011 4471 4365388

~- - - - - DIVISION OF-MIN--'ES=AN-=O=G-=E=-O=W=Gy=====i:;-1 --;=::;D;;M;G~Op~:::"",= ..:;FiIe;;=~


Publications Request Form Report Release
Number 01 copIeS PrICes ,nclude postage 1
and sales taJl. 1
GEOLOGY OF THE HOWSTFR AND
MAPS
I SAN FEUPE QUADRANGLES. SAN
"'003 counlles.
Geology at the Mt Boardman [151 quadrangle, Santa
Cal1fomia (scale 162.500) 1964
C~ra and Stanislaus
S500 I BENITO. SANTA CU\RA AND
Geology of the Redding [7.5'] quadrangle. ShaSla County. Cahfom;a MONTEREY COUNllES, CAUFORNIA
(scale t24.000) 1965 SSOO 1 DMGOFR 93-01. ByT.H, Rogers, 1993.
"SOO5 Geology ollhe western Vallecitos Synchne, San BeMO County. California I $10.00.
(scale 1:3t.25O) 1~ $500 1
"SOOS Geology ollhe Palo Alto quadrangle. Santa Clara and San Mateo counties. The study investigates the geology
California (scale. 162,5(0) 1966 $5001 and mineral resources 01 the Hollister
"S009 Geology of the Kelseyville 1151 quadrangle, Lake, Mendocino, and Sonoma
counties, California (scale 162.5(0). 1968 5500 I and San Felipe quadrangles. Emphasis is
placed on delineating landslides and the
MS010 Geology of the Lakepon It 51 quadrangle, Lake County, California
(scale. 162.500). 1967 .S5.00
II struclural relationship between the
MS011 Geology of a poflion ot western Mann County, Cal,fornla CalalK'ras and San Andreas fault zones,
(scale 148,000).1969 S500 I
MS012 0'
Geology tile southeast quaner of the Tnn~y Lake 1151 quadrangle.
Trinity County. California (scale 1:24.000).1969 SSOO 1
The study area is approximately tOO miles
southeast of San Francisco and extends
MS022 Geology of lhe Manerhorn Peak 1151 quadrangle, Mono and Tuolumne over parts of the Gabilan-Santa Cruz Moon·
counlOes. California (scale 1 48.000) 1975 $6,00 1
I tains. the Diablo Range, and the inteTVening
MS031 Geology 01 the WilloW Creek 1751 quadrangle, Humboldt and Trinity Hollister Valley.
counlles. California (scale: 1 62.5(0), t978 $700 I
MSOJ2 Geology of the Fallen leaf Lake 115'1 quadrangle, EI Dorado COI.lnty. Reference copies of DMG OFR 93-01
Cal~ornla (scale' 1:62,5(0). 1983 $9.00 I are available at all three DMG offices. It may
CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY (and Mlnerallnlo.malion Service) I be purchased at the Sacramento and San
Francisco offices. In addition, the Sacra-
__ Back Issue Ispe<:1fy month and year) $2.00 1
mento ollice offers prepaid mail order sales.
OTHER I Publications and Information Office
Ust ot Ava,labie PubilCahorls Free 1
801 KStreet,14thFloor,MS 14-33
AMOUNT ENCLOSED $~ I Sacramento. CA 95814·3532

A CHECK OR MONEY ORDER MUST ACCOMPANY THIS ORDER. All non·US oroors must be paid
I (9\6) 445-5716

WIth an Intemallonal money order or drah payable in US dollars and made out to DIVISION OF MINES I Bay Area Regional Office
AND GEOLOGY Send order to DIVISION OF MINES AND GEOLOGY. P 0 Bo~ 2980. sacramento. I 185 Berry Street, SUite 3600
Caj~omia 95812·2980 San Francisco, CA 94107
NAME I (415) 904·7707

STREET 1 Southern California Regional Office


107 South Broadway, Room 1065
CITY
- - - - - - - -STATE ZIP
--.J1 Los Angeles, CA 90012-4402
(213) 620-3560

CAUFDRNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER,lOCTOBER 1993


'"
The follow1I19 ISSUes of CALIFORNIA Composites. New Uses oflndusfrial December 1988-Geology of Del Norte
GEOLOGY can be purdwsed for $2.00 Minerals and Siskiyou Counties and AdJacenl
each (the order form on page 148 may July 1987 ForenSIc Geology and a PQr110ns of Humboldt. Shasta, and TIIOlIy
be uS€d) Colusa County Murder, Pothole Dome_ Counltes; Ice Age Geomorphology 10 the
December 1983 -Geology_of the Santa Where Waler Flowed Uphill, Tuolumne Klamath Mountains; New Model for the
Rosa Quadrangle; Cahfornla"s Ice Age County. legislative History of CallfofOl3 Formation of Myrmekite: A Mystery Solved
Lost The Palisade Glacier, tnyo County: Coastal Lands: Mining Crossword Puzzle: Near Temecula, RiverSide County, Califor-
China's ·San Andreas' Fault The Tanlu careers In Geology- Geoscience Posi- nia; Index to Volume 41
Fault System, Shantung and Anhui Prov- hons In State Civil SeNIce February 1989-The Grandeur of Con·
Inces; Index to Volume 36 August 1987-A Thumbnail Sketch: erete-Part II; Beally Landslide, santa
May 1984-CoUr1right IntrUSive Zone, Callfornla's Marine Geology: Scripps Cruz Counly, CaliforOia
Sierra NatIOnal Forest Fresno County; InstllU\loo: Eight Decades of Research; March 1989 -Medicine Lake Highland
Index to Graduate Theses and Disser1a- The Galapagos Islands, Province of September 1988 Eanhquake Swarm,
tlons on California Geology 1979 through Ecuador, Careers In Geology (Manne Siskiyou County; Or'9ln of the Isabella
1982 Geologist) Pluton and Its Enclaves. Kern County,
October 1984-1983 Mining ReView, September 1987 Geographic Names in California: Parkfield Strong·Mohon Array,
Goldbelt Springs Chrysotile Asbestos California: HistorIC Glacier FluctuatiOns Monterey and San LUIS Obispo Counties
DepoSIt. Death Valley. Inyo County; al Mount Shasta Siskiyou County: Mount July 1989-Ancestral Klamath RIver
Gold MIning Landscapes of the West Shasta -Challenge 01 the Mountain: Deposits at Gold Bluffs, Prairie Creek
January 1985 -Gold Districts of Califor- TectoniC Evolution of the Southern Redwoods Stale Park, Humboldt County,
nia-An Update; Recent Mining AcliVltles Panamint Range, Inyo and San Bernar- Cahfornia; Scenic Resources of Prairie
in California; MIOIng and Prospec1ing for dino CounlJes Creek, Redwoods State Park. Humboldl
Gold ,n the 1890s Excerpts from Frank November 1987 1983 U S HIghway 50 County, CaliforOla: California State Mining
Noms' McTeague; Origin of the MISSion landslide Near WMehall. California, EI and Mineral Museum; Chestermanlte'
VieJO Clay DepoSit, San Juan Capistrano, Dorado Counly; A Century of Earthquake A New Mineral, Fresno County, California:
Orange County Records, 1887-1987. Terraces, Tilting, The 15 Most SlQnlfiCant Eanhquakes 10
and Topography 01 Cordell Bank U.S. History: First Diamond Find in Califor-
February 1985--Hlstory of MIning: Provi· nia-When and Where?
dence Mountalns. San Bernardino County; January 1988---Elemental Analyses of
Mitchell Caverns Natural PreseNe in the Mica Resources in CalifornlCl: Gold Miners November 1989 -Deep SprlOgs Fault,
Providence Mountains State Recreahon from South AmerICa "'We Were 4gers~­ Inyo County, California An Example of
Area, San Bernardino County; Eanhquake Emergency Planning for Flood Hazards the Use of Relatlve·Datlng Techniques:
Damage in Ihe Sacramento-San Joaquin Ar1hur A Wilson Quarry: Where Nature
February 1988 -Ground Shaking and
Della, Sacramento and San JoaqUin Gives Man a Break, San Benito County
Engineering Studies Near the san
Counties Andreas Faull Zone, Parkfield, California: December 1989----loma Prieta Eanh·
February 1987-Rock Stripes on SIerra Japan's Ear1hquake Warning System: quake. OcIober 17, 1989, Santa Cruz
Nevada Foothills, Fresno and Tulare Should It Be Impor1ed 10 California?; An County, California: Effects 01 the Loma
Counties; Geology of an Accreted Slab in EvaluatlOO of the Anlmal·Behavior Theory Priela Ear1hquake, October 17, 1989.
Franciscan Complex, Redwood National for Earthquake PredlCltOn: Earthquakes San Francisco Bay Area: EnVIronmental
Park, Del None Counly: Using Geologic Strike Imperial Valley in ·Superstitlon Hills and Public Health Issues Related to the
Knowledge for the Public Welfare Sequenca- November 23-24,1987 Disposal of Non-Fuel MIning Wastes:
selected Reading ust Earthquakes and
March 1987 Mother Lode Gold Mines: May 1988-lchthyosaurs of CahforOla,
Related Faults in California
Jackson-Plymouth District, Amador Coun- Nevada, and Oregon: 1987 Annual
ty; Geology of Mussel Rock Landslide, Repor1: Slate Mining and Geology Board: February 1990----A GeologICal Journey
San Mateo County; Careers In Geology Geomorphology of Upper Palm Wash. Through Red Rock Canyon State Park
[Exploration Geophysicist, Geochronology, Anza Borrego Deser1, California. San and the EI Paso Mountains, Kern County,
Hydrology] Diego and Imperial Counties, Legend California. Strong Motion Records: Octo·
of Ihe Geysers ber '7, 1989 Earthquake [a review 01
April 1987-Vacavllle-Winters Eanh-
Callfornl3 Slrong Mollon Instrumentation
quakes. 1892, Solano and Yolo CountIes: June 1988--Applicatlon of Remole Sens-
Program Repon No OSMS 89-06}; Volca-
1892 VacaVille-Winters Ear1hquake and ing to California's Geology; Geologists of
OIC Hazards In California la review 01
1983 Coalinga Earthquake; Mesolhermal Californl3 Series Mason Lowell Hill;
US GeologICal SUNey Bulletin 1847];
Gold Mlneralizallon: Skidoo-Del Nor1e Fulgurlle In the Sierra Nevada
Sea Floor Tool; California Geology: A
Mines, Death Valley, Inyo County November 1988 Paleomagnetism of Resource lor Teachers
May 1987-ln search of the Abrams Post the Zuma VoICSOlCS, POint Dume, Los
April 199O-Coaslal Landslides Caused
OffICe, Trintly Counly; Gold Camps Angeles County, California; GeologIC
by the Oclober 17, 1989 Eanhquake,
of Fresno County; Geology and Palynol. Walkabout in Australia: Volcanic Hazards
Santa Cruz Counly, california; Cactus
ogy: Del Puerto Canyon, Stamslaus at Mount Shasta; Sedimentology of the
Gold Mine, Kern County, California:
County: Careers in Geology [Astrogeol- Montgomery Creek Formahon, Shasta
Earthquake Preparedness Education
ogy], GeologiC Crossword Puzzle; County, California

CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


'"
Mining operations were conducted
somewhat dlHerently in 15th century Italy...

