HomeMy WebLinkAboutCDP 2016-0005; KLOVANISH RESIDENCE; Paleontological Resource and Monitoring Assessment; 2016-11-17A !!!5!!!r!!!ia!!!n!!!!!!F:!!!5!!!m!!!!!!it!!!h!!!a!!!n!!!d!!!!!!A!!!s!!!s!!!o!!!c!!!ia!!!t!!!e!!!s ,!!!!l!!!n!!!c!!!. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! R Archaeolom I .Bio/om I History I Paleontolom I Afr Quality /TraFFic / Ac;oustics
17 November 2016
Mr. Steve Klovanish
2721 Carlsbad Boulevard
Carlsbad, California 92008
RECEIVE
DEC 14 2016
CITY OF CARLSBAD
PLANNING DIVISION
Subject: Paleontological Resource and Monitoring Assessment, Klovanish Family Residence,
4385 Adams Street, Carlsbad, San Diego County, California (APN 206-180-041)
Dear Mr. Klovanish:
A paleontological resource and monitoring assessment has been completed for the Klovansih
family residence project site (Assessor's Parcel Number [ APN] 206-180-041) located on the 4300
block of Adams Street in the city of Carlsbad, San Diego County, California (Attachments 1 and
2). The project site is located near the western edge of projected Section 8, Township 12 South,
Range 4 West, San Bernardino Base and Meridian, as shown on the U.S. Geological Survey 7.5-
minute, 1 :24,000 scale, San Luis Rey, California, topographic quadrangle map (Attachment 2).
The parcel comprises about 0.42 acre on the east side of Adams Street, and overlooks Agua
Hedionda Lagoon. Pre-existing family residences are present to the south and east and a vacant
lot is adjacent to the northwest.
Geologically, the basement rocks in the area are mapped as the middle Eocene(~ 38 to 48 million
year old) Santiago Formation (Attachment 3, after S.S. Tan and M. P. Kennedy, 1996, Geologic
maps of the northwestern part of San Diego County, California: California Division of Mines and
Geology, DMG Open File Report 96-02, pl. 1). The Santiago Formation contains a variety of
lithologies, including ones derived from marine, estuarine, and terrestrial environments. Eocene
sediments are exposed along the water's edge on the shore of the lagoon. Much of the coastal area
in this part of the county is also overlain by a thin veneer of Pleistocene marine terrace sediments
that are not always mapped as such, but are evident based on the planar terrace geomorphology.
A paleontological collections and records search conducted by the Department of Paleontology at
the San Diego Natural History Museum (SDNHM) in San Diego did not identify any previously
recorded fossil localities within the project boundaries. The closest fossil locality recorded by the
Department of Geological Sciences at San Diego State University (SDSU loc. 682) is located
approximately 0.45 miles to the southeast along the edge of Agua Hedionda Lagoon, and yielded a
fauna of Pleistocene marine invertebrate fossils (T. D. Grotts, 1981 , Unpublished SDSU Master's
thesis, p. 30, fig . 8). In addition, the SDNHM's locality maps show one fossil palm locality less
than a mile distant to the east-northeast (SDNHM unnumbered) and another Eocene locality
(SDNHM lac. 3279) to the north-northeast just outside the one-mile radius, both in the Santiago
M-010 Powa_y Road, Suite A, Powa_y, CA 92oG+; Phone (8J8) 679-8218 or (951) 681-9950; Fax (858) 679-9896; www.bfsa-ca.c.om
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Brian F. Smith and Associates, Inc. -Page 2
Formation. In addition, about a mile to the east to northeast, the University of California Museum
of Paleontology collected numerous Eocene vertebrate fossils from the area of the Laguna Riviera
housing development in the 1960s. The fossils from these collections, which included bird, turtle
soft-shelled turtle, crocodile, tapir, and brontothere, were named the "Laguna Riviera local fauna"
and are discussed in a number of published reports (e.g., D. J. Golz, 1976, Natural History
Museum of Los Angeles County Science Bulletin 26; Golz and J. A. Lillegraven, 1977,"
University of Wyoming Contributions to Geology, v. 15, pp. 43-65; S. L. Walsh, 1996, Middle
Eocene mammal faunas of San Diego County, pp. 75-119; and others). The SDNHM also
contains numerous collections of Eocene vertebrate and invertebrate fossils from the Santiago
Formation in areas just east of Agua Hedionda Lagoon, some of which are also discussed by
Walsh (1996). It is apparent that the Santiago Formation is abundantly fossiliferous throughout
this region.
In addition to the numerous documented Eocene fossil localities in the region, Pleistocene marine
invertebrate fossils, such as bivalve and gastropod mollusks, are present on the coastal marine
terraces in the area. The only recorded Pleistocene fauna from around Agua Hedionda Lagoon is
SDSU loc. 682, mentioned previously, but all of the other lagoons and estuary systems along the
coast, including those of Soledad Canyon (Torrey State Reserve), San Dieguito River, San Elijo
Lagoon, Batiquitos Lagoon, Buena Vista Lagoon, and in Oceanside have yielded fossiliferous
marine deposits that date to one of the earlier warm-water interglacial periods of the last half-
million years. Given that these sea level events occurred globally, and that there is no structural
geologic evidence to preclude deposition around Agua Hedionda Lagoon, it is reasonable to
assume that fossiliferous marine deposition also occurred locally, although perhaps not yet
identified. Tan and Kennedy (1996) show extensive areas of marine terrace sediments (Qt1 and
Qt2 on Attachment 3) around Agua Hedionda Lagoon.
Because of the "high paleontologicalresource sensitivity" of the iddle Eocene Santiago
Fonnation and of Pleistocene marine terrace sediments (T. A. Demere and S. L. Walsh, 1993 ,
Paleontological Resources -County of San Diego; and R. A. Stephenson et al., 2009, County of
San Diego Guidelines for Determining Significance [of] Paleontological Resources), full time
paleontological monitoring of mass grading and excavation activities, including utility trenching,
etc., in areas so mapped should be required to mitigate any adverse impacts (loss or destruction) to
potential nonrenewable paleontological resources (i.e., Pleistocene and Eocene fossils). A
Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Program (MMRP) consistent with the provisions of the
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA),.regulations currently implemented by the City of
Carlsbad, and proposed guidelines of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology should be
implemented for this projec.
If you have any questions concerning this evaluation, please feel free to contact us at o
address. Thank you for the opportunity to provide paleontological services for this pr
Sincerely,
B=-~<~
George L. Kennedy, Ph.D.
Senior Paleontologist
Attachments: Index maps, geologic map
~ Todd A. Wirths, M.S., P.G.
California Professional Geologist
Attachment 1
General Location Map
The K.lovanish Residence Project
DeLorme (1 :250,000)
Smiles
Attachment 2
Project Location Map
The Klovanish Residence Project
USGS San Luis Rey Quadrangle (7.5-minute series)
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Attachment 3
Geologic Map
The Klovanish Residence Project
Geology after Tan and Kennedy (1996)
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