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ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0002016
EnvironmentalHealth
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2900 - Site Mitigation Program
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PR0505509
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ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0002016
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Entry Properties
Last modified
1/29/2020 12:07:00 PM
Creation date
1/29/2020 11:49:15 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
2900 - Site Mitigation Program
File Section
ARCHIVED REPORTS
FileName_PostFix
XR0002016
RECORD_ID
PR0505509
PE
2950
FACILITY_ID
FA0006824
FACILITY_NAME
BP STATION #11191
STREET_NUMBER
1469
Direction
E
STREET_NAME
HAMMER
STREET_TYPE
LN
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95210
APN
08818030
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
1469 E HAMMER LN
P_LOCATION
01
P_DISTRICT
002
QC Status
Approved
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EHD - Public
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21 <br /> • CAMBRIA <br /> STANDARD FIELD PROCEDURES FOR INSTALLATION OF MONITORING WELLS <br /> This document presents standard field methods for drilling and sampling soil bongs and installing, <br /> developing and sampling ground water monitoring wells These procedures are designed to comply <br /> with Federal,State and local regulatory guidelines Specific field procedures are summarizer) below <br /> SOIL BORINGS <br /> Objectives <br /> Soil samples are collected to characterize subsurface lithology, assess whether the soils exhibit <br /> obvious hydrocarbon or other compound vapor or staining, and to collect samples for analysis at a <br /> State-certified laboratory All bormgs are logged using the Unified Soil Classification System by a <br /> trained geologist working under the supervision of a California Registered Geologist(RG) <br /> Soil Boring and Sampling <br /> Soil borings are typically drilled using hollow-stem augers or direct-push technologies such as the <br /> Geoprobe(D Soil samples are collected at least every five ft to characterize the subsurface sediments <br /> and for possible chemical analysis Additional soil samples are collected near the water table and at <br /> lithologic changes Samples are collected using lined split-barrel or equivalent samplers driven into <br /> undisturbed sediments at the bottom of the borehole <br /> Drilling and sampling equipment is steam-cleaned prior to drilling and between borings to prevent <br /> cross-contamination Sampling equipment is washed between samples with tnsodium phosphate or <br /> an equivalent EPA-approved detergent <br /> Sample Analysis <br /> Sampling tubes chosen for analysis are trimmed of excess soil and capped with Teflon tape and plastic <br /> end caps Soil samples are labeled and stored at or below 4°Con either crushed or dry ice, depending <br /> upon local regulations Samples are transported under chain-of-custody to a State-certified analytic <br /> laboratory <br /> Field Screening <br /> One of the remaining tubes is partially emptied leaving about one-third of the soil in the tube The <br /> tube is capped with plastic end caps and set aside to allow hydrocarbons to volatilize from the soil <br /> After ten to fifteen minutes, a portable volatile vapor analyzer measures volatile hydrocarbon vapor <br /> concentrations in the tube headspace, extracting the vapor through a slit in the cap Volatile vapor <br /> analyzer measurements are used along with the field observations, odors, stratigraphy and ground <br /> water depth to select soil samples for analysis <br /> • <br /> 1 of 3 <br /> P kTRMPLATE150PsIGW Installation doe <br />
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