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A map of Livermore published in 1878 by Thompson & West. Robert Livermore died in 1858. [15] The first significant settlement in the valley was Laddsville, a small settlement of about 75 [citation needed] which had grown up around the hotel established by Alponso Ladd around 1864 [21] on 160 acres of land he bought. [22]
[citation needed] The Livermore Basin is one of five aquifers in the San Francisco Bay Area that supply most of the metropolitan Bay Area population. [3] The entire Livermore Basin aquifer faces a concern over elevated total dissolved solids by the year 2020 due to an expanding human population leading to higher rates of return water flows to ...
Livermore is in the White Mountains region of northern New Hampshire, along the eastern border of Grafton County.According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 63.9 square miles (165.6 km 2), of which 63.8 square miles (165.2 km 2) are land and 0.2 square miles (0.4 km 2), or 0.26%, is water.
The expansion area encompasses a geographical area significantly larger than the current Livermore Valley viticultural area; for both areas, the underlying geologic formations and the geological factors in soil formation are the same. Thus, the soils in the expansion area are consistent with those of the original viticultural area.
The Livermore Area Recreation and Park District (LARPD) identified Brushy Peak as a potential city park in the early 1970s, and acquired 507 acres (205 ha) for that purpose in 1974. In 1997, LARPD and the East Bay Regional Park District (EBRPD) formally agreed to cooperate in the further acquisition, planning, and protection of Brushy Peak ...
Although historically it sank into the area between Livermore and Pleasanton now the site of multiple gravel pits, there is an engineered channel connecting it to Arroyo de la Laguna. [4] The underlying aquifer is the Mocho Subbasin, whose eastern boundary is the Tesla Fault. Some groundwater flow occurs across this fault boundary, but flows ...
Vasco Road is a roadway over the Diablo Range that connects Livermore and Brentwood, California.Although it is not part of the California State Highway system, it is the principal north–south commuter route serving eastern Alameda and Contra Costa counties.
Amador Valley is a valley in eastern Alameda County, California and is the location of the cities of Dublin and Pleasanton. [1] Part of Tri-Valley, the valley is bounded by the foothills of the Diablo Range on the north and south, Pleasanton Ridge to the west, and Livermore Valley to the east.