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The Salt Creek watershed was shaped by seismic uplift of the San Joaquin Hills starting about 1.2 million years ago. Sulphur Creek, which now flows northwest into Aliso Creek, may have once flowed down what is now the Arroyo Salada channel into Salt Creek, but at some point in geologic time was captured to the north and resultantly makes a sharp turn north of what is now Crown Valley Parkway ...
In 1960, the Moulton Niguel Water District (which today serves all of Laguna Niguel) was established by a conglomerate of ranchers, to import water from the Colorado River Aqueduct as the area lacked a sufficient natural water supply. [14] In 1964, Crown Valley Parkway was completed from I-5 to the Pacific Coast Highway, facilitating transport ...
The Central Valley Project was the world's largest water and power project when undertaken during Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal public works agenda. The Project was the culmination of eighty years of political fighting over the state's most important natural resource - Water .
The pipeline project through Elk Grove will ferry recycled water to south Sacramento County crops and habitat. One of California’s largest water pipeline projects will run through Elk Grove ...
Sacramento Area Sewer District’s Harvest Water project will install a transmission pipeline that will soon cause traffic delays on major roadways in Elk Grove.. The Harvest Water development is ...
Oso Creek is an approximately 13.5-mile (21.7 km) tributary of Arroyo Trabuco in southern Orange County in the U.S. state of California. [1] Draining about 20 square miles (52 km 2) in a region north of the San Joaquin Hills and south of the Santa Ana Mountains, the creek is Trabuco Creek's largest tributary, and is part of the San Juan Creek drainage basin.
Located along Antonio Parkway and Crown Valley Parkway, construction of the community began in 1999 on portions of the O'Neill, Avery, & Moiso families' 23,000-acre (93 km 2) Rancho Mission Viejo cattle ranch, which was the largest remaining working ranch in Orange County.
The Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) published a report in 1992 considering an implementation of the plan using a subsea pipeline running down the Pacific coast between the two states. [4] The OTA plan concluded that conservation, water banking, and changing water pricing schemes would be more cost effective than building the pipeline. [5]