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Field Practices and Procedures <br /> Pane 2 <br /> samplers will be steam cleaned between each boring to reduce the possibility of cross <br /> contamination Steam cleaning effluent will be contained in 55-gallon drums and <br /> temporarily stored on site The disposal of the effluent will be the responsibility of the <br /> client <br /> Soil Sample Collection <br /> During hollow stem auger drilling, soil samples will be collected in cleaned brass, two by <br /> six inch tubes The tubes will be set in an 18-inch-long split-barrel sampler The sampler <br /> will be conveyed to bottom of the borehole attached to a wire-line hammer device on the <br /> drill rig When possible, the split-barrel sampler will be driven its entire length, either <br /> hydraulically or by repeated pounding a 140-pound ha=er using a 30-inch drop The <br /> number of drops (blows) used to drive the sampler will be recorded on the boring log <br /> The sampler will be extracted from the borehole, and the tubes containing the soil <br /> samples will be removed Upon removal, the ends of the lowermost tube will be sealed <br /> with Teflon sheets and plastic caps Soil samples for chemical analysis will be labeled, <br /> placed on ice, and delivered to a state-certified analytical laboratory, along with the <br /> appropriate chain-of-custody documentation Soil samples are not normally collected <br /> during air rotary drilling <br /> Soil Classification <br /> Soil samples collected in brass tubes, or drill cuttings evacuated from the borehole during <br /> air rotary drilling, will be logged on site by a geologist using the Unified Soil <br /> Classification System Representative portions of the brass sleeve samples will be <br /> retained for further examination and for verification of the field classification Logs of <br /> the borings indicating the depth and identification of the various strata and pertinent <br /> information regarding the method of maintaining and advancing the borehole will be <br /> prepared <br /> Soil Sample Screening <br /> Soil samples selected for chemical analysis will be determined from a head-space <br /> analysis using a PID or an FID The soil will be placed in a Ziploco bag, sealed, and <br /> allowed to reach ambient temperature, at which time the PID probe will be inserted into <br /> the Ziploct bag The total volatile hydrocarbons present are detected by the PID and <br /> reported in parts per million by volume (ppmv) The PID will be calibrated to an <br /> isobutylene standard <br /> At least two soil samples retained from each soil boring will be submitted for chemical <br /> analysis unless otherwise specified in the scope of work Soil samples selected for <br /> analysis typically represent the highest PID reading recorded for each soil boring and the <br /> sample dust above first-encountered groundwater Additional soil samples will be <br /> • <br /> M Wield Pracuces\Field P&P with Air Rotary Drilling-revised 02 2005 by SGB doe <br />