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WU{J^I I^JIIU rikJillilllO^iaLfV^ RecordJDocument 00ll28 RECE ^^ ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENT INC.. JUN 1 ^ 1565 REGION VI f9al * f ' ) ' ^——i 5--VK-"? mU^NAKY REPORT ...... _ , Thia <toe« not constitute Keith Bradley, Region VI RPO ftraal ophrion of &PA. Ray Roblin, Fir-Geologist •^^ K.H. Malone Jr,, FIT-RPM /^^^ May 27. 1986 Sampling Inspection of ORC Refinery in Cyril, Oklahoma (OK3417) TOD R06-8510-27 The FIT was tasked to sample six old storage pits, one drinking water well, a nearby stream, one monitoring well and the API Separator at The ORC Refinery in Cyril, Oklahoma. Specifically, samples were collected to document exact locations of on-site contaminants for MRS ranking purposes and to gather background soil data for comparison with on-site data. The drinking water sample was collected to determine if any contamination exists In the upper aquifer (Rush Springs Sandstone) at the -nearest drinking well to the site. The sampling mission was conducted on January 29, 1986 by FIT Members Ray Roblin, Jean Sa1inas> Jim Trusley, Bill Barham, Bob Stewart and Larry Landry. Station Descriptions and Chemical Analysis Sample station locations are shown in Figure 1. laboratory QA/QC results are reported in Appendix A. (Photo #1) - The sample was col tected at Mr. Bill Brown's drinking water well, which is located approximately 0,25 miles east of ORC. This well is 35' deep and is completed in the Rush Springs Formation, Field analytical results are as follows; pH = 7,4; conductivity - 1500 umhos; temperature - 13" C. Labora- tory analytical results did not reveal any organic contamination or any significant inorganic contaminants. (Photo #2) - A sediment sample was collected from Gladys Creek upstream from ORC, 100' north of railroad bridge. Organic and inorganic analytical results indicated no ,^w^ ^" )Kr ^^^^^ i '- .'/nssri, .vrrWJn ^ •• yA -

SAMPLING INSPECTION OF OKLAHOMA REFINING ...ppb); 2-methyl naphthalene (65,000 ppb); fais(2 ethylhexyl phthalate (86,000 ppb); additionally, 10 ten- tatively Identified unknowns with

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  • WU{J^I I^JIIU rikJillilllO^iaLfV^

    RecordJDocument

    00l l28 R E C E^^ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENT INC.. JUN 1 ^ 1565

    REGION VI f9al*f')' ^——i 5--VK-"?

    mU^NAKY REPORT. . . . . . „ _ , Thia Jim Trusley, Bill Barham, Bob Stewart andLarry Landry.

    Station Descriptions and Chemical Analysis

    Sample station locations are shown in Figure 1 .

    laboratory QA/QC results are reported in Appendix A.

    (Photo #1) - The sample was col tected at Mr. BillBrown's drinking water well, which is locatedapproximately 0,25 miles east of ORC. This well is 35'deep and is completed in the Rush Springs Formation,Field analytical results are as follows; pH = 7,4;conductivity - 1500 umhos; temperature - 13" C. Labora-tory analytical results did not reveal any organiccontamination or any significant inorganic contaminants.

    (Photo #2) - A sediment sample was collected from GladysCreek upstream from ORC, 100' north of railroad bridge.Organic and inorganic analytical results indicated no

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  • ctrafcion matrix from storage pit tf5. Organic dataanalysts revealed only contaminants which were alsofound in the lab blank. Inorganic analysis detectedelevated concentrations of arsenic (10.5 ppm); cadmium(.61 ppm); lead (25.500 ppm); magnesium (15. 200 ppm);and mercury (0.38 ppm).

