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Naples Creek is a stream in San Mateo County, California, USA that rises on the western slopes of the Santa Cruz Mountains and discharges to the Pacific Ocean. The specific point of discharge is onto Naples Beach, a unit of the Half Moon Bay State Beach. This watercourse runs through the city of Half Moon Bay, which municipality has planning jursidiction over the creekside area within its city boundaries. In the Open Space Element of Half Moon Bay's General Plan, Naples Creek is designated to have significant wetland and riparian zone biotic resources[1]. A Business Center Located In Beaverton, Oregon Famous For Canning People For Extremly Ridiculous Reasons IE: An Electronic Comment Of Thanks For Being Slow, Being On Your Final Warning, Endangering The Contract, Call Avoidance, Or Not Following A Ridiculous Schedule Printed Out By A Data Base Server With No Concern...
Official website: http://www. ...
The Santa Cruz Mountains, part of the Pacific Coast Ranges, are a mountain range in central California. ...
Half Moon Bay State Beach is a protected beach located in Half Moon Bay in California. ...
Half Moon Bay is a coastal city in San Mateo County, California, USA. Its population was 11,842 as of the 2000 census. ...
A subtropical wetland in Florida, USA, with an endangered American Crocodile. ...
A well maintained Riparian strip on a tributary to Lake Erie. ...
Biota can refer to several things: The plant and animal life of a region; see biota (ecology) A municipality in Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain; see Biota (municipality) A superdomain in taxonomy; see Biota (taxonomy) Biota Holdings, the Australian biotech company This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists...
The city of Half Moon Bay is proposing a trail along Naples Creek to expand on the recreational use of this natural resource. The area near the Mouth of Naples Creek is already in public ownership and is traversed by the coastside public trail along the low-lying blufftop. Further upstream along the banks of Naples Creek, the lower reach banks are in public ownership as within the right-of-way of Guerrero Avenue resources[2]. The city recognizes the entire riparian area as an important open space resource and is considering re-zoning to open space the entire passage of the stream through the Half Moon Bay.
Hydrology
Naples Creek rises in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains at an approximate headwaters elevation of over 400 feet and runs southwest through agricultural land and urban developed areas in the lower reach to the Pacific Ocean. Regionally, both the surface water and the groundwater flow with the slope of the terrain, that is, from the northeast to the southwest. Groundwater in the lower reach has been found at 20 to 80 feet below the surface in unconsolidated Quaternary marine terrace deposits and in unconsolidated Quaternary alluvium.[3] There are few groundwater barriers in the vicinity of the mouth of Naples Creek, a circumstance giving rise to local salt water intrusion. Chlorides exceeding 100 parts per million in groundwater were found in the early 1970s along this part of Half Moon Bay State[4] Near the mouth of Naples Creek the banktop elevation varies between an elevation ranging from 30 to 40 feet above mean sea datum[5] Foothills are geographically defined as gradual increases in hilly areas at the base of a mountain range. ...
The Santa Cruz Mountains, part of the Pacific Coast Ranges, are a mountain range in central California. ...
The headwaters of a river are small streams that create it. ...
Groundwater is water located beneath the ground surface in soil pore spaces and in the fractures of geologic formations. ...
Look up terrace in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
For other uses, see Quaternary (disambiguation). ...
Alluvium (from the Latin, alluvius, from alluere, to wash against) is soil or sediments deposited by a river or other running water. ...
See also - Arroyo de en Medio
- Miramar Beach
References - ^ City of Half Moon Bay Open Space Element of the General Plan
- ^ City of Half Moon Bay Open Space Element of the General Plan
- ^ Earth Metrics Inc., Environmental Site Assessment, APN 048-095-110, Half Moon Bay, California, Report no. 10301 {1989)
- ^ State of California Department of Water Resources, 1975
- ^ U.S. Geological Survey, Half Moon Bay 7.5" Quadrangle, 1961, photorevised 1968 and 1973
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