HomeMy WebLinkAboutTract Map 3883 Lot 147 Soils Report
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Los Angeles County Office:
155 West Avenue J-5
Lancaster, California 93534
(805)942-09911 Fax: (805) 723-3685
Orange County Office;
2615 Orange Avenue
Santa Ana, California 92707
(714) 54&40511 Fax: (714)5464052
SOiL TEC:H, INC:.
Geotechnical Engineering Special Material Environmental
Engineering Geology Inspection Testing Assessments
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City of Temecula
Department of Public Works
43174 Business Park Drive
Temecula, CA 92590
May 14, 1996
Attn: Mr. Jim Faul, P.E.
Re: Soils Report
Single Family Residence
40285 Paseo Del Cielo
LD 96-061 GR
Dear Mr. Faul:
Soil Tech Inc. has been retained by Bratene Construction to perform the
Geotechnical Engineering for the proposed grading on the refereced 1/2 acre
lot, located in the Meadowview area of Temecula_ It is our opinion that a
Preliminary Soils Investigation is not necessary for the work proposed on this
site. The history of the Meadowview area is one of well known, fairly consistent
geotechnical characteristics, to the degree that an investigation would provide
no new data and no recommendations for changes in the proposed grading
procedures, or the design of the structure's foundation system, from the
recommendations made in this letter.
The earth materials underlying the area are known to consist of stable
units of Pauba Formation sandstones and siltstones. The regional geology has
been thoroughly mapped by Michael Kennedy, and presented in his "Special
Report 131, Recency and Character of Faulting Along the Elsinore Fault
Zone in Southern Riverside County, California", 1977, California Division
of Mines and Geology. As clearly documented by Kennedy, the entire
Meadowview area is underlain by units of the Pauba Formation, an interbedded
succession of Late Pleistocene sandstone, siltstone and conglomerate. The
results of geologic mapping by Kennedy are plotted on Plate 1 of the report, and
a section covering the Meadowview area is attached for documentation. The
presentation is one of nearly flatlying bedding with a low angle of dip[, ranging
from 2 to 5 degrees, generally in the northwest direction. Jointing is generally
vertical or near-vertical.
Corporate Office
Post Office Box 1568 . 41607 Enterprise Circle North . Temecula, California 92593 . (909) 676-2745 . FAX (909) 699-1757
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These earth materials have historically been considered stable, and as
evidenced by the absence of geotechnical instability problems in Meadowview,
have performed with consistent reliability. Prior to the formation of the City of
Temecula, the County of Riverside, then the controlling agency, recognized the
documented stability of the area and did not require preliminary soils
investigations for single home development in the Meadowview area.
Based on the relatively simple grading proposed for the site, no unusual
conditions are anticipated which cannot be mitigated during grading. The
following grading recommendations are presented based on our familiarity
with the area and the earth materials expected to be encountered:
1. All loose surface soils shall be removed to a minimum depth of 12
inches, or to a deeper depth if cosidered necessary in the field,
prior to scarifying and placing fill materials.
2. A 1 O-foot wide key shall be excavated at the toe of the proposed
fill slope. The key shall be excavated to a minimum depth of 2
feet and shall slope into the hillside.
3. Benches shall be cut into firm natural ground such that all fill is
placed on level ground.
4. All exposed natural ground shall be scarified to a minimum depth
of 6 inches, moisture conditioned as necessary, and recompaced
prior to placement of fill.
5. All fill shall be brought to within 2% of optimum moisture content
and shall be compacted to at least 90 percent of maximum
density.
Our representatives will be on the site to perform density testing and
inspection to assure that the above recommendations are adhered to and to
verify that the grading is being performed in an acceptable manner. A report of
Rough Grading will be prepared upon completion of the grading and, if any
design or construction recommendations are in order, they will be made in that
report, and will be presented together with the results of density testing.
The opportunity to address this matter, and your consideration of this
request is greatly appreciated. If you have any questions regarding these
issues, please don't hesitate to call.
Respectfully Submitted,
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ATTACHMENTS
FROM
SPECIAL REPORT 131
Recency and Character of Faulting
Along the Elsinore Fault Zone
in Southern Riverside County, California
Michael Kennedy
1977
California Division of Mines and Geology
4,
1977
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ELSINORE FAULT ZONE-KENNEDY
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'41. '';<>v ~O~.... SECTION I
I OVA. ~(l' Murriela \./1
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33030'+"-'-" .q/1'.s- ~~g'~I~~~;O ",,~SECTION 3
. -. . Temeculo 0:-- Rodee
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~~OI1 A~uTibio
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117" 00'
+
10 0
20
40
50 Kilometers
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30
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~igure 3. Index map and columnar sections showing fossil localities
Temecula Arkose in the,subsurface (figure 4). The maximum
exposed thickness of the formation is estimated to be 75 mj
though because of faulting. low relief. and the discontinuous
oUll:rop pattern, this figure is questionable. .