A 15th CENruRY MIMNG LEASE

[S;ma-Apnll,1445/

&jOrtyou, mognijic(m andpownful /ords. our most parrimlar /ords.


pmnisillg tlx humbk rrrommnuiations. (tc.

It is rtlaud with du~ revafflC( by your mort/aithfill smHmts. Vitak. J(}/J of


Maestro Aikgro of Imola ... and Strfil1l0 di Giol.·mmi ofRagusa. thllt tiNy
hal)( Ixord through "porr that in some parts ofyour district tlJt'1T art emain
motmtains which hal/( vtim ofrvny kind ofmaal; andfOr that rtason tlJrY
hal/( come to your city and wish to mine in said mountains. TINy would like
to ask by singulargrau [that is. by a gram rtSmJ«1 txclusil/(/y to thmt] to Ix
allo~d to mint in t!Jt tnTitory ofMomitri, that is. in tlJf viliAgt of
BocrhrggiawlO and in the viliAge ofRorcastrada, with tlNK pacts. conditions.
andproadum: that wlJt'rt t/xy /xgin to mine no otlm- pnson Ix allol«d to
min~ within a milLftom tlJ(m fOr a pmod oftwnlty-fil/( ~ars; and ifit
should happm that two years pass withour tlxir mining anything, tbm this
gracr is to Ix wukrstood to Ix null and lJOid; and tlJrY offirfOrrotT' to gil/( your
Commune our ofanything tl19 min~ orfind one part out oftuxIV(. Also. in
r~ard to ronything tlJry min~that is. gold. silvtT, and any oth" metal-
tl19 promi$(your umlmrme that tl19 will hal/( it melud and refined by
artisans lilling in your town, that is. by goldsmiths; and if[t/J( goldsmiths!
t/mnselvtI wish to do this, they promi$( not to mId {the metal! to others. that
is, outsideJOltr city. Also, {they promise! that they will hall( it all stmck in the
mim ofyour Commune.

Also we wish to be allowed to use any water in the said localities and to
erect there any building [needed} to work the wa
metal. and to be allowed to
cut wood without detriment or damage to (my ofyour communities or to
prillau persons. {since} this grace is not to be understood to bt detrimental in
(my part to them.

And this they would like to ask by graa ofyour lordships, to whom they
ever rtCommend tlJt1nselves, whom may Godprrst'f'W as they wish. Praise Ix
(0 God

The petatJOn was approved on April 6, 1445. five days afler applicatIOn
Quoted 111 Medieval Trade III the Medirerranean Worldby Robert 5 lopez and Irvng W Raymond. New York. CoIumbla Urvver5lty Press.
1955. Tl1IS text appears on p.l22 and is listed as doctJmeot 49
Document 49 IS translated lrom the llaban as publIShed by A. l.JsinIlfl NoflZe delle rrwuere della Maremma Toscana e /egg pet festravone
del mera" riel medlOeVO. Bullet''''' Senese di Stana Patna. new ser . VI. 1935. P 255--256

,so CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBERIOCT06ER 1993


AB 3098 Surface Mining and Reclamation Act (SMARA) Eligible list - July 30, 1993
(THIS UST SUPERSEDES ANY PREVIOUS UST AND WILL EXPIRE OCTOBER 1, 1993)

