Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout4116_WIHighPointC&D_GWMR_DIN27852_20160217 Golder, Golder Associates and the GA globe design are trademarks of Golder Associates Corporation FIRST SEMI-ANNUAL 2016 SAMPLING EVENT Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Submitted To: Waste Industries of High Point 5830 Riverdale Drive Jamestown, NC 27282 Submitted By: Golder Associates NC, Inc. 5B Oak Branch Drive Greensboro, NC 27407 USA April 2016 Project No. 1239-651616.101 WA T E R Q U A L I T Y M O N I T O R I N G RE P O R T Golder Associates NC, Inc. 5B Oak Branch Drive Greensboro, NC. 27407 USA Tel: (336) 852-4903 Fax: (336) 852-4904 www.golder.com Golder Associates: Operations in Africa, Asia, Australasia, Europe, North America and South America April 26, 2016 1239-651616.101 Ms. Jaclynne Drummond North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality Division of Waste Management - Solid Waste Section 2090 US Highway 70 Swannanoa, NC 28778 828-296-4706 RE: WATER QUALITY MONITORING REPORT FIRST SEMI-ANNUAL 2016 SAMPLING EVENT WASTE INDUSTRIES OF HIGH POINT C&D LANDFILL, PERMIT NO. 41-16 GUILFORD COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA Dear Jackie: Golder Associates NC, Inc. (Golder), on behalf of Waste Industries, is submitting the enclosed Water Quality Monitoring Report, which documents the results of the February 17 - 18, 2016, semi-annual compliance monitoring event at the Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill. This is the first Assessment Monitoring event for the facility. During this event, the concentrations of cobalt in the samples from downgradient wells MW-2 and MW-6 exceeded the Solid Waste Section Limit (SWSL) and Solid Waste Section Groundwater Protection Standard (GPS). The cobalt concentrations from samples MW-2 and MW-6 were statistically compared to background concentrations and were determined not to represent statistically significant increases over background concentrations. Therefore, cobalt is considered to be naturally occurring and no further action is warranted. Cobalt was also detected in samples from upgradient well MW-1 and downgradient wells MW-4S, MW-5, and MW-8 at concentrations below the SWSL, but above the GPS. Vanadium was detected in samples from downgradient wells MW-4S and MW-7S at concentrations below the SWSL, but above the GPS. The concentrations of cobalt and vanadium are similar to historical data and are considered to be representative of natural conditions; because they are estimated below the SWSL, no further action is warranted. Indicator parameters iron and manganese were detected in samples from several downgradient wells at concentrations that exceeded their respective SWSL and NC 2L Standards, as they have during previous events. Total dissolved solids (TDS) were detected in the sample from MW-6 at a quantifiable concentration that exceeded the NC 2L Standard. The iron, manganese, and TDS concentrations were statistically compared to background concentrations and were determined not to represent statistically significant increases over background concentrations. Based on the available data, these concentrations are considered to be representative of background conditions. Toluene was detected for the first time in the sample from MW-8 above the SWSL, but well below the NC 2L Standard during the February 2016 event. Future concentrations will be monitored to determine the potential source of toluene. No other volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were detected at concentrations above their respective SWSLs and groundwater standards during the event. No additional NC Appendix II constituents were detected at MW-1 or MW-2 during this event. Copper, chromium, lead, nickel, and zinc were detected above their respective SWSLs and above the applicable surface water standards in downstream monitoring point SW-4 during the February 2016 event. The concentrations of inorganic concentrations in the sample from SW-4 are likely biased high by entrained sediment as evidenced by high turbidity, likely from an offsite source as there are no land disturbance activities on the landfill property in the vicinity or upstream of SW-4. Heavy rains preceded April 2016 i 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx Table of Contents 1.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................................. 1 1.1 Site Description and Background ................................................................................................. 1 1.2 Compliance Monitoring History .................................................................................................... 1 1.3 Hydrogeologic Setting .................................................................................................................. 2 2.0 FIELD PROGRAM, MONITROING RESULTS AND DISCUSSION ................................................ 3 2.1 Visual Inspection Program ........................................................................................................... 4 2.2 Well Network and Groundwater Elevation Measurements .......................................................... 4 2.3 February 2016 Groundwater and Surface Water Monitoring Event ............................................. 5 2.4 Laboratory Analysis Program ....................................................................................................... 5 2.5 February 2016 Sampling Results ................................................................................................. 6 3.0 LABORATORY AND FIELD QA/QC ................................................................................................ 7 4.0 DATA EVALUATION ........................................................................................................................ 7 4.1 North Carolina Groundwater and Surface Water Quality Standard Comparisons ....................... 