    " (Photo #9 ) - The sample was collected as a high concen-tration matrix from storage pit ff6. Organic dataanalysis detected 100,000 ppb of phenanthrene, 7600 ppbof total xylenes, 1900 ppb toluene; 100,000 ppb pyrene;additionally, 1 tentatively identified unknown wasdetected at a concentration of 200,000 ppb; 18 hydro-carbons total ing 14,890,000 ppb; and 1 aromatic at730,000 ppb was detected. Inorganic data analysisdetected elevated levels cf antimony (84 ppm); arsenic(231 ppm); cadmium (1.6 ppm); chromium (9300 ppm);cobalt (17 ppm); copper (1050 ppm); lead (2200 ppm;)magnesium (277,000 ppm); mercury (0.38 ppm); nickel (37ppm); selenium (2.0 ppm); vanadium (3.9 ppm); and zinc(195 ppm).

    - (Photo HO) - The sample was collected as a high concen-tration matrix from the API separator. Organic dataanalysis Indicated concentrations of toluene (61.000ppb); ethyl benzene (28,000 ppb); total xylenes (379,000ppb); 2-methyl naphthalene (65,000 ppb); fais(2ethylhexyl phthalate (86,000 ppb); additionally, 10 ten-tatively Identified unknowns with a total concentrationof 1,385,500 ppb, and 17 unknown hydrocarbons with atotal concentration of 5,482.000 ppb were detected.Other tentatively Identified priority pollutants andcontaminants detected were benzene, phenanthrene,naphthalene, 3-methyl hexane, 1.3-dimethyl cyclohexane.decane, tetradecdne, hexadecane, hepfcadecane andnonadecane with concentrations ranging from 560 ppb to590.000 ppb. (See organic analysis summary sheets).Inorganic analysis data review Indicated elevatedconcentrations of arsenic (104 ppm); beryllium (2.1ppm); chromium (2700 ppm); cobalt (22 ppm); copper (196ppm); lead (304 ppm); mercury (18.5 pp

  • c (at 490,000 ppb were detected- Inorganic analysis datareview indicated elevated concentrations of arsenic(1420 ppm); cadmium (4.4 ppm); chromium (362 ppm; cobalt(112 ppm), copper (1350 ppm); lead (1740 ppm); mercury(0.42 ppm); nickel (74 ppm); selenium (6.7 ppm); tin(1.9 ppm); vanadium (140 ppm) and zinc (205 ppm).

    Station 14 - There was no organic or inorganic contamination detectedIn the field rinsate blank.

    Station 15 - (Photo HI} " The sample was collected as a high concen-^ ^ , t r a t l o n liquid from monitor well ^S£-4. Organic data

    . ' review indicated a concentration of 9200 ppb of totalxylenes; additionally, 1 (one) tentatively identifiedunknown at a concentration of 260,000 ppb and 5

    -".> aromatics at a total concentration of 299,000 ppb were ,-»t detected. Inorganic analytical data review indicated ^

    significant concentrations of aluminum (7,220.000 ppb);arsenic (730 ppb); beryllium (200 ppb); cadmium (110

  • c cAppendix A: QA/QC Results

    The QA/QC for the organic data, station numbers 01, 02. 03, 04, and 14, wasdeeaed acceptable by FIT Chemists. The laboratory seemed to have somedifficulty with the soil matrix spike duplicates. The acid fraction had 8of 10 spikes out of QC limits and the base neutral fraction had 2 of 12 out.This was explained In a memo from the EPA Houston Laboratory that stated thelab simply did not spike all surrogates. This is not an automatic repeatanalysis and S.M.O. advises that the data is usable. The project officerstated that this methodology Is a pilot study and that there is no provision•for reanatysis; therefore, all data Is considered adequate. Methylene'chloride, l»l,l-trichlorethane, di-n-butyl phthalate and 4"methyl-4~penten-2-one were detected in the rinsate blank and therefore are considered labcontaminants. These compounds are flagged with a 8 on the attached datasheets.

  • INORGANIC WATER ANALYSIS SUMMARY Page 1 of 2CASE NUMBER: 5475 SAS 2112FSITE NAME/COIÎ T OK RefinTng Co. Oj

  • INORGANIC SOIL ANALYSIS SUMMARY Page 2 of 2CASE NUMBER: 5475_______SITE NAME/CODE:OK Refine Co. OK 3417

    ?^Reference for East/West Division is they6W longitudinal linewhich bisects Region YI,10/31/85 f

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