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' 04 January 2006 <br /> . AGE-NC Project No. 97-0301 <br /> Page 2 of 6 <br /> 2.1. WELL MONITORING AND PURGING <br /> On 22 September 2005 depth round water was measured in wells MW-1, MW-4 and MW-6 <br /> de p to g <br /> through MW-12 from the top of well casing to the nearest 0.01-foot utilizing a Solinst water level <br /> ' meter. <br /> On 23 September 2005, single-completion monitoring wells MW-1, MW-4 and MW-7 and multi- <br /> level monitoring wells MW-8 through MW-12 were purged by lowering and raising a length-discrete <br /> polyethylene hose(3/8-inch on CMT and 5/8-inch in 2-inch wells),equipped with a ball-valve water <br /> tip through the top chambers into the specific water-charged screened section.A Waterra Hydro-Lift <br /> ' Il pump equipped with a mechanical arm was utilized to surge each well with 3/8-inch diameter <br /> polyethylene hose.Well MW-6 was purged using anew disposable plastic bailer.Approximately 2.5 <br /> to 9 gallons of ground water(a minimum of three casing-water volumes per well)were purged from <br /> single-completion wells MW-1,MW-4,MW-6 and MW-7 and approximately 0.35 to 3 gallons were <br /> purged from multi-level wells MW-8 through MW-12. Temperature, pH, and conductivity were <br /> measured for stabilization at regular purge-volume intervals from each well using an Oakton water <br /> analyzer. Field data and logs are included in Appendix A. All purged ground water was transferred <br /> to Department of Transportation (DOT)-approved model 17H 55-gallon drums and stored on-site <br /> i ' . in an area lacking general public access. <br /> r <br /> 2.2. GROUND WATER SAMPLING <br /> After each well was purged, ground water levels were re-measured to verify the amount of ground <br /> water recharge. Upon achieving at least 80% ground water recharge, samples were collected from <br /> wells MW-1,MW-4 and MW-6 through MW-12,utilizing the techniques described above in purging <br /> each well.Ground water samples from each well were transferred into three 40 milliliter(ml)EPA- . <br /> approved volatile organic analysis (VOA) vials containing 0.5 ml 18% hydrochloric acid solution <br /> as a sample preservative and one I-liter amber bottle without sample preservative. Care was taken <br /> to ensure that visible air bubbles were not present in the vials after filling and capping.Ground water <br /> sample containers were labeled with the well designation, date, time, and sampler's initials. <br /> 2.3. LABORATORY ANALYSIS OF GROUND WATER SAMPLES <br /> ' Following collection and labeling,each ground water sample was logged on a chain of custody form, <br /> placed in a chilled container, and transported to Cal.Tech Environmental Laboratories (CTEL), a <br /> California Department of Health Services (DHS)-certified laboratory, for analysis for: <br /> ' Total petroleum hydrocarbons quantified as gasoline,diesel,kerosene,and motor oil(TPH-g, <br /> ' Advanced GeoEnvironmentai,Inc. <br />