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Vertical Delineation of Contamination in Fractured Bedrock Aquifer
Authors:David Muscalo
Institution:David Muscalo;, CPG, PG (Advocate Environmental Consulting Inc., 19 Voight Lane, Lafayette, NJ 07848–3132; 875–4685;fax 875–4859;), is the managing principal and owner of Advocate Environmental Consulting Inc. He received a B.A. and M.A. in geology from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He has 20 years of experience in the environmental consulting field, including five years with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. His current interests include the restoration of ground water and soils through the use of innovative and traditional technologies.
Abstract:The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's Technical Regulations require the horizontal and vertical delineation of contamination. Monitor wells screened at increasingly deeper intervals are used to delineate vertical contamination. In New Jersey, the open interval in a bedrock well cannot exceed 7.6 m. Since contamination has been found at depths as great as 91.4 m in a production well in the study area, it would be prohibitively expensive to install monitor wells with 7.6 m open holes at ever-increasing depths until no contamination was found. Isolation of discrete zones in boreholes using pneumatic packers was implemented at a site in north central New Jersey. Ground water samples were collected from selected 6.1 m sections of boreholes drilled into fractured bedrock at three locations on the property and one offsite location. The ground water samples were analyzed in a field laboratory. The analytical results were used to determine the vertical extent of gasoline-related compounds dissolved in the ground water on the property and offsite. These compounds include benzene, ethylbenzene, methyl tertiary butyl ether, toluene, and xylenes. The four boreholes were converted into bedrock monitor wells. The intake interval for each of the wells was selected through evaluation of the vertical distribution of contaminants as determined from analytical results obtained from a field laboratory located onsite. Three wells are used for the recovery of contaminated ground water. The recovered water will be treated at the onsite air-stripping unit. The fourth well is used to chemically and hydraulically monitor the progress of the ground water recovery program.
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