The formation is Composed mostly of pale greenish-yellow,
medium-grained, friable, caliche-rich sandstone, which. in its
northwesternmost part along the Wildomar fault zone. grades
laterally and abruptly to a cobble-and--boulder conglomerate
facies composed entirely of Ioca11y derived plutonic, ,metamorph-
ic, and volcanic clasts set in a coarse-grained brown sandstone
matrix. The composition and character of the conglomerate--
especially the abundance or quartz-bearing gabbro similar to
that immediately east of the outcropping conglomerate near Wil-
domar, steeply inclined,' west-dipping, crossbedded sandstone
North
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pauba Formation. (upper Pleistocene)
Unnamed sandstone and conglomerate for~ation
(Pleistocene)
Temecula Arkose (upper Pliocene)
I",,'''', "'i- ""I Basement complex (mid-Cretaceous and older)
Figurel". Diagrammatic relationship-between the Pauba Formation,
an unnamed sandstone and conglomerate formation, the T emecula
Mose, and the rocks of the MesOzoic basement complex.
SECTION I
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500 _ Meiers
400
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300
__ SECTION 3
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Fossil localily
Upper boundoryof luffaceous
$andslone facies
(modified from Golz and others. 1977).
interbeds, and the presence or volcanic clasts petrographically
similar to those at Hogbacks--suggest an eastern and northeast-
ern source area for these rocks.
.
A 2-to-3-m-thick ash horizon interstratified with sandstone
near Chancy Hill. referred to as the Wildomar kaolin deposit
(Dietrich, 1928) and considered a part of the Temecula Arkose
(Mann, 1955), is correlated with the O.7-m.y.~ld Bishop Ash
(Merriam and Bischoff, 1975). A. Sarna-Wojcicki of the U.S.
Geological Survey and Glenn A. Borchardt of the California
Division of Mines and Geology have also correlated the Wildo-
mar kaolin deposit with the Bishop Ash by neutron-activation
analysis (written communication). Detrital biotite originally
considered to be part or'the primary ash fall mixed with initial
biotite gave two erroneous KI Ar ages of 9.9 :j: 2.5 and 18.7 :j:
0.8 X 10' years (figure 2).
Pauba Formation
,
The Pauba Fonnation, a succession of latc Pleistocene silt-
stone, sandstone, and conglomerate. was named by Mann
(1955) for exposures at Rancho Pauba, approximately 5 km
southeast of Temecula in Rancho California. Rocks in the type
area crop out nearly continuously for more than 5 km in the
north-facing bank of Temecula Creek in lower Pauba Valley.
The Pauba Formation has an exposed thickness of approxi-
mately 75 m and is composed of (I) alight-brown, moderately
well-indurated, extensively crossbedded, channeled and filled
sandstone and siltstone facies that contains occasional interven~
ing cobble-and--boulder conglomerate beds and (2) a grayish-
brown, well-indurated, poorly sorted fanglomerate and mud.
stone facies.
The sandstone and siltstone facies is widespread and crops out
in its main part along the eastern side and central portion of the
Elsinore trough from near Wildomar south through Pauba Val- "'S'
ley and east to its unconformable contact with older sedimen-
tary. plutonic, and metamorphic rocks in the vicinity of Skunk
6
.FOnNIA DIVISION OF MINES AND GEOLOC'
SR 131
Hollow, Buck Mesa, and upper Temecula Creek (plale I). The
slopes underlying these rocks are subdued and commonly man.
tIed by a O.5-to-l-m-thick soil horizon. Discontinuous con-
glomerate interbeds 10-50 em thick occur locally in the
easternmost exposures of the siltstone and sandstone facies but
are essentially absent in the westernmost exposures near Wildo-
mar. West-dipping crossbeds,. channel-aod-fiIl features. and a
variation 'in grain size along strike within individual beds are also
common :to the easternmost exposure. These factors. when con.
sidered together, suggest that this part of the Pauba Formation
w8S:deposited in a fluviatile environment by a river system whose
headwaters,: though certainly at a considerably higher base level,
may have been coincident with the present-day drainage of
T emecula Creek.
The, fanglomerate facies of the Pauba Fonnation crops out
nearly continuously along the~ eastern and central parts of the
Elsinore ,trough from Temecula north to Cole Canyon. The
clasts of the fanglomerate have been derived principally from the
plutonic and metamorphic basement complex. Clasts of the fan-
glomerate are angular and set in a well-lithified mudstone ma.
trix which has also been derived from the local basement terrain.