7 4.2 Statistical Evaluations .................................................................................................................. 8 5.0 PORE WATER SAMPLING ............................................................................................................. 8 6.0 CONCLUSIONS ............................................................................................................................... 9 7.0 REFERENCES ................................................................................................................................. 9 List of Tables Table 1 Summary of Historical Groundwater Elevation Data in Monitoring Wells Table 2 Summary of Estimated Horizontal Flow Velocities Table 3 Summary of Well Construction Information Table 4 Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Table 5 Summary of Field Parameters in Groundwater Table 6 Summary of Detected Constituents in Surface Water Table 7 Summary of Field Parameters in Surface Water Table 8 Comparison of Field Parameters to Evaluate Pore Water Sampling List of Figures Figure 1 Comparison of Field Parameters to Evaluate Pore Water Sampling List of Drawings Drawing 1 Groundwater Contour Map, February 17 - 18, 2016 List of Appendices Appendix A Groundwater and Surface Water Sampling Logs Appendix B February 2016 Groundwater and Surface Water Certificate-of-Analysis, Chain-of-Custody Form and Laboratory Data Review Appendix C Statistical Evaluation Worksheets and Stats Summary Table April 2016 1 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx 1.0 INTRODUCTION This report summarizes the monitoring results from the February 17 - 18, 2016, groundwater and surface water sampling and analysis event at the Waste Industries of High Point Construction & Demolition (C&D) Landfill in Guilford County, North Carolina (NC) in accordance with Title 15A of the North Carolina Administrative Code (NCAC) Subchapter 13B.0545. The active C&D Landfill is owned and operated by Waste Industries under Permit No. 41-16 issued by the NC Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ). 1.1 Site Description and Background The location of the facility is shown on the inlay on Drawing 1. As presented, the Waste Industries of High Point C&D Landfill is located along Riverdale Road within the city limits of Jamestown in Guilford County, NC. The site consists of approximately 154 acres, of which, approximately 17.2 acres is currently permitted as the Phase 1 and Phase 2 waste units. There are three small unnamed streams that traverse the site and flow into an unnamed tributary of Richland Creek, which forms the southern property boundary as shown on Drawing 1. The first unnamed tributary is a southwest trending stream that forms the northwestern property boundary. The second tributary is a southwest trending drainage in the center of the property and lies just east of the Phase 2 waste unit. The third tributary is a southwest trending drainage in the eastern portion of the site. A large man-made pond is located near the eastern property boundary. A small storm water basin was constructed in the northwest corner of the facility and a larger storm water basin was constructed along the southwestern part of the site during the construction of Phase 1. Topographic surface elevations at the facility range from approximately 700 to 820 feet above mean sea level. The western portion of the site mainly consisted of trees and heavy brush before Phase 1 of the C&D landfill was constructed. Now, most of that area consists of landfill operations. The eastern portion of the site has historically been used for agricultural purposes. A reclamation facility is located at the northernmost part of the site. A large portion of the surrounding properties are agricultural, sparse residential, or owned by the City of High Point for operations associated with Kersey Valley Landfill. 1.2 Compliance Monitoring History Groundwater monitoring at the facility was initiated in October 2003 after approval of the Groundwater Monitoring Plan by the NC DEQ. Currently the facility’s monitoring network is comprised of eight monitoring wells (MW-1, MW-2, MW-3, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, MW-7S, and MW-8), which monitor the uppermost aquifer beneath the facility. Monitoring wells MW-7S and MW-8 were installed in July 2006 to monitor the Phase 2 expansion at the facility. In addition to the groundwater monitoring points, the facility’s monitoring network includes four surface water sampling points, SW-1 and SW-3, which are upstream from the waste area, and SW-2 and SW-4, April 2016 2 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx which are downstream monitoring points. These points are sampled in conjunction with the groundwater monitoring wells in accordance with the facility’s permit. Vinyl chloride and benzene were detected in the sample from downgradient monitoring well MW-2 at concentrations above their respective Solid Waste Section Reporting Limits (SWSLs) and NC 2L Standards during the July 2014 sampling event. On February 3, 2015, an Alternate Source Demonstration was submitted in response to this detection that provided evidence that an unidentified source other than the waste unit is likely responsible for the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) detected in the samples from MW-2. On March 2, 2015, NC DEQ issued a response letter that allowed an additional six months to assess potential sources of VOCs. Benzene was once again detected a sample from MW-2 at a concentration above the SWSL and NC 2L Standard during the August 2015 sampling event and the facility transitioned to an Assessment Monitoring Program. An Assessment Monitoring Notification and Work Plan (Work Plan) was submitted to the NC DEQ on December 7, 2015, and was approved on January 28, 2016. The approved Work Plan stated that samples from groundwater monitoring wells MW-1 and MW-2 would be analyzed for the NC Appendix II list of constituents during the first semi-annual water quality monitoring event of 2016 and during subsequent events, MW-1 and MW-2 would be analyzed for NC Appendix I list of constituents plus detected NC Appendix II constituents. The Work Plan requested that a new surface water point (SW-2A) be added to the monitoring well in lieu of an additional groundwater monitoring well. The January 28, 2016, letter from the NC DEQ, stated that additional information was needed before the request could be considered and directed that pore water samples be collected during the first semi-annual water quality event of 2016. 