The following is the July 30, 1993 It'S! 91.05-0012--CalallCll.irnll'slone OuilrlY (Calllveras Humboldl County
of mining operations subject to the Surface CemenI Company) 9\·12-C1OO2-51f1Cly p.airie (~... Fra_)
91 ·OS.ool3-Wolin & Sons A9II.egll<l
Mining and Redamation Act (SMARA), from 91·12·0003-A·21 Qu,IJIY (Me'ee<, F.-)
(Wobn & Sons. tnc.) 91·12·0004-T.inidId Quafry lMeK:e•. FflSlf)
wtJich California stale agencies may purchase 91.05-00144iogan Cuany (Ford ConSlruclioo CO.)
9l·12·ClOOS--€s_ (Me«lt', F.ISef)
or use materials, /' nas been prepared by Ih8 91 .05-0016-McCany Pit/Foathil Malefial$ 91·12-CIOO6-Cooks Vlley (MefOlH. FflIserj
Depattment of Conservation Office of Mine (Ford CQmlnM;t;on CO.)
9\·12·ooo7-Willow Cfeel< (Mercer. Fraser)
Reporting 8IId Reclamation Compliance. The g'·OS.(ll)17-A/lo M.... {GlilTlII Gold. Inc.1
9l·12-C1OO8-Jacoby C..... (Barnum rmblf)
list is required by Public Resources Code Colu. . County 91·12.ooll)..Clwisloe Ba. (Eureb RfIIIdyM")
section 2717.(b) to b6 published in the CaN· 91·12.oo11-Mon1chk. o..afry (Wallin & JoIwlsoo)
91 ·06-0001-Teochef1-Tl1ornpson 0uaf1Y
91-12-0012-Mld AMI. Sand Ind Gr......
Iomia Regulatory Notice Registaf. In addition. fTeld>e<t Aggr• .,.)
(V1CIOf GuynJp)
it is published herB as a OOUfl'esy. at no cost ConIra CO"'I County 91 ·12'OO13......cata ReadiMUl-&M O'Ne~
to CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY subsaibers and 91-o7.(JQQI-8yfOfl Plant (U....... Corp.) 91-12·00I"'Aandan sand & Grlvel
with no reduction in conlanl of /his issue. 9l·07·0003-C1ay1on Qua.ry (Kioiser Sand & G...... Q 9\·12.(ll)I6-Toslen QuIJIY (GonIon Tostenl
91·07·OOO4-CIayton (RMC lOflMllf) 9l·12.oo17-<>rake FaciUty (HumbokJl Bay Gravel}
91·07·0005-P0r\ Cooua Malllllall 91 ·12·001 8- Thomas Besa
(Port Cooua Mallllials. Inc.) 91 ·12·0029-Alt0fl P. (Eu.eka ReadyMlx)
AllIm.ca. County 81-o7·OllQ6.-.ChewOfl CluaIIY {Americaln Rock 91·12·0030---G,Wm Bar
9,-ol-ooGl-DumbaltOn Quarry aod AsphflM. tnc.) (AedwOod Empire AlIll.~t"}
(0urnb-.tQn Ousrrv As$cX:iaIeS) 9l·07·ooo7--Ca1'lll1 Quafl)' (A.merican Rock 9l·12-C103 I -.Johnaon Bar
9\·01..(l()l)2-R.dum (l<Mer Sand & ~ Co_I & Asphfll. Inc.) (Redwood Emp. . . .~tes)
ll'·01·0000-Niln Qonyon Ouarry (SADC. Inc.) 9l.07..()O(l9-Slone. P. (F.T.G, ConSlfUCtion 9\·12-003.2-8lue Lake ea,
9,-o1·0007-SU1'llll (RMC L.oresulf) Malerials.Inc.) (ReawoocI Empire Agg.-egal_)
11l.(Jl.oooe-leona Ouarry (GaIagher & BuJ1<a) 91· I 2·0033-Em....son BIl.
Del MM. Couflty
91-01..(lOl)$...Eliot (RMC Loneltlr) (Re<Iwwd EmpI.1 Agg<egat_)
91-Ql·0(IIo-c.lMal PlNsanton (CaIMal) 91-C1e-0001--5ullan B.--NortIl Coast PaYing & Rock 91·12·003s-&own & $oM o..arry (R05I8' Brown)
91·01.(l()12-Mission Valle}' Rock Co. SMP·' (Redwood E""",e Agwtlglltes) 9l·12·0036-Wailh Quany lJacIc & Mary Walsh)
9,·01-QO,3-Mission Valey Rock Co. SMP-24 1l1·08-C1OO2~ Ba.-Nor1h ea.. P ....ng & Rode 9l-12·0037-Ammon o..arry (McI.-1I ConslfUClioo)
1l,·O\·0016-S1leridan 0ua"Y (Redgwick ConsI. Co., (AlKtwood Empi.e "119',-) 91-12-C1038-M1IOfl Quat", r-Nlyna """"""')
Co.,
ll,-G,.()(),7-f'allol'l Pit (Redg'wicJl Coos1. 111·06-OOO3-FllInch Ba</ResllIvllioo Rancl'I 91-12~Vlley ea. (RicI'*d Rowland)
111·0,-OO,8-Tas.ujllr. p~ (Redgwick ConSl. Co.) {E.noeSlWa) 91-12..(104(lo.McKnigtl: Bar (MMe.., F.1Sef
91-C18-OC104-TedIIon Bar {T'dewalt< COnu8<:lOf$.Inc.) 91-12·00....-LP ...-3701U2OO (Me.C&f. F.aser)
Alpine County 91~ocken Ba< {T'lClewaler CoroI.aetOf1', lno;.) 91·12·0046-Grooma Aock Ouf,fI)' (HIlI.....n G._)
9,.()2-QOO,-Merrill Barrow p~ (Sluan P. MerriI) 91-C18-OOO6.-Hole P~ {T'1dew_ ConuaetOfS. Inc.) 91·12-C1047-Millerl Gf...... Bar (Roger Mil\ef)
Amldor County
91 -0e-0007_Westbfoolc·Wethe.aft fTaytOf W.,.lbfook) 91·12.()l).l.8-WIliln & Johnson Gf8veI Bar
91·08·0008--&aIy QuaIIY (Tdewallll ConuIlClln. Inc.) (Willan & JoMson)
91·03·0001...()osc1l P'I (Pacific Clay P<0lk/cIs) 81 ·12.QO!;1--Singley Bar (.... CalI Re.clyMlx)
91 ·08·~ BIlf (Morgan Redl·mile)
91.Q3.0002-Nort1l Cattloncll'- Sur/ace M....
(J8lIper Mlo'oWlg) EI Doo-ldO County Impe.111 County
81..Q3-OlXl3-Ch1n H~I ClIim (Owen&.lllinoil) 81 ·09-0004--ehlle Ba< SIaIe MIne 9\·13·000l-Pic.cho M.... (ChemgOkl. Inc.)
81..o3-OOO4-Ow_·IMlonis sand P~ (PIllcerville IlDlstries) 91·13-C1OO3-Frink P. (DesIf1 Grlvel Company)
(Owens· Illinois) 91-09-0005-C00l Ca.... o..afl)' (Spfeckels Llmeslone & 91_13·0004-Plester City ShovIIllI Amex
91-03-ooo&-Unc:01n Mine {Sull" ~ AwagaleS) (U.S. Gypsum Company)
81-ro.ooo7-MGM Mining. Inc. 91_13-OOOS-P\asl:IH City Quarry
91-Q3..0008-NIDyO Seoo Ranch (lone Mine) F.HnO County (\J S. Gypsum Company)
(North A,merUn RefIacIoriel) 91.1C1-0003-Acadamy o..fI)' (Raymond Grl...e) 81_13.OOO6--OcoIiIo Mine (Flrmef'l Land Leveling.
91.¢).(J(11G-8uen1 VISlI Clly Pil 91 ·lll-OOOol-A1·1 Concretl (ATe Concreta) Inc., dbll Masters COlllltruclion)
(CIlaveIas C4tmenc CompIny) 81.Io-ooos-coalin9ll P~.l (GraniM Constn.>cti:>n Co.) 91·13.0007 _ ~ Mine (Flrmlf'I Lane Leveling.
91..oo·0011-Ca1 Wi'll Roek P.oductsI\OM 0uaf1Y 81·ICI-OOCl6-Acme Rock (Acme PlYing Co.. Inc.) Inc.. dba Mastef'l Construction)
(Weslem Rock P.odtds, Inc.) 91·10-0007~ P~ If2 9\·13--OOOlhShe11 Canyon (V"'Roclt. Inc.)
"..oo.oo'3-6oring Shale Pit (Krelh. Inc.) (Grlnil:. CoosUllclion Company) 91_13·001G-Wonderstooe P. (GfenlM Conswctionl
'1..00.001 ll-Ilish Hill P~ {KnIlll. Inc.) 91.1C1-()(X)8-P1l1Y sand P. (Ed Petry) 91-13·001 1-f11ilandJFrifIk P. (G.lnite ConstNc:1lon)
9HI3-CJ02O-,Jlckson Valley CluIfI)' 91-10-0009-RiYef Rock {CalMlt of cenl.al Calilomlll) 91.13·0013~1owing Well P. (GflInila Coosuuoc:tioo)
(Geo<lJII Reed, Inc.) 91·10-001 ll-CaIMaV 5angef (CI1Mal of Cer!I.at 91·13-00I.-$hank PiI (Gf_1 ConslfUClfOn)
8<rtte County Cali1of....) 91·13-0015-Nonish P. (Gf_a ConItruclioo)
9\·10-001 I --CalMaV Rank laland (CaIMll of Ca<1!.at
91·04·ooo1-f'entr. P'I (8lIlctow1n Conmoctng CO.) 91 ·13-0017-SheII CanyoniOcotillo
CaIiIOf_J (Grlnill ConslfUCtlOfl)
91·04~ Cons1rucIiorl-OfoviIe Wio:M8 9\·IO-OO12--CalMaV Frianl Rd, (CaJMel of Clnlflll
".
"..(M..()()()5.-Aobinton ~ P.
CaIitomia)
81-ICI-0013-lapata,'Ch;no Pi! (MMla Ready·Mix
91·13.oo18-Oco1i1ct{Sch...- P.
(Gfaoile Consllllctlon}
9H3·0018-Gold Fields Operatioo CO.-Mesqu~e
81..(M.(JQQ7-M1lhews ReadyMiIl-Vance ...venue Coocfele. Inc.)
91 ~lhews RfllldyMix-State lands (Gold Fields MlrOng CO,)
91-10-00l.-Rockli&ldlP\lnl SOli (AMC Lonesl-af)
91..(M.ool l-(hefl Rock Oullriet (Ro9oH Gfeen) 91·13-C102O-Go1d Fields Operating CO.-MHquila,l
91·ICI-OOIs-RoddieldJ8eclc (RMe Lonestlr)
VCR {Gold F"oeld:I MiO"Iing CO,)
Cllaver. . Couflty 91·10-0016-Ma1orirlO Fa"TII (Jim & Brian Maiorino)
91 ·13-C1045-Chuckawalla (Camns)
9\.ICl-OOI7-Carotral Vllay Ready Mix. Inc.
91-05-OQ01-&lydef Clly P'I (John J. S<1yde<} 91 '13-C1046-Coyota (CalI.ans)
91.ICl-OOl6--rrvy Veley Granil:e (Charlea L.an Raper)
91-«>-0002-Royal Mounlaln KWlg Mine 81-13-C1047~riftk CInal (CallfSns)
(Meridllln Gold CO.) Gr.tIn County 9\-13·~d Fish Springs (Cllt.ans)
81..(l5.(l()(l3.- Hill Ot.iIfI)' (Cyprus Westem Sourcel 91.11-C1OO3-8lony Cteel< P\llr( (8llldoWl COmrading) 91-13-C104!)-New River F"IMS (Ca~rans)
91-05-0004-I( R Mine (Cypnll W.,.tem Source) 91.11-0004-S1ony Creek P. (00ancl s.nd & Gravel) 91-13-OOSO-New Rive< Gr-' (Cdrans)
91·Q6.0006-Teiche!I-flobl Plafll fT""" Aggrl9Dtes) 91 .11-C1OOS-Spoonll1 P. (Valley Rock proctJcta) 91·13-0051-f11ilaod (CaM'lns)
91.()5..()OO7-Teiche!I-Reed fT-'chen Aggfegetes) 91· I I -CIOO6-Slony Creek (Valley Rock ProctJctal 91·13-0052...Qco!illo (Ca~'IIllI)
91~VIlleySprings ClIy Pi! 91·1 1·000741and P~ (Vubll River sand & GfIlWl) 91.13-C1053-San Felipe Wish (CI~""')
{CIIave1IIs C4tmenc Company) 91.1I-C1OOll-8lony Cteeil-Whil....y Pil (leOf1 Whilney) 111·13-C1OS4-Six and QoI.HaIf Mile (Callfl")
9HI6-000'i-Cllavefn Cement Company, /ffi o..lfI)' 91·13·0055-T~n(Callans)
g1_11.(lO(l9-Mal1in Sind & GrlMll (M. & T. A_.oes)
(Calaveras CemM1l CompInyl 91·11.(ll)I(hJaspe. Grlvel P'I 91· I 3·0056-lndian RoM (tmpe<ial Gold COfporation)
91..()6-(l(11t)..Ca1llYlraS cemerrl ComIPIlY. o..any'7 81.13-0057-W""ht P~ (Aggregate Prodtds. Inc.)
91·11.oo12-Vllley Rock PfOdum. roc.
(CalIveIM cemerrl Company) 91-13-0062-AlnlfieIn Gi1 CMyon Mine ("'me.ican
81·05-0011-Al1 Rock (C.E. Mcl..I..>gtllin) Gift Mining JoO"ot Ventu<a)

