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V � <br /> 20 October 2004 <br /> — AGE-NC Project No. 04-1156 <br /> Page 5 of 6 <br /> 3.7. DISPOSAL OF SOIL <br /> On 05 August 2004, 8 drums of soil was transported to Filter Recycling Sevices, Inc. in Rialto, <br /> California for disposal. The manifest is included as Appendix B. <br /> 4.0. FINDINGS <br /> Soil descriptions were determined from field data.Petroleum hydrocarbon impacts to soil and ground <br /> water were inferred from laboratory analysis of the soil and ground water samples. <br /> 4.1. SOIL DESCRIPTIONS <br /> The soil encountered at discrete depths between 5 and 10 feet bsg consisted predominantly of olive <br /> brown to brown, dry to damp, fine- to medium-grained sand and silty sand, excluding fill material <br /> from borings B-3 and B-4. Soil at discrete depths from 15 to 25 feet bsg was predominantly yellow <br /> brown or orange brown,dry to damp, sandy silt to silty clay. Similar fine materials were encountered <br /> at 30 feet bsg in soil borings B-2 and B-3. Primarily sand and silty sand were encountered at 30 feet <br /> y bsg in B-1 and B-4 and to total depth in all borings. Ground water was encountered in the sod <br /> borings at approximately 33 feet bsg. Soil boring logs are included in Appendix A. <br /> 4.2. ANALYTICAL RESULTS OF SOIL SAMPLES <br /> No target analytes were detected in the soil samples analyzed. The laboratory report (CTEL Project <br /> No. CT214-0406214), quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC) report and chain of custody <br /> forms are included in Appendix C. <br /> 4.3. ANALYTICAL RESULTS OF GROUND WATER SAMPLES <br /> No target analytes were detected in the ground water samples analyzed.The laboratory report(CTEL <br /> Project No. CT214-0406214), QA/QC report and chain of custody forms are included in <br /> Appendix C. <br /> advanced GeoEnvironmental.Inc. <br />