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May 4, 2012 - KGO Radio Medallion Comptetion Interview
February 5, 2012 - Student contest winners to design portal adornments, Bay Area News Group
January 24, 2012 - Tunnel Breakthrough Gives Momentum, Contra Costa Times
December 27, 2011 - Diablo Magazine, Tunnel Vision: Inside the Digging of the Calecott's Fourth Tunnel
November 29, 2011 - Milestone Reached in Construction of Caldecott Fourth Bore, KTVU
November 29, 2011 - Underground in Action, Tunnel Talk
September 19, 2011 - San Francisco Chronicle, Caldecott Tunnel workers dig toward tomorrow
September 11, 2011 - New York Times, Caldecott Tunnel Edges Forward, Tribute to Stimulus Bill
September 10, 2011 - Bay Citizen, In Dark Times for Stimulus, Tunnel Offers Dems a Ray of Hope
August 17, 2011 - KRON-SF (MyTv), KRON 4 Evening News
August 17, 2011 - KPIX-SF CBS Eyewitness News at 6:00 PM
August 17, 2011 - KTVU-SF (FOX), Mornings on Two
August 17, 2011 - KNTV-SF (NBC), Today in the Bay
April / May 2011 - North American Tunneling Journal: Going Full Bore at Caldecott
May 11, 2011 - yourmonthlypaper.com: Caldecott Fourth Bore Tunnels to the Past
March 28, 2011 - Contra Costa Times, Dig, Probe, Dig: Inside the Caldecott Tunnel fourth bore
February 14, 2011 - Contra Costa Times, Caldecott Tunnel: Digging in deep
February 7, 2011 - KGO, Construction continues on Caldecott Tunnel 4th Bore
January 7, 2011 - KPIX-TV, What's Going on with the Caldecott Tunnel Construction
December 8, 2010 - Lamorinda Weekly, The Caldecott Tunnel - History in the Making
September 1, 2010 - Metropolitan Transportation Commission's (MTC) Transactions, Federal Stimulus Dollars Fuel Bay Area Transportation Renaissance
August 19, 2010 - KQED, Quest Science Program, A Record of the East Bay's Past Revealed during Caldecott Tunnel Excavation
August 14, 2010 - Contra Costa Times Editorial, Caldecott Tunnel Project Good Use of Federal Stimulus Funds
August 10, 2010 - White House Blog, Caldecott Tunnel Fourth Bore a Stimulus Success Story
August 6, 2010 - Contra Costa Times/Oakland Tribune: Tunneling to Begin
July 27, 2010 - KPIX-TV - Good Question: What is the Temporary Soundwall Made Of? Video is on the right side of the page.
July 19, 2010 - Contra Costa Times - Fourth Bore Bones
July 16, 2010 - KTVU-TV - Crews Find Fossils
June 12, 2010 - Contra Costa Times - Caltrans Gets Earful About Soundwall
May 31, 2010 - San Francisco Chronicle - Caldecott Fouth Bore Under Construction,
May 20, 2010 - Lamorinda Times - And the Digging Begin
May 13, 2010 - British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) – U.S. Stimulus Money, Written summary of BBC Radio story on U.S. Stimulus featuring the Caldecott Fourth Bore Project as an example of stimulus money at work.
January 23, 2010 - San Francisco Chronicle - Work Begins on Caldecott Tunnel's 4th Bore
January 20, 2010 - Costra Costa Times Editorial - Begin Digging on the Fourth Bore...
December 14. 2009 - Contra Costa Times/Oakland Tribune Columnist Tom Barnidge comments on the Caldecott – Some Light at the End of the Caldecott Tunnel
December 3, 2009 - Wall Street Journal, Letter to Editor from Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood mentions the Calecott Tunnel - The ARRA is Working, As It Should
Press Releases
Tunneling Begins on Caldecott Tunnel's West Portal, March 16, 2011
Construction Begins on $420 Million Caldecott Tunnel Fourth Bore Project, January 22, 2010 (PDF, 416 KB)
Upcoming Community Meeting for Caldecott Tunnel Project, December 7, 2009 (PDF, 28 KB)
by Brian Romans • August 19th, 2010
37.85822548033667, -122.21365928999148
Geologic map of Caldecott Tunnel area (credit: USGS ) Click here for a larger version.
If you use Highway 24 as part of your daily commute you are already familiar with the Caldecott Tunnel, which connects Orinda and Oakland — perhaps you are too familiar with the tunnel as you sit in the bottleneck traffic waiting to enter it. What you may not be familiar with, however, is the geology of the hills through which the tunnel was constructed. There are currently three separate tunnels, or bores, that make up Caldecott Tunnel. Construction for a fourth bore is now underway an is already yielding interesting geologic results. The Caldecott Fourth Bore Project website contains a wealth of information about the entire project — from funding to logistics to tunneling methods and more.
The process of excavating a tunnel produces a lot of rock and, in this case, it is sedimentary rock that is known to contain abundant fossils. The geologic map shown above depicts the distribution of distinct rock types and ages in this area. The part of the ridge that Caldecott Tunnel cuts through is made up three formations — each of which has their own color: The Orinda Formation is the orange unit at the east portal, the Claremont Chert in yellow, and an unnamed mudstone in brown at the west portal. The tectonic forces that created these hills also caused the layered sedimentary rocks to be tilted at high angles and, in many areas, the layers are standing up vertical. The rocks are older from east to west so, in this case, excavation of the tunnel from east to west is similar to drilling down into older layers.
Orinda Formation along Hwy 24 near east portal of Caldecott Tunnel (credit: Jeff Weiss, public information officer for Fourth Bore Project)
The rocks are lithified sediments that were deposited in the Miocene period, which ranged from 23 to 5 million years ago. The Orinda Formation (the orange unit by east portal in map above) is approximately 10 million years old and is known to contain abundant mammal and plant fossils in nearby areas. The Orinda Formation is characterized by a wide variety of sedimentary rocks including mudstone, sandstone, and conglomerate that were deposited in streams in creeks (see some photos of the rocks near the tunnel here.
Some mammal fossils found in the Orinda Formation include*: • Gomphotherium (a primitive type of elephant) • Hipparion, Nannipus, and Pliohippus (primitive horses) • Barbourofelis (member of primitive cat family) • Cranioceras (deer-like mammal) • Ticholeptus (member of extinct group of pig-like animals) • Desmostylus (exctinct sea cow similar to a hippopotamus)
The Miocene was the peak of mammal diversity and thought to be linked to the development of grassland ecosystems. So, next time you’re stuck in traffic leading up to the tunnel remember that you’re driving through the geologic evidence of a past Bay Area environment. Excavation of the fourth bore is really just getting started so stay tuned for more in the coming months. I will do my best to find out what I can and blog about it here for QUEST.
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* List of mammal fossils from University of California Museum of Paleontology database. If you want to learn more about specific species, you can learn a lot by simply googling the italicized names in the list above.
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Categories: Geology | Tags: fossil, Geology, highway, KQED, Oakland Hills, sedimentary rock
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