CAUFOANIA GEOlOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


'"
91·13·0066-Padle MaOr. Pro,eel fAmencan (3oft 91 15-004-4-EdlSOrl Sand Co, Inc 91·20·0003 Moen p" (CaIavaoas Cement,
M.tlong ..loon! Venture) (Ed'son Sand Co Inc) dbll Stewart & NussJ
9~-13-0061-Amencan GIl1 M,nmg JoInl Venture: 91 15·004~ Raoct'to La l.oebfe{Te,on Randl 82) 91-20-0004 CObb Ptt (San JDaquon sand & Graval)
&plooa\lOn (5ullCfele Matenals Co , 91·2O·0005--8eoendl Slough
91-130069 Aober1 s Ptt (Des8f1 Gra"lll Co) 91 \5-0046 Shuma~1lI' M"", {J;vnes Clar"') (Central Valley Concrele. Inc,)
91·15·0047 lnyoklll'n PI (BoIaI Resou<ces, Inc) 9\·:z0.0006-1Ue 0. Silva
Inyo County
91-1S-0048---GaIlocll Ptt (Borlll Resources Inc I (lee'. Concrele Malenals Co, Inc)
91-14--0001 Nikolaus'" N,kolaus 91·15·0049-H & W NO Kern OG 9l·2Q.OOQ7- Taylors P'1 {Cah!Qrn;a Indu$tr\aI ".",.,."
(NikOlaus" NJkolaus. Inc I NY Hunsaker ER W8I8SenDlll'gtll') 91-20-0008 Bollrng« Ash Slough SIIe
91·14-00<12 Red HoM OuaffY 91 15.0Q51---Gol Ro<;Ios (Homer A Hansen. Jr J (Wm. E 81_, Inc)
[Twill Mwntwl Rock Co) 91 ·15.0066 Mota"" PrI (Eagl KllI'n AIrport Oos\l1Cl)
Marin County
91·14.0D04 H<.iIlIAg9'egatePtt 91- IS-OQ61-De<by Aces 6ofrow Pol
(HIall RUOy MIx. Inc.) (ARCO 0'1 & G.u Co ) 91 -21·0001 -·RedwoodiSolven Quarry
9114-0001-"'''' c<_ {V 5 Tungslen COrporanonl 91- 15«l6&-Ooloale R8lldV M,. (QoI<lale Ready MOl) (Redwood l.andf>I. Inc )
9\ '14-OO1ll-G4nlley M,,", (U S lJofu" CI>emIcal 91-15-0069-SWEPI- PMlM,,.. 91 ,21-0002-t..wson s Land"'ll (Call W Vogler, SoJ
""'01 (Shell Weslam E & P, Inc I 9 I -21 -OOO8-San Ralaal Rock QuaNy
91 lHl012-<>weRs Lake Mine (Lake M....... a1s Corp,) 9115·0071 Sec!1OIl2llBooowSlle (Outno Companoas)
91 14 -(l()13----CaUtornm HectOr'I' PI\$ (Sama Fe EnerlJ)' Resoaurces.lnc) MllIpoai County
(IMV OMs>on 0/ Flotodonj 91 15-0073 Rid Rock MaIenaIs.1nc
91 14-0014 Amenc.an Pinte Company !M*OCiIn 91-22-0002-R Pearson
La~eCounty 91·<!2-0003-Larry & Sandra Bunrw1g
Pentte Company)
9114.Q021 Sd"eMone{An'wlncan6orateCo_) 91·17.Q003 Sulpher Mound M,ne (S-Bar·S) (LaffY & Sandra BunnnIng)
91-140021 .116 8rockman Pot !C'lVans) 91·17--0007· Putah Creel< Mine Mendocino County
91·140032 Mat_I S,le .118-1ndependence {Hocklen Valley Sand & Gravell
(Caltrans) 9111-oo11Ind<anC.eekOuaNy(pamumPitW>\l, 91 -23-0003-Ford Gr~ Compiony
91-14--0038- MaIer",1 s,te 8111~---shOsone (Caltr.."" (Ford Gra...... Co. Inc.)
'~I
91-14-Q04!t-Mateoal 5,te 8283-New Zunch (~"'ans) 9t 17-0012 Clearlake Lava OuaNy 91·23·0004 Ausl.n----Crlwlood Gravel Bar
91-14-Q041--1'268 New Coso (Caltrans) 91 l1-OO13-P! Lak_ ROClo "RedlMOl {Foro Gr~ Co. Inc)
91·14-oG4ll---4'2B9 Ha,_ (Celtrans) (B,U Van PllII) 91-23-OOO5-Bradtoro Gr..... Bar
91 ·14.()()49-4':290 Olanche (Callrans) (Food Gra"lll Co, Inc)
La..en County 91·:n-0006-friz Creek Gravel Bar
91-14-Q050-Malerlal S,te '291~ (callrans)
91-14·0055----Panamltlt Valley ~ Quarry 91·111·0001 Ray HiUnng10III Standrsh P,I{Counryl (Fehz Creek Gravel Bar)
UfI\ermountaln "lone ServIces, Inc,) 91 -111·0002 -Honey- LaJ,.e Aggt'9\lates 91·23·0007 Fetzer/Jepson Gra... Bar
(Honey Lake Aggregates) (Ford Gravel Co. Inc)
Kern County 91·23·0008-Be!lrock, Inc. (W1IIoIIm & Karen Hay!
91·\8·0003 Doyle Planl (Baldwin ~ Co.
91'IS,0002-WebsltII' Sand, Inc (Websttll' Sand, Inc,) ,~, 91-23-ootG-ChllN Rock Ouany"'-'d FIocl< Quarry
91 -15.OOQS -.$humalle ()pe<a\lOn 91-18.000&- Malle<y P~ (Moller's Custom WorI<. Inc ) (Palllum Pavwlg_ Inc)
(Cactus Gold M,nes Co) 91-111·0007 ·WllIIs P,Wl8W\and (M'lIIlI'"s Custom WOfk. 91·23·0015· Harn. Dualry (Northern "ll9regalllS, Inc)
91- 1S.()()()6. t.Wdle Bunes OperallOll '~I 91·23-OO1&-Mill er.- SIr/Adobe Lana P,t
(Cac.ls Gold Mines Co) 91·111·0008 Ward Lake Ptt (Moher'S Cr.oslom Wonc. (~ymond PoIsleyI
91·15.(l()()7 Sotw.. PlEldr. Co (AM Webb, J< J '~I 91-23-OO11-SNlnvOCll Quarry (Pa'num PaWlg_ Inc)
91,l5.Q008 109 l.JmeSlone Cuany 91 18·oo1O---StaodlSl1 Ptt 91-23-tlO21-PIata (Northern "ll9'ogales, Inc,1
(NatlOllal Cemool Co) (Saul Conc<_ & Maler..,' Inc) 92-23.OlJ26-TunZl.lnc (wry Turw)
91'1S-OCI09 M,crowave OWny-lebec Plant 91 18-0012 Hayden HoI M...e 1I1·23-0027-RowIand Gflvel Bar {RJeharo ~
(Nal1011a1 c.mtnl Co I (la$$en Gold M""ng. Inc) Mercad County
91-15-(l()I()-Qua"y Sole 6-l8tlK Plant 111 18-OO14--Round Mounta,n (A1rnanor Rock &
(NallOllal e.m..t Co ) 91-240001- TurlOCll Rode Co
Equ,pment)
91 -IS·oo1 1---.Q1cl Dutch 0 - . - Mone (MlItCOll Corp ) 91-240002-VOCIor Pet (Western Slone ProOuers, Inc.)
91·1S·OO12- Gilliam & Sons MoIWIll Opera\lOn LOs Angeld County 91-24-0003 Robonson North Ptt
(GAam & Sons, Inc) 91- 19-0001 -51ale Sand & Gravel Co (Weslern Slone ProallClS. Inc I
91-1S-0013--Siand CanyonICaI·C,·Co Roete Co. Inc_J 91-19--0002 1I111erod< Aggregale Co dlla Antelope 91·24 OOO4---S11va Pc (Western Slone ProdllCll. Inc I
91·15-0014 Calclle{CaIMatCo,) Valley Aggregat•. Inc 91·24-CIOOS--SnaIng Pot
91·15-OO15-Bowman Pn 91· III'0007-AzuM PrlI Azusa (Southdown Inc. dbil (W_tem Slone Products, Inc.)
(Asphalt ConSlfUCbOn Co, Inc.) Tr_~ Muced Concrere ComPllttyJ
91·24·0008-La Grange Ptt
91·1S-0016-M¢1ave p~ 91· 19.()()()&-.GrilOll. Planl LJlIlerodc (GraMe (W"I&rn Slone Proaucts. Inc I
(Asphalt Coos1ruclIon Co . inc ) Cons\l'llClOOfl Company) 91-24.()()l)9-LOs Banos Gfavel Co,
91·15.0017-LOSI Holls MIfMI (H M HoIoway, Inc) 91·19-OO12-UnIIecl Rock ProducI9 Corp Planl SIle {LOs e.nos Gravel Co )
91·1S-0018-Stanoaro HII {MI1I:ln Monerals USA) 91·19-0013- Uruleo Rock Produc:l:9 Corp PIt 81 91-24-oo12--e&nyon Rock Ptt IF S Rad.lncj
91·1S·oo21-Eltcel-M.ner.. Company, Inc 91·19-OO14--UrlIled Rock PrO<luets Corp. PrI "2 91-24-<lOI3-PlInocha PlII~ 8ruackne<)
91·15·oo22-8oron Owl Ptt "lone III· 19-001 S-Unoleo Rock PrOducts Corp Ptt 83 91-24-oo14-Winton PIInl (M J Ruddy & Son. Inc)
(U S Bora>: & ChemICal Co,) 91· 19-OO16--R"'anc&--llWlndala (CalMal Co.) 91·24·oo19-Carson Ptt 811
91-1S-o<l~4--""""" Ptt (Gralllle ConSlructOOfl Company) 91-19-0011· Sheldon (CaiMaI Co) (Western Slone Proaucts, Inc.)
91·IS~ Road PIt & 1.4,1 (Kern Roell Co) 91 19-o<lIIl-RaI,anc..AtuN (CaWiM Co,) Modoc Counly
91-15·0027--eanet>rake Creek P,l (Ladd Ready Mill) 91 - 19-o<l19-BouleYard Propany (CaWiat Co)
91-1S-oo:!8-James Road 91-25-0001- Morgan Ranch CO, Inc
91,19·0020 Palmdale (calM" Co 1
(Granole Cons\nlCtJOn COmpany) (Morgan Ranch Co. Incl
111,19·0021 -Bog Roclc C<_ (CaIMaI Co)
91-15'0031 -BoO Mor1Ol1 ConsINCtJOll. Inc 91 '2S.OQ03-Caldwefl Onder Pl\ Mone (RoM CIlOweI)
91 19'OO22---C1lMal-Sun Valley (CalMal Co.)
91 -I S.OlJ32 Mo!&ve Quarry 91-25-00G4 -Folch Gravel
91·19-oo:n-ClurbIn (CalMal Co I
(~~omoa Porlland C&menI CoJ 9 I ·19·Q02S-1I"""li1SIOn--Granam. IlWJIldale Mono COUnty
91-15·0033 V-..ow -'sttll' (~M""ng Col III ·1 9.0Q26-.Ht-Grade Mater,als-unllll'ock 9l-26-0002-HOt Cr"", KaoIe1 Mule
91·IS·003S-Descar~(Rand M"""ll Co,) 91·1s.0034 -Aluu. (Owl Rock Proaucts) (Standard InllustnaI M.......ls.ln<:l
91· I S-003&-Coopef P~ " (Slanley Coopefl 91-19.OlJ3S-F,sn Canyon QuaffY (Azusa Rock) 91 ,26·0004-Fran~ Sam M.... (U S Purruce CO)
91·1S.OlJ37-WheeIef Rodge PrI & Min (Kern Roc!< Co.) 91·19-0036--Sweelwaler Aggregates 1I1·26.0Q29-Lae Vonong {F\u$h C<eell) Ba'
91 ·1 5-00:J8-Coopef PrI. '2 (Stanley COOpef) (Lang StallOn. Inc) (Harvey E & P"VfIoI P. HuIl8W1llJ
91·IS.Q039----Goklen Cat CorporallOn 91 19·OO3Il-Soledlo canyon M.... 91-26-0035--Marzano & Sons Sand & Gra"lll
9 I -1S.()l)4O..MonoI~h lImeslone Quarry (P W G"bll.nd Co ) (Marzano" Son,)
{CallvllI'u Cement Co )
III IS.()()41-eaIMav SIn Em!9d1O M.d••• County M01Ile..y County
(~IMal 01 Cenltal Ca~lomoal 91·2O.OOQl -Sotwra WlIoI. Quarry 91·21.(l()()1 -Sano Clty P,t {Monterey SInd Gon'I9MY)
91 15.()()42----Gahente Sand & M"""a1 CO. Inc (Raymond Gr""". Company) 91-27-0002- Ma"na Prt (Monlerey Sand ComPi'lly)
(Nature COnservIncy Parcel) 91-20-0002 o.er...- Pll (Calaveras Cement 91-27-0003-Del Monle FOO'. ., Quarry-Goanna
91 IS·0043-eabente Sand & MloIlI'a1 Co. Inc dlla Slewarl & Nuss) Construcllon
{CaI_te Sand & M.naIai Co. Inc J

'" CAUFORNIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993


91·27.(l()()4-Mttz./Chelome Creek Pll-Griln'l. 9t-:l3.oo1-"Malln Road Plant (R J Noble CO I 91-36.Q008-Amenc:an MIne Pro,ec:l Joont Vllflluf.
c•••",.""" 91·33.oo1S-Wyroc: Lilk. SU_ Ouar!y (Wy<OC. Inc,) (Palma MInrog CO,)
91·27~lMdIdOuar!y 91·33-OO16-3!d 91-3&«112-San Bemardno (ClIlMa1 Co,)
(NiIIlonal Retr.etonn & MlIIolII'alsl 91-33-OO17....coron. Induslnill Sand PIOIICI 91-36-0013-Uplancl PIt 86 (CalMa! COl
91·27-ooo&--l.apIs (AMC L.orMstal) {Corona Indu5tnaI SiInd PfotectI 91-36-Ol)I<6-UpI8nd PIlI 4 & 5 (CalMal Col
91·27.(X)07_8l.M Rock Plle>-Wm J ClarI< 91-33.()()I~GradeMa ........ CO Mor_VIIItey 91·36-OO15-Caslli1 MounIiIInVMlIe"
91·27..()()()8-Anoyo5eco-Wm J CIarIt (HI Grade MaIan;llS CO I ('\rIC.-cI'( Gokl Corp.)
91·21~ PII-Wm J CIiIrk 91-33-OO2ll-Mount A_ _ Pot'2 9l-36-OO11-Soerfa Aggregat. Co (Donalcl G JOIy)
91·27-0011-Pine c.nyon PlII-Granltl Consrruebon

--,
(Ebnlr. Rudy MIX) 91·36-001~ MoI.wllilll1 Ouan'y
91·27-OO12-51orMwi11 Canyon Quarry 91-33-0021_Mounlaon A.......... PIt'1 (Soulhwestem Pof1IlInd C«nent Co )

- --
(S)'iIr lncluSlnes, n:) (Elsnof. Rucly MIX) 91 -36-0021 Br1StI:II Dry lal<e (NabonlII Cllk)nde Co
91·27-001 S-PI:lrw A.nch EsIllI&l1Jladley Pit 91-3:).(lI)23..Corona Oay (fWerMlrt Cement Co,l
. . - . . ""'""""""I 91-33-0024--Srnolh SiInd (AtoertoOe Cement Co) 91-36-002'2-~ ... au.ry (R.vwtocle cern.n.
9 1 ' ~0u8rfy~ Poru.nd

"""""
91·2ll-0001-Hi11old Smch & Son Pll
Cement Co,) 91·36-<1023-Qn;I Grande au.ry ~ cern.n.

-
91-33-0021-Corona 0u8rfy (c.lMal Co,)
91·28.000:2-0. ttl 0uiIrfy ~ CiIl>yon 91.36-Oll2ol-Upl;1ncl Rock Planl:
9 1 ~AecydIng I.me
oe. ....,..CO)
",-one e.-
ServIceI (Bluoe lAamoncl /IotaterIiIG)
91.~oghIin(HomesIak.• ......-.g
91~ PIt (Gtanol. Consln.oaonJ 91 -36-Oll21-8clro$CllYay Bcwrow Pll
91-33-0031-Gamel PIlI tar- Cor1sUudIon) (Noro> AmenciIn 0'Ien'c:aI Co I
91.~ 0u8rfy (Sytr IndusInes. n: )
91~V""au.ry 91-36-0028--EaII Gr...... PIlI
1iI1.~c.nvonau.ny
18cnl~lnc) (Nonh AmenciIn ~ Co I
!S'f'r Irduar-., n: I 91-33-Olll6--Coto PIlI (8t:nI ~ _ Inc ) 91-36-0029- T.1Ip Borrow PC
Hev.cla Counry 91 ~ CiIn)oon PIIIIC L f'twnsl (Nonh AIIlenc:M aw..e. Co.)
9 1 ~ Flats IC L PtI8msl 9 1 ~ Op'fllllon lNOfth ""*'tan
91·2S.(X)01--5i!n Ji.Mn Rlclge MoM Prospea
91~2~ lC L Pfwnlol Chernrcal Co.I
(Soskon Gl*l CorJIOr_1
9 1 ~(Owl Rode Proclucts) 91·36-0031-U1<e & MneraI Rescue:.-
91·:5-0002-Non1l SliIf Rod! Prodl.cts 0I.wfy {P_ _
91·~ '1-..,
PIlInl (T-=:herl AggrIlgill&S) 91-33-OQS9-.PaaIic ~ ns..-..I P'" (Ncm AmenciIn 0'IefNcaI Co )
91-3S-0032-PartwI u - Proclucts. Inc.
91·29-OOOS-ShI-NeYa Plant 112 ISN·Neva, n: )
9 1 ~ y ~ Co (DannosVouroger) (P.... ~ Produtu_ Inc)
91·29-OJ06.-Gt-.nom ~ P\wlI
91-33-OO69--Par'o_ InduslniIl Cenw 91-36-0033- HlIdor Mrne (Rheoo: ~I
~&OS.~)
91..33-0071-Villey Rode & sand 91~Gr-.~·Mann.lnc)
91·N-001G-fWge Rod! 0u8rfy ~ T ae.-J
(Valley Rod< & SInd. Inc) 91-36-OQ3S-.(;o1o Quarry {CaIIbnla ~
91·29-0012-.1oe cr--.x~CoIny
C«nent Co_I
91·29-001s-A.J M* Co (R.J Miles Co) Sac.......... to Counry 91-36-003S-6axIar Cuany ~ Por1Iancl
""""-~
1iI1.-JO-llOO5--IMne L.a~. (Bluoe Otamond MiitenlllI)
91-34«101-Van VIed< Rancho 5and & Gr
91-34-ooll5-McDone1 Clay Pc (n:luIIoIl l01I
, Inc
)
C«nent Co.l
91·36-0031-SuperIClf Ouany ~ POf1Iand
1iI1.-JO-D006--New Star (Owl Rock Prodl.cts) 91-34.()()()6.-T8Od'Ierl -P«tuna ~ CtmentCO_1
(TfIOd1Iltl "WegiII8Il 91-36-00:J8-.~ (Owl Rod< Proclucts)
91-3O-OOO1-Qrang-. ~ (I'I.J Noble Co)
91·30.Q008-MariQn Qey (RNetsolIe Cement Co,1 91-3<1«101~T-="-l-AapenIA (Teoc:hen AQgfegal"l 91-36oOO4G-lylle Creek (Owl Rod< Pn:lduds)
91-3Q..00()9....R¥Ieho MISSlOO VItlJO 91-3<1.CJ008-.-Ted1er1--Aapen IV (Teoc:hen Aggregal"l 91 .3ft.()(M I-Newt:>eny Spfw>gs 0ua1'l'Y,'MP'1 Cuany
(R........ Cemenl Co I 91-3<1.0009--Ted1en Aspen V (Teoc:nert Awregalesl (Wf$ttm Rock Proo2ucIs. inc.
91-30-OO11-MlSSlOI'l VieIO Mlltertals. Inc 91-34-0012-RlIncho CordoYalRMC Lonestar) dl:Ia Cal Wf$1 Rod< Prvducts)
(M"SlOOVle,o MiII8I\II1s. Inc I 9t -3<1-OOl3-t.Dwef 8<ad1ord Clay PIt (Sytllon·R8Id 91·36.()()42-lIJceme Valley (Ht-GriIdEI Millef1lIIs)
91-30.oo12-Gypsurn Clnyon P~ Col 91 ·36.()()43-Cadiz Dry Lake-Lee ChemICa1. Inc
(PIIafic Clay Prodl'Ct$) 9t -30t-OOI4--Sacramenlo Aggrllgiltlll, Inc) 91 -36.()()4S-MlIftlIa canyon (Pfo.z.... Inc.1
91-30-001-"EI TOf() MJl8l\ll1s. Parcell 9O-CZB-UPB·lltS 91-36.()()46-AgCOn.lnc (AgCOn.lncl
91-30.001 S-El TOf() Mal&rillis. Parcel II 9t-3ot·OOl1 Fuc.a... n South (Gran,te CORlltfUctlOfl 91-36.()(l47-Qro Glanct. Rock Planl llndtlsu", As·

