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t <br /> WEISS ASSOCIATES <br /> 23 GROUND WATER MONITORING WELL INSTALLATION, DEVELOPMENT, AND <br /> SAMPLING <br /> A ground water monitoring well was installed in the vertical borings adjacent to each <br /> vault Each well was constructed to monitor the upper-most water-bearing zone, which was <br /> encountered at about 71 ft depth in each boring The well screens extend 10 to 15 ft above the <br /> static ground water level and 15 to 16 ft below the static water level to 85 to 89 ft depth in each <br /> well j <br /> WA constructed the wells of 4-inch ID,0 02-inch slotted, flush threaded Schedule 40 PVC <br /> well screen and blank casing Lonestar #3 Monterey sand filter material occupies the annular <br />' space from the approximate bottom of the borings to about two ft above the top of the well <br /> screens One to two ft of bentonite pellets was placed on top of the sand pack to prevent <br /> infiltration of grout into the sand pack and disturbance of the sand pack by tremied grout <br /> The borehole was backfilled to ground surface with cement grout containing 3-5% bentonite <br /> powder The well heads are secured with locking plugs and finished at-grade with protective <br /> vaults <br /> On January 29, 1991,P C Exploration and WA environmental technicians David Charles <br /> and Paul Cardoza developed the three wells with a surging bailer and air lift evacuation to <br /> remove drilling residues, reduce the sediment content of water entering the well, and improve <br /> the monitoring well performance Each well was developed with at least two episodes of surge <br /> block agitation followed by removal of sediments by air lift evacuation Each well was purged <br /> until five times the volume of water in the well plus the water in the sand pack had been <br /> removed,and the water was as free of fine-grained sediments as possible All equipment which <br /> may have contacted ground water during well development was steam-cleaned before use and <br /> after developing each well <br /> On January 31, 1991,WA environmental technician Paul Cardoza collected ground water <br /> samples from the wells Prior to sampling, at least three well-casing volumes of ground water <br /> were removed from each well using a steam-cleaned PVC bailer Water samples were collected <br />' with steam-cleaned Teflon bailers and the samples transferred to appropriate sample <br /> containers The samples were refrigerated and a chain-of-custody was maintained until the <br /> samples were delivered to the laboratory for analysis <br /> Prior to well sampling,the bailers used to purge and sample the wells were washed with <br /> D lALL1331DWG1331R1MA1 WP Page 9 <br />