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AEGIS ENVIRONMENTAL, INC <br /> STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES <br /> RE. SOIL BORING SAMPLING <br /> SOP-1 <br /> During drilling, soil samples for chemical analysis are collected in thin-walled brass <br /> tubes of varying diameters and lengths (e g , 4 or 6 inches long by 2 inches outside- <br /> diameter) Three or four of the selected tubes, plus a spacer tube, are set in an 18- <br /> inch long split-barrel sampler of the appropriate inside-diameter <br /> Where possible, the split-barrel sampler is driven its entire length either hydraulically or <br /> using a 140-pound drop hammer The sampler is extracted from the borehole and the <br /> brass tubes, containing the soil samples, are removed Upon removal from the <br /> sampler, the selected brass tubes are either immediately trimmed and capped with <br /> aluminum foil or Teflon sheets and plastic caps, or the samples are extruded from the <br /> tubes and sealed within other appropriate cleaned sample containers (e g , glass lar) <br /> The samples are then hermetically sealed, labeled, and refrigerated for delivery, under <br /> strict chain-of-custody, to the analytical laboratory These procedures minimize the <br /> potential for cross-contamination and volatilization of volatile organic compounds <br /> (VOC) prior to chemical analysis <br /> One soil sample collected at each sampling interval is analyzed in the field using either <br /> a portable photoionization detector (PID), flame ionization detector, organic vapor <br /> analyzer, catalytic gas detector, or an explosimeter The purpose of this field analysis <br /> is to qualitatively determine the presence or absence of hydrocarbons, and the <br /> samples to be analyzed at the laboratory The soil sample is sealed in either a brass <br /> tube, glass far, or plastic bag to allow for some volatilization of VOC The PID is then <br /> used to measure the concentrations of hydrocarbons within the containers's <br /> headspace The data is recorded on both field notes and the boring logs at the depth <br /> corresponding to the sampling point <br /> Other soil samples are collected to document the soil and/or stratigraphic profile <br /> beneath the project site, and estimate the relative permeability of the subsurface <br /> materials All drilling and sampling equipment are either steam-cleaned or washed in <br /> solution and double-rinsed in deionized water prior to use at each site and between <br /> boreholes to minimize the potential for cross-contamination <br /> ATTACHMENT/SOP 1/FEBRUARY 1992 <br />