Placer County
91·31~-.kleChevrNWl. MltiIlIow VlSUI
Col
91·34-Q022-Hanlonl sanct & Gfavel. Inc
(PrltSton Hanlofcl, Sr.)
""'"
91·36·0053- CIYSlaI H,lIs Sand & Gravel
(Kern Rocl< Co.)
91·3HlOOS-Uneoin Pil Clilyt (Gladding, McBeanf 9t ·34·0023-Amencan A.... llf AlMlfegates~CIafkSri, 9 1-36-()05.t-(;uShllf>be1fY (M,tsublsn; Cllfn(lflt
91·31.(lOO9..PatlOf'lIO/1 Sand and Gfavel 91·34·0026-Si!aarllllfllo Aggregatos, Inc} CorpofatlOfl!
91·31.ooto-.Qoll81 Rockhn AlMlrl9llt., 91·UPB-0201 91-:!6·00sS-Vlc!Of P1I29 Palms
(R C Colle!, Inc.) (Tafmac Canom,a, Inc_!
san Benito County
91-:11.0013-819 Gun Gran~. QualfY 91-36·0056-Needles Pn (Tilrmac. Inc_)
(Big Gun M'1lIng Co I 91·3S·0001-Joe PI! (KCAC. Inc I 91·36·00s9-Fontana P,t (Bofal Resoufces, Inc)
91-:1S.()()()2~Trf$ Pinos Cfeel< Pll IH,I&da1e Rock) 91·3fj·OO6O-Barstow P,11 (Boral Resoun:es. Inc.)
PlUmllt County 91 -3S-<lOO3--San Juan PI1 en (Hohdalll RoeIll 91·36·006I~&yman P,t (Elofal R8SOUfcetl. Inc)
91·32-0002-Chtlstef PI1 (Baktwon Con\fac1lfl9) 91 ·J5.OOO4-SCL PII/ElclISa Road Quarry 91·36-0062-lane Mounlllon P1I (Bofal Resources, Inc_I
91-32·0015-Sopeo' P~ (FHther RrY1If Miltefials. Inc,) IH-asctaI. Aodt) 91·36.Q063..Essex p~ (Boral Resou~. Inc.)
91-32.oo16-Spanosh Cfeel< Aggfl9lltes. Inc 91-3~Ashtifsl·lawla(Wilbuf·EIIS COmpany) 9t·36-()()6ooI Barstow PllII (Elofill RBSOtI'eat. Inc I
(Hale Ctlarllonl 91 -:lS«106-PiIOCllIeS Ranch (San BenIlO Supplyl 9t ·36-0067~Wh~.I<nobM'tut.RIdge l.imlls1Onll
91·32.oo17-SMtfra AQW.tes 9 1·35.()()()8...Mlll Williams Sand & Gt1tY8l (Pluess·StiIUlef)
92-32.oo1&-Sl<NoI PII (8a~ ContJacMg) 91-:15.ooog...Southsode Sand & Gra..... 91 <16·0070-Redlands AggrOlg;lte (C.L Philmtl
Rl.....lIld<t County
(GrllfUl. Rod< Cornparfy) 9t ·36-0012~Cfeek e-
91-35-OO10--Hams Ouany (Granne Rode Company) {Aobeftson's Ready Mlll)
1iI1·33«lOt-Glen tvy lWemer Corp) 91-35-OO11-Si1n Ben<1o 5and Plant 91·36-0013-Ola Webster 0uiIny
91·33-0002-A...-.., SD'eet PI1 (GraMe Rock COmpany) {Aobllftson's Ready Moel
te L 'I'Mget' Construcbon Co,) 91-35-0012-Anhur R. WQon Quarry 91.,l6-0075-SouIMiIsI Bamow Bom:rw PIt (CaItr-1
91-33-Olllls-H1 AITIerQn ~ (GI~ Rock CornpanyJ 91-3S-00~ EloffOW PIt (CaIIr-l
91-:13-OOO&-PiICIfic Clay PJtt (PiICIfIc Clay Products) 91-35-00I3-DoIomote 0u8rfy (o-d P Gr~ 91.)6.Ol)17-Newberry Bcwrow PIt (CMuwa)
91-:13«107-Motli1e SInd Co. 9t-35-00loI---San Juan A$ptIiII (LO McClald1eyl 1iI1·:J6.0086--Fer!JIlZ", Arrtbof MII'Nl
91~Cana_Co, -cabamn 91-35-0015-S1llr Canalll. (eo.ctIeIa V-., 0rglIf*: FIIft*Z8fS CO I
91~R-.ncanyon fSandman. Inc ~ 91~SU_ (C L PhiIms)
(Mofeno VIIItey SInd & GRveI. Inc I 91-35.()016-lomenl1s Mu.-tiIS (HiIIaclale Rode) 91·J6.OOl!9 BerltOoote Open-~ Mrne
91-33-001G-Wem« Corp.(llen Ny (llNl*...·MiInn. 1nc.1
san 8emMcllno County
91-33-0011~sSInd & ar.... !Chandws 91·36-0090-W_ Reel Cuany (8rutlti.er·MMwl. ~I
p*", V.on SInd & Gt..,.q 91-36-0001-Uvc 0u8rfy (TWIll McllnaIn Rod< Co) 11·36-Oll91-Go1cl, 8<oM'l_ & Lac au....

...... eona_ -
91-33-0012-a-.mon.: e.dd\am 8folhenI

91-33-00134)S NO Sot fI,Jn<1ed S1iItea Tile Co I


91-36-OOll2-Mounti1on Pass Mone (MoIycgrp. Inc)
9 1 ~ Plant ~ Aod<Co, n:)
9 1 ~ PIanI ~ Tn.ockIng_ Inc I
91-36-OOO6-foo1h1 Plant fHaIQlIy Rode CO . Inc )
~.·Mann. Inc..)
11.364:l92-Gr...., Mcluf-. 0uiIny
~.Mam. 1nc.1

CAUFORNlA. GEOLOGV 5ePTEMBEA/OCTOBER 1993


""
91·36.(l()93-.$f1adDw MQunl;l..nJWMe Rocl< 91-40·000s-Hanzllll Ranch-Red Aoek Quarry 91·4S.Q010-8urney P~-Ameo-ocan Resources
(~8I'.Mann. Inc) rt-/W HameD.Jr.) 91.4S.Q012-Gray Aock Quao-ry
91.,]6·009S-M\ld Hils (Teol'lllOO Mlne<aIs. Inc) 91 .40·0006-6rugN!l~ P,I (Cal3.....as Cemenl Co) CBAI
92.,]6·0104-SiIYer u.ke MIl,e (K- 0 M,n,ng Co) (~Iy GarCIa> & Eoleen Damon) 91·4S.OQ13-Falkenour, (Cala_as c.menl Co)
91.,]6.()IOS-Mnc & AlurrM\iI OucuflltS 91.40.Q012-W,II(;o·Hernweck.BrilACh CBRI
(Southwestern Porrtand C&mentJ 91 ·40.OQ 13-Rodty Canyon 91·4S.(l(I14-$hea Sand and Gravel (J F Shea)
91·36-0106-Wh~e Mountaon Quarry {M.J HermredrJWlIIco Assoc.) 91·4S·0017-FaWlldale Rock Quarrv
(SoutI>westem PonliInd Cemenl) 91·40.OQ14 NewIlan (WIIcoAssoc) (Yuba A ..... Sand & Gravel)
91·36·0107...()la Qua...-ies (SOul/1Weste1n Portland 91·4{).(l(II5-M,ner M>IIe (M.J HtHmredrJWoIco Assoc) 91·4S·0019-Agg'egate PrOducts (J.F SI'1ea, Inc)
Cement Co) 91-40.0016-T'ber Car1yon Sand P~ 91.4S·oo21---Grystal C.eek Aggregate
91.36-Q lCJ6-.Caliche p~ (Southwesle<n PonliInd (Hearn Trucll,ng Inc.) (Jerry 0 CorTwlgdeerI
CementCo) 91·40·oo18--Alamo Rock (A.J DIa", CoostruelKlll) 91-4S.()024~Bradllll Saod Pn (Hal Creel\ COnslfUCIIOO)
s.n Diego County 91·40·0019-Urne MQUn\.lIIn Quany 91-4S.0Q25-Nontlslate AsPl'1an_3
(Urne Moun1a... Com~ny) 92·45.OQ27-Cow Creel< P~ (Gallen Brown)
91·3Nl002-NOrth TWIll Oaks VllIIo.ly QUlIfry 91-40.0025-A1berti Ranch Red Rock Quarry 9 I ·4S·OO2ll---81aC1C Bulle C<nde<s fW....m C Haeklet)
(So. Coast Materials Co.) (Madonna> ConslrUClJOrl) 91·4S·oo29--Oak Aun Plt-LW Kall Co ,Inc.
91.:)7.()1()04-M,ssoon V~ Rock Plam
9 I ·40·oo26-&anchi Pil (W0'\I0r CooslrllCllOOl
(H.G. Fenton MatefW) Sierra County - Nona
91.40.OQ27-NayllfO Roe\< & Sand - NayllfO Creelc P'l
91·:)HlOOSMP~Rod< Plant fS3ndl
(AttHlr1 & A. ~ 'NayajO Conete<e') SlIJklyou County
(H G Fenton MatenaQ 91 -40·0030--Sabl\lls A ........ Borrow P11
91·:)7.()(J()6./iarll'lOl>jl' Glove Plam 91·47·lll102-&lva Quarry (RotM.! F Silva)
(City 01 P;JSO Aobiesl
(H G Fenton Maleroa/l 91·47-llOl&-Yreka TranSl1 MOl, Inc
91·40·oo32-Muna.-. P,t (WeyncI< Sand & GraY(l/)
91·37·0007-Carrol Canyon f>l3,nt (Vre... Trans<! MOl, Inc)
91·40.()()36-Qr;e;Jno Sand CompcIny
(H G Fenton Materiloll 91-47.OQ1G-Rebbeca & Deboy Mille
(Ocea>no Sand Company)
91·3].(II)08-8oo'ento sand CompcIny.lnc. (JoIvI Fbos) (SSB Cinder Company)
91-40-0039-3·S Ranch Pll (3·5 Ranch, n:!
91 ·37.()(l()g-Wyroc Syeamo<e Quarry ('Nyroc. Inc.) 91·4{).(lD43-AIfDyO QeI 0$0$ Belld1 91·47.OQll-Glass Mountaon Pumoce, Inc
91·37.(l(11G-u.kesille s..nd P,t {C.W McGrath. Inc.) IGtass Min. Pumoce, lne,l
(W1l1lIOI COnSUUC\IOn)
91·37.(l(11 t-H'lIsOale Pi! fC.W McGrath, Inc.) 91·47.Q013-8lodc Pumoce 1·4
91 ·37·00 13-S1m J Harris-see addenda S.n MalltO Counly (Glass Min PumICe, Inc.)
9t·37.()()15-U C L.H San Marc:oa (Bea>:e<) 91-4 I .(l()O;2·a"sbane Quarry 91-47·oo14_t.loore·, Grayel (AOCI'IlIf11 S MOO/e)
91·37.()()16-Ocll;lnslOe/Ca!lsbad (SO. Coast Materi, 9147·oolS-$pr1ngtloil M'1!fl (Sousa Ready MOl. Inc)