The mudstone swells considerably by the addition of water and.
based on ifield observation. has an extremely high plasticity in-
dex., The fanglomerate facies was probably deposited by sheet-
wash activity on initially moderately steep slopes as small mud
flows that coaJ.esced to form the continuous debris apron that
now mantles these slopes. The fanglomerate facies is now partly
dissected by east-flowing drainages that carry detritus to Mur-
rieta Creek in the central part of the trough. Where these drain-
ages have cut deeply into the bedrock, an interfingered
relationship. between the fanglomerate and the finer grained
sandstone and siltstone facies has been exposed. Because the
facies change occurs over a distance of several hundred meters,
the contact between these units is an approximation of where
surface ex,posures belong entirely to the finer grained facies along
the eastern side of the contact
The late Pleistocene age assigned to the Pauba Formation is
based on its superpositional relationship with the unconformably
underlying approximately O.7-m.y.--old unnamed sandstone and
conglomerate formation (plate I) and on a small fossil assem.
blage reported by Mann (1955). The fossils, which include Equ.
us. occur approximately I km northeast of Interstate Highway
15 (previously U.S. Highway 395) in the northwest bank of
Santa Gertrudis Creek. Mann (1955, p. 14) states, "The horse
teeth are modern in every respect and are much less indurated
than the horse teeth found in the Temecula Arkose."
Photo 2. Wildomcr fault zone neor Ran-
cho Coljfornio.
Dripping Springs formation
The Dripping Springs Formation was named by Mann (1955)
for exposures of fanglomerate that crop out immediately east of
the area in road cuts along State Highway 71 in the Vail Lake
7,5' U.S. Geological Survey quadrangle. Only two smal1 expo.
sures of these beds occur in the area studied, and they lie in the
vicinily of lhe Yampa Ranch (Ial. 33"27'50"N., long.
IlTOO'12"W.) and the eastern Pechanga Indian Reservation
(Ial. 33"26'lO"N., long. IIT02'40"W.).
These deposits are composed of pebble. cobble, and boulder
fanglomerate in a reddish-brown, poorly consolidated, poorJy
sorted sandstone matrix. The clasts are mostly subangular to
subround and have been derived rrom the local basemen I rocks
composed of gabbro, granodiorite, and hybrid gneiss.
The age of the Dripping Springs Formation is not known,
though it is certain from field relationships that it post-dates the
age of the Temecula Arkose and is either equivalent to, or slight.
Iy younger than, the late Pleistocene Pauba Formation.
landslidt! Deposits
Very few landslides occur in the area studied. The largest of
these were mapped and are shown on plate 1. The location and
a brief description of each landslide is given in table I.
Terrace Deposits
Quaternary terrace deposits crop out as isolated remnants of
a once-widespread sedimentary cover. These deposits are com-
posed mostly of reddish-brown, well--consolidated, coarse-
grained sandstone and conglomeratic sandstone that contain
stringers of pebble and cobble conglomerate. They are best pre-
served east of the Wildomar fault zone and south of the Murrieta
Hot Springs fault between Buck Mesa and Pauba Valley. Here.
the surface upon which the terrace deposits rest lies between
approximately 455 m on the east and 375 m on the west and.
though regionally elevated and very slightly tilted to the west, is
tectonically unmodified (figure 5).
South of Pauba Valley, in the area east of the Wildomar fault
zone, the terrace is steeply tilted to the northwest (figure 5) as
a result of youthful uplifting of the Palomar Mountain tectonic
block.
Only one smalllerrace has been mapped on the southwest side
of the Elsinore fault zone, and its age relationship to those to the
west of the fault zone is uncertain. This terrace. which lies near
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CALIFORNIA OIVISION OF MINES AND GEOLOGY
THOMAS E. GAY JR., STATE GEOLOGIST
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Stream-terrace deposits
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landslide deposits
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Dripping Springs Formation
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Qps" sandstone part; (}Pf, fanglomerate paPt.
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Unnamed sandstone and conglomerate. formation
Qua, sandstone paPt; Que, congZomerate part.
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Kqm, fresh rock; Kqmd, decomposed rock.
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MAP SYMBOLS
-
175
U
D
FAULT
---**........
Solid line where confirmed. dashed line where inferred, dotted line
where conce~led by unfaulted rocks; U, upthrown side; D. downdropped
side; single:arrow and corresponding number indicate direction and
amount of dip of fault plane; double arrows indicate the relative
direction of horizontal movement;~~~ indicates shear zoneL
X. indicates fault based on gravity data.
-----------
Geologic contact
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Anticline
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Dike in metamorphic rock complex
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Tuffaceous horizon
o~~~~~ooo",,oo
Conglomerate horizon in
sandstone fonmation
---T'i5
Dip and strike of bedding
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Dip and strike of over-
turned bedding
-\15
Approximate dip and strike
of bedding
----v40
Strike and dip of layering
in volcanic rocks
175
Strike and dip of S-surface
in metamorphic 'rocks
---50
Dip and strike of jOint
-II-
Strike of vertical joint
. 05 20 75 01
Rock sample locality
. 05 15 75 01
(KA g)
Rock sample locality of
material dated by KIAr
analysis. .
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Berghofer No. 1
(1234 m)
Exploratory oil well Showing
total depth drilled below
land surface and name.
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Water well Showing State
number.
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Closed depression
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Landslide deposit and
corresponding number.
__ -75___ _
Contours of the ground
water table as measured
in the autumn of 1971.
(Contour interval in 25 mJ.
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