Aggregate Resources Vs Urban Development & Multiple Use Planning San Gabriel Valley, Calif.

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
G. V. Henderson
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
11
File Size:
1681 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1978

Abstract

The San Gabriel Valley contains some of the richest and most extensive sand and gravel deposits in California. Operating quarries within the San Gabriel area mine more than 15 million tons of high quality aggregate per year. This represents about 45 percent of the total mined in the greater Los Angeles area, one of the nation's largest aggregate markets and producing regions. Popular opposition to continued aggregate production in the San Gabriel Valley is high, especially in the city of Irwindale where 40 per-cent of the city's property is made up of "excavated holes," some 150-200 feet deep. Reclamation of 70 years of mining is now an almost impossible task. Zoning regulations have the effect of depleting these vast reserves rapidly by changing the definition of total reserves to include only "legally minable reserves." All but two or three of the aggregate mines now operating will be depleted or zoned out of business by the year 2000. Some studies indicate that there will be no aggregate mining operations by 1995. Recent studies show a drastic change in land use patterns within this valuable mineral resource area over the past 20 years. The San Gabriel Valley is a classic example of the lack of adequate regional planning with regard to urban development in MRA's and represents a "too little, too late" effort by local government and industry.
Citation

APA: G. V. Henderson  (1978)  Aggregate Resources Vs Urban Development & Multiple Use Planning San Gabriel Valley, Calif.

MLA: G. V. Henderson Aggregate Resources Vs Urban Development & Multiple Use Planning San Gabriel Valley, Calif.. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1978.

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