."
(A/nerJca>n Aock and Aspna>It)
91 .41.0003-LangIey H,n Ouarry llM!gley H,D 0ua>rIy) 91·47.()(I1G-Upton M.ne (Sousa Realty MOl. Inc.)
9l.:)7.(l(119-TTT Quarry {Supenor Aeaoy M'~, L.P) 91 ·41·Q005-PitarC'lOS Quany 91·47.Q017_T,uax Quarry (Kiewil PaaliI: Co I
9 I .:)7.OQ2!l-Hesl8l'·s Granite Co. (West coaSI Aggregales, Inc) 91·47.()(116_Kldder CrOOk Quarry
(Easl County Materials Co.) (TlICnOpp E~caYil1lng)
91.:)7.0Q21-81aughler House Canyon (AspnaM, 1nC_) SIInta Barbara County 91'47,OOI9_BaIIIlart Pil (J F Shea Co., Inc)
91.:)7.(1022-McGratlt 8orrow P~ (CW McGrath) 91.42.(1OQ3-$rsquoc (Southern Paalic M,n'ng 91·47.OQ20-Fort Baker RiIACh (J F Shea Co, Inc)
91.:)7.0Q24_M,ssKlll G40rge Pit Company) 91-47.()021_ABA Aanctl fJ F Shea Co.• Inc.)
(Supeoor Ready MIx, L.P.) 91·42.()1()04_Parks Sand P~ (Parks u.nd and Canle 91-41-0023-Shastal,te Ond" M....,
91·37·002&-M,1IIOI'l Valley (Calma1 Col ",-"" (F'ad W Burton & George C,OWllII)
91·:)7.0Q27-S!oan Canyon s..nd Co. 91-42.QOO&-6ee Aock Quarry 92·47.0Q24-C1!erry C'Dek ~
91.:)7.(l()28-MossiQlt V~ (Ex·Fentonl (CaIMat Co.) 91-42-0007_Lompoc Plant (Celile Coo-PQfillion) (Paragon Partnelsl'itP)
91·37.OQ2ll-Caroi canyon (CaIMal Co.) 9l·42·001o-Sognorelli AMIdv'Sile 2 91-47.()(l25-.JJJ AallCl'1 (DlMl BlOnd.)
91·37·0030-CalMat~Poway (CalMa! Co.) (Set>ulveda> 8Iclg Materials lompoc, Inc.) 92-47.()(l26-0enms York
91·37·0034-8 Monte p~ (Nelson & Sloan) 91·42.()(1 I 2-Bogr'HJda (Coa,I Aockl SOlano County
91·3HI035-Qtay Ranch Pi! (Nelson & Sloan) 91.42.()(113-Sisquoc (Coasl Rock)
91.:)7.()006-NltIson & Sloan PilIZ (Nellon & Sloan) 91.42.OQ15-Goodchild (Coasl Aodt) 91·4B.()()()2_Leke Herman Quarry
91.:)7.0Q37-Borde< HightandS (Netson & Sloan) 91·4Z·0020-Ehoocl Ranch (santa e-rball (Syar InduslneS. Inc)
91 ·:)H1052-Na1lQl'l.ll1 Quarries Sand & TopsOIl) 91 -4ll.0Q03-Potrero Hills landfill (Sy&lln<lusrr.."
(Mike Johnson, Gary JOhnson) 91 .4Z-0Q22-&lem:.n Pi! (GIllO,te ConstrUC1>O/l) Inc.)
91·3H1057_The Pauma Valley Country Club 91·48·0004-Potrero HillS Quarry (Syar IndUStries, Inc!
SIInl-a Clara County
91·48-OOO5-Goodyear Qu.arry (Par"" P~)
SIIn Joaquin Counry
91·43·0001--Q.wtner Quarry (0INeI de SIlva. Inc) {Syar In<llJstnes. Inc I
91·:)9.(lOQ1-Ql!kwood u.ke P~ (Brown Sand, Inc.) 9'·43.(l()O;2-8e1pa PilIA8Isdl Compan~) Sonoma County
91·3IHI002-Verl\lllis Pi! (Brown Sand, Inc.) 91·43.()OO:)-Azevedo au.ry (A.J. Ra,sdl Pawog Co.)
91 ·39.()1()04-C1emeonl$ (TBId'Iert Aggregates) 91-43.()1()04-KaIser Cement Pefmante Quarry 91.49·0003-WotIdSOlIlI (Ka.ser Sand & GraYlll
91·3g..00()5..Rose (Teoeheo1 Aggregales) (Kaa$er Cement) ",-""
91-39-0006-Tracy Aoek Plant (T~ Aggregales) 91.4:)·OOll5-f'oIak P~ Quarry (GraMe Rock Col 91·49.()1()04-Canyon Aock Co.. Inc. (Wendel T'i!>llQlIl
91-39.(lOQ7-Pe<lWa (Teichert Aggregatesl 91 .4:).()(J()6.LeXlOgion Quarry 91 -49-0005-lelmori", Qu.arry
91,:)9-0008-Tracy Pit (Granite COnst~ (Wesl Coast Aggregales. Inc.) (NortI'1 Bay ConslrUCllOn, Inc.)
91-43-0001_Stevans Creelc Quarry. Inc 91·49.0Q06- Slony Poom Rock Ou<vry
",-""
91·:)9-llOl&-AME Pit (Gla"'le COnStrucDon Company) (St....- Creek Quarry, Inc.) (Stony Poont Rod< Quarry, Inc.!
91·:)9.(l(11G-Lone Tlee Depo$~ (Valley Rod<, dba 91.49.CJOO7-Hagernann Rancl'l Quarry
Santa Cruz County
Wesl CoaSI Aggregates) {Stony Poon1 Rock Querry. Inc.)
91·39·0011-Kasson Aoad Pit 91.44-0001-0hye SP/ongs Quarry. Inc. 91-49.())()&..8onoma Aoek Company
(F T G, COns1NCllOn Malerlals. Inc.) 91-44.Q002_FeIlon Plant (Kais8l' Sand & Glavel Co.) (C A Fert,k;k. Inc.)
91·:)9.(l(11 2·MossdaJe Road pft 91-44.(J0Q3..FeIIon Quarry IGraMa Construebon Co.) 91.49·0009-Nuns Canyon Cuany, Inc,
(F.T G COnslruC1ioo Matenalt, Inc.) 91-44.()1()04-otympla (RMC L.onestar) 91 .4g.Q012-PetalU<Tla Quarry
91-39.()()I3-EI Raneno Rock & Sand, lne. 91 .44-Ollll5-8r)nny 0II0n Limestone & Sllale Ouarroes (Ameo-kal Aoclc & AsphaIL Inc.)
(EI Aandlo Rock & Sand, Inc.) (AMC LoneslaII 91-49.Q013-.Jerry De Wilt Trucking, Inc.. dba De w,n
91·39.Q014-Ker1inger_HucI< (RMC L.or\e$lilrl 91 -44-OOO6-Cabrillo Sand & Gravel Sand & Grayet (Jerry De Wm)
91.39.(l()I5-Ker1inger_Rhodes (AMC ~ (LaIltllTMl W PaCkerl 91·49.Q014_Vomark Property
91·39.(l()I6-Solari Pit (George Aeed. Inc.) Sl'Ia,la County (CloYerd<lle ReaIty·M,~. Inc I
91-39.QOI8--Fealherstone Aanch (Geoflle Aeed. Inc.) 91.49.(l(115-Log Pond Ente1p/'ses, Inc. (Clcwerdale
91·39·0019-Ma>... Aiverbank Pit (George ANd, Inc.) 91.45.(lOQ1·Moumaln Gate limestone Cuany Aeady·MI>:.lncl
91 ·3900020-KRC Aggr.les 91·4S.(l()O;2-oear Creek sand and Gravel 91-49·oo16-Gerdes Proj:lefly
(1ormerly Aoc-Sa>n Gravel Co., Inc.) (Northstale A$pI'1;Inj (CloIIerdale Aeady.MOI, Incl
91·39.()()21-Vernabs Quarry (T edlerl Aggregales) 91·4S.()I()04_Andefson Collon'NOOd Concrete Products 91·49.Q011_Tatge Propllf1y
91~.(l(I22-MouclaIeRiIACh (Brown Sand, Inc.) fJ·F SI'1ea CoJ (Cloveraala Aeady·MOI, Inc)
91-4S«JOll-NoIlhslale Asphalt, lne _I (Btacl< u.ne) 91 049.Q018-Gar,baIdl Property

-
San Lula Oblapo County (Sylvia Sdvnrn) (Clcwe<dille Ready.MOI. Inc.)
91·4D-0003-Santa Margarita 9,-4S.(l(l(»-Nonl1Slata Asptlan, lne a2lCiear Creele) 91.49·0019-Carano Property
(Sou1tlOm PilCiIIc MoIbng Co.) (&,Me ScI'1m,") (Clcwerdille Aeady·M,x, Inc.)

,,. CALlFOANIA GEOLOGY SEPTEMBEA/OCTOBER 1993


Tulano ceunty 81.S7.~ Oeel< Pil (SI'8f IIIlNsI'ies. Inc.)
e1"'~ PfOl*1Y
91.S7-OQ1G-Wocdancl facility
l~ AHcly.MG. Inc I 9,-S4-OOQI...f'fU,I SWod Co (GIaN:e ~ Co)
D1 .• D~1 .... ~~O".r<yIG~8r ......... 1 (PonefYih RHOyM ... lnc.)
DI"'~·R.dWn FINt<~ 1*$ 91.S4-«102-lee ~ GI Boffo- Pc VubaCounty
(Spr 1"".,.,_. InC: I .1.$I-0005-&GenGl ~~ 81.S8-0001-W.-n AggI~. Inc.
D, ... ~T"" BndgetPlanl 9,.$I.QC1Ol)-l(awNh R Roct Co 81 se.0002_ _ PlI (fko-.n Cont..."u,'V!

