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lie <br /> at a depth of 45 feet bsg or in samples analyzed from the three other probings Soil probe boring <br /> Installations were described in theAGE-prepared Preliminary Site Assessment Report in August <br /> 1997 <br /> One 20,000-gallon UST was installed at the site following the 1998 UST removals Approximately <br /> I 341 tons of hydrocarbon-Impacted soil were excavated during removal of the old USTs and <br /> overexcavation for the installation of the new UST and piping Soil was disposed at Forward <br /> Landfill During the UST Installation, two conductor casings were Installed through the pea gravel <br /> I adjacent to the UST In anticipation of fixture site assessment need The UST removal,overexcavation <br /> and UST Installation were described in the AGE-prepared USTRemoval Report,dated 26 May 1998 <br /> Three ground water monitoring wells were Installed In December 1998 as part of site assessment <br /> activities Petroleum hydrocarbon-Impacted soil was encountered in all well borings The maximum <br /> concentration of TPH-g was 4,200 mg/kg (MW-1) Benzene and MTBE were detected only in soil <br /> sample MW2-35 at 0 0058 mg/kg and 0 011 mg/kg, respectively <br /> TPH-g was detected in initial ground water samples collected from MW-1 through MW-3 at a <br /> maximum concentration of 330,000 micrograms/liter (µg/1) in the sample from MW-3 BTEX <br /> compounds were detected at concentrations as high as 29,000 µg/l, 54,000 µg/1, 6,500 µg/1 and <br /> 36,000 µg/l, respectively (MW-3) MTBE was detected in all three well samples at a maximum <br /> concentration of 510 µg/1 (MW-1) In addition, TBA was detected In MW-1 and MW-2 at a <br /> maximum concentration of 830 µg/1 (MW-1) Monitoring well installation and Initial monitoring <br /> activities were described in the AGE-prepared Monitoring Well Installation Report, dated 02 June <br /> 1999 <br /> Between February and November 2001,AGE advanced five paired cone penetrometer testing(CPT) <br /> soli borings(CPT-1 through CPT-5) at the site to depths between 100 and 150 feet bsg to assess the <br /> extent of petroleum-Impact and to Identify potential hydrologic units TPH-g was detected in grab <br /> water samples at concentrations as high as 14,000µg/l(CPT-4),BTEX compounds at concentrations <br /> as high as 4,000µg11 benzene(CPT-4),MTBE concentrations as high as 1 3 µg/l(CPT-4), and TBA <br /> at concentrations as high as 5 0 µg11 (CPT-2) <br /> Based on CPT data, AGE identified a vadose zone and six potential hydrologic units informally <br /> identified as Hydrologic Unit 1 (HUI), located between 30 and 70 feet bsg, Hydrologic Unit 2 <br /> (HU2), located between 70 and 85 feet bsg, Hydrologic Unit 3 (HU3), located between 85 and 95 <br /> or 100 feet bsg, Hydrologic Unit 4 (HU4), located between 95 or 100 feet and 120 feet bsg, <br /> Hydrologic Unit 5(HU5), located between 120 feet and approximately 135 feet bsg,and Hydrologic <br /> Unit 6(HU6), located between 135 feet and at least 150 feet bsg Geologic cross sections A A'and <br /> B-B' were generated from the CPT data, depicting the informal hydrologic units and petroleum <br /> Ihydrocarbon concentrations beneath the site <br /> Results of the February 2001 investigation were reported In Cone Penetrometer Testing (CPT) <br /> Report - February 2001, dated 19 June 2001, results of the November 2001 investigation were <br /> • reported in Cone Penetrometer Testing (CPT) Report-November 2001, dated 25 March 2002 <br /> Advanced GeoEnvironmental,Inc <br />