DH9-0027-Dry~""""'''''''''I
CIwk OWoMl-WeASICIe ~
(K-..n ~ Aodt Co 1
91-M-0007-lemon Cow (RMC~
.,-s8-0003-YutIa"" G:JldCo
(V..- W . . Gold, Inc.)
(Y.-d) (S,.. tndlrSlnK. Inc.) 91_54-OOl»-ledbet1tlBooow Pit II.s&-OCllM-Spertlec:lc Qua,..,. (C8I1 J WoodI)
11"'!)O(l28 " " - ' RMtr ~ve..d &Irs (E~~B.~ 81-1i11~Sand"0<""Co.
(Sy.- _ _. lnc:·l 91.S4-OQ12~ 801I0oI'" DIy CIwlc 91·5a-OOOli HaIrooood PWlI(T~""'19-.j
""'~ T. .~ PiI.(V8II«fI ( M _ Ready ..... eoner_. Inc.) 81·S8-0007-Wl»MIaftd Cl'¥' PIt (GIIadIJing, McB.n)
lSv- ~ Iooe.) 1I.$I-0013-UmDn e- G<w*'" 81o$6.OllI1-Yut. ~ S¥d" GIawl
11...10030 t1eeHst="9 T_ _
~~~~)
{Thoma
91-54-001~T_~
N."""'"Sont.
Tea...
.. Inc.I
81 ~ 1 2 ~ PI rn- .. ar..,.q
~ •.....-. IN::.) 81-54-0016-8"_ . . . . . (.h I..lnI)

_
11-6-C1C02-4r.i11k w.- Q>any l800Nft Co • Ille.t
.....
11~" c.n.ilI (Austill c..... R-'Y
.,-s«X!17-f'RM Aoc:k PWlI C.

....--
~ RHctr·.... Inc.1 ADDENDA
~n~lJ-OMf ~ RMclI(sr.n Kif9
IHtJO(I)S 8oIwI"
c.n.ilI
11""OO'J6 "diw~o-.y
92-~"""~a.y
(OeIignoBond l~
The ~rementsof AB 3098 do not
91.S6-OO2l-o-' CNelo a.-r, apPj to certain lands in the State. 1bJs.
11... ~$M'd"Gf_(Sow.-c...., ~e-Rock~ materials from operationS on those lands
_
11"'9-OlHO-Twwo _I
Bridgn PWlI...stMIon 2
T""-"-'County can be purchased by State agencies with-
II..f,I-CIl)41~ SMd .. arr..I 91·5S-OOO'I......---n
91 ss-ooCIIl' MnI (Soncn
_ M-.g Corp) our. !heir being induded on me regd.ar
to"_
11"'I-QOoI2-brn1ral'1~.Inc. (Golf" C NiMIeni
AB 3098 list As a courtesy to operators
11"'~ Rode c..
(00I'I ~ 81.~'-- a-..,. twm- G C<volcl on those lands. we have incILded ope.a-
11 ...10(144 aoob au.ny (Wetley "- StoobJ 81_5S-OOl&-T. .. ""
(Geo<ge au.ny
_ - - Inc.l tion!i of whk:h we are aware
11~ Gu6eh a....v Ire:.
cs. ~ a.....,.. In::) V_uno County
11"'~w.I PropIfty For federal lands, AB 3098's req.Jire-
(Qww.... AI.oy·...... 1nI;,) el.M-0001-Ridg1fi11 IP-* ~ ~
81.56-0002-0.1 Not1ll ~ P-ek IoHIno rneAS apply only to thaw agmde5 wiIh
CIa..I...... C_"'" \Yhich the Departmenl of Conservation
11~1~Pi1.
s.- ProclIcIa, Ire:.)
""""""
.,--56-(1(1(D-f'UlI ..... ~ PKiIIe ~
has a Mernocane;bn of UndeTstanding
(VI""'"
1I·~OOO2-&:twnlc1 P~
(VI-*" su- PI'~ 1nc.1
""""""
81.56-0Q04-Vet1lufl ANe< (SoulIwIn p.ac Miling n- are lhe Bureau of Land Manage-
meR and U.S. Forest Service. Operators
11.!1Q.-OOO3-Olatln 0
(Westefn Slone
w.t.-" SOn. Ire.
Pf~. Inc.)
""""""
'1.56--OlXJ!S-KnoI (5ol.4tlem PKlIc ~ ~
9',56-0006-&oggt Rlad (SouIhem PKIlle MiIinQ on other federallancls inchJde:
1'-~ 5afld" GrawI
.,.~w __ AuGlJVl
(MJ
11·5O-ODQ7-u GI.nge (Iol.J Ruddy!
""""""
91-56-0001-El Roo ~ Pacllk 1oli5nll
""'-,
Superior Ready Mix Concrete,
Miramar N.A,S., San Diego
11-~1'"8 MafQ tr1lI Son, Inc. 8'-66-OOO&-SIo1lCOy ~ P8c* ""ling
1,~RanchPil
(VI....""n $/.",.. p,OINcIi. Inc.t ""'-'"
91.56-OQ1ll-GrlfTMll canyon Rode aua,...,.
e1.!IO-OO'O-U Gfange (George AMd. Inc.) (8asl Rode P~)
SimJ. Harris Company,
I' .!IO-OO114iGdge "-ncfI PiI. lGe0fv40 Reed. I,.,;:.) 8'·56-001' ........,. SIrittI Ouany (A.J 5andt<a) Miramar N.A.S., San Diego
9'·~OO'2""" (George AMd,Inc.) 81.56-OQ13...sespe Oeell (Sespi Rock ProducIIl
DI_50-00I:)-Aobef1'. h''Y rrl" _100.1 81.56-0014-8lue S* au....,.
e1.5().OO14-Wllllfbd rr/11 Maleri") (eu. Slaf ANdy ""', Inc.)
Teichert Aggregates,
" .e;o.oo15-Ung10flll~pIey 9' ·56-00I6--Calave,.. Cuyama a."..um U,S. Bureau 01 Reclamation,
92~UI-Fleecl W.,erlo<d (Geofge Reed, Inc.) (H. L.IfTI&ICa,ltvefu Cemtnl)
Mi"sis~ppl Bar. SlKRlmenlo
Sutlw County
.,.i!i6-00,r-ealMal Co.-SMICOy tca-lMtl Co.}
el.56-00,&-CalMal Co.-Feno SBlicoy (CllMal Co.)
91-$I.OQOl-8utt. Rock" Gr-' 1'-56-OO2O-Ha1oCl< PC lGl...... e-fUCllon) Also exempted are operations on
TMuJnll CouMy 81·56-OO2!-Tapo e-,on Mina Oepllrtmenl of W~ler Re5OUrce:s kinds for
(P W a~.rol CoJCZS Cofp.l
11-52.0Q02-C1rf1llChMl Aoc:k eomp,.ny 81.56-0022-Se1pe Fbck lJohn C Nick4'Q \Yhich a reclamation plan has been ap-
(Carl J WoodiI) 81.56-0025-TM 0jIi Ouany (SCtwI'ld eor.1NCtiDtI)
91.~2..()(l()6-~ Cfeek Rode. Inc. (Joe COoJIItf) 81.56-0026-8 Rio Planl (Soufhem PllCllIc lIIi1ing)
praYed by that department. This includes:
11.~.OQ07-A1d 8Ul Aoelc - W--' P10peIty ',.5&OOV-8rWO fbaol PIanl
(I/aIWf' Rock Pfoclo.ds. Inc.) tsoud-1 PKi*; MiIIi'Ig ConIpMyl ASTA Construction, Rio Vista:
91-s2.ooo1.Rtd Blull Rod< _ 0 . . PiVRed ea.. . 9 1 · ~~ Inc. {81«1 JoowII
CoMlt (V...,. Rock ProducU. Inc.) Slale Reclamation Board Lease 87-2
11-52-OQ1fl-TMWl'j' Aock IIIId 5afld V_Couaty
11_52-OQ17~ ('1*1" TIUdl' e ~ Inc.) 91.S7.OQ02-TedIeI1-WOlldI8I"ll PIanl
91.~.(1(l'23-Oyeer.k 0rIarry (NonIe lnduIlries) (Te<che<I AggII9*')
AB 723, an urgeocy biD now before
11l-52-oo2S-Hub~(l(un s-Alo) 11_S7.oocn--T-.c:MII-AIofI Aanl the k!gisIalure. states thai: Indian lands
91·52«1Z1~ Cleel (MoIthIalIl ~ (T.......,Aoll~1 will noI be SI.b;ect to the ~IS of
'1-s2~ CfMk Rod< 81-57'OOO--TeochIII......... (Totd'oeI1 ~J AS 3098. Upon _ . the , _
(Sgl4I" u. ~ '1-57~"s--.1nc
~ .. $OM.1nc.1 operations..wl be in this category:

--
TrWry County
81.57~&s-..1nC
1I~~i-,I"-~
el.~.Q007-uGl. . . U- IE. Rock, Inc.) CSct-.. ubef"
81.S7.OQ01-S011no Concr. . ~
$OM. Inc.I
CalMat Co.. Paia Reservation
CalMaI Co.• Maongo/!lannlng
81.57-Ol101-So'Mo e.-e- 01..0.--1
(Solano Conefetet

.
,
STATE OF CAUFOANIA SECOND CLASS POSTAGE
ll-lE RESOURCES AGENCY PAID AT SACRAJ,lENTO, CAUFORNIA
DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION
CALIFORNIA GEOLOGY
DMSlONOF
MINES AND GEOLOGY
PO eox2980
SACRAMENTO, CALJFOANIA95812-2geO
USPS3S0a.-o
ADDRESS CORRECTlOH REOUESTED

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