1.3 Hydrogeologic Setting Geologically, the facility is located within the Carolina Slate Belt of the Piedmont Physiographic Province of North Carolina (NCGS, 1985). Generally, the Carolina Slate Belt consists of Late Proterozoic to Cambrian volcanic and greenschist-facies metasedimentary rocks intruded by plutonic suites (Butler and Secor, 1991). The site geology is characterized by a regional-scale felsic intrusive complex, which consists mainly of white to gray, fine- to coarse-grained, massive to foliated metamorphosed granitic rock. The region is characterized by regional and small scale Mesozoic diabase dikes. The uppermost groundwater beneath the facility is present in a shallow, unconfined aquifer comprised of saprolite, partially weathered rock (PWR), and granitic bedrock. Groundwater occurs at depths of approximately 25 feet below grade along the northern upgradient side of the waste disposal area, and at a depth of less than 10 feet below grade along the perimeter downgradient boundary. Depth to water April 2016 3 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx measurements, obtained during the February 2016 monitoring event and summarized in Table 1, were used to prepare a groundwater surface contour map presented on Drawing 1. Surface water and groundwater at the site generally flows south to southwest towards a tributary of Richland Creek. Richland Creek is approximately 1300 feet south of the site and flows to the Deep River, which is approximately 0.5 miles from the site. Groundwater beneath the site flows in three distinguishable and vertically interconnected hydrogeologic units; saprolite, PWR, and bedrock. The groundwater surface contour map and interpreted flow directions are consistent with previously submitted interpretations for this facility. Based on the February 17 - 18, 2016, groundwater surface contour map, the average hydraulic gradient in the shallow aquifer underlying the site, as measured along the conceptual flow path shown on the contour map, was calculated to be approximately 0.045 feet per foot. Groundwater velocities were calculated using a hydraulic conductivity of 1.37E-05, which is the geometric mean of the hydraulic conductivities for each of the hydrogeologic units present at the facility. The estimated effective porosity of the shallow aquifer is expected to range from 0.20 (saprolite) to 0.09 (fractured rock). The effective porosity of the fractured rock was used in calculations to provide a conservative estimate of groundwater flow. Using the above values, the estimated rate of groundwater flow for the uppermost aquifer beneath the facility was calculated using the following modified Darcy equation: Vgw = Ki/ne where Vgw = average linear velocity (feet/year), K = hydraulic conductivity (feet/year), i = horizontal hydraulic gradient, and ne = effective porosity. The average estimated linear groundwater flow velocity under the waste management unit is approximately 7.00 feet/year, which is generally consistent with previous estimates (Table 3). The range of groundwater flow is expected to vary depending on the hydrogeologic unit in which it occurs. The linear velocity equation above makes the simplified assumptions of a homogeneous and isotropic aquifer. Therefore, this equation represents a likely average value for the uppermost aquifer and does not account for heterogeneous and/or anisotropic conditions that may be present in the uppermost aquifer at the facility. 2.0 FIELD PROGRAM, MONITROING RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Field activities conducted for the February 2016 sampling event are discussed in the following sections. April 2016 4 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx 2.1 Visual Inspection Program In order to ensure that a potential release is detected at the earliest possible time, the visual inspection program is used by Golder personnel at the Waste Industries of High Point C&D Landfill. This program includes physical indicators such as potential water table mounding beneath the waste management unit, physical examination of any stresses in biological communities, visible signs of leachate migration (i.e., leachate seeps), unexplained changes in soil characteristics, and any other change to the environment due to the waste management unit. During the February 2016 compliance monitoring event, no physical indicators of a potential release were observed in the vicinity of the waste management areas. 2.2 Well Network and Groundwater Elevation Measurements The current approved network of groundwater monitoring wells at the facility consists of eight monitoring wells. Monitoring well construction information is summarized on Table 3 and the well locations are shown on Drawing 1. The well locations were selected to yield groundwater samples representative of the conditions in the uppermost aquifer underlying the facility, and to monitor for potential releases from the landfill unit. Two upstream (SW-1 and SW-3) and two downstream (SW-2 and SW-4) surface water monitoring points are also monitored and are shown on Drawing 1. At the request of the NC DEQ, three pore water samples (PWS-1, PWS-2, and PWS-3) were monitored in the vicinity of MW-2 and are shown on Drawing 1. Monitoring well MW-1 is the facility’s background well and is located hydraulically upgradient of the waste disposal area. Monitoring wells MW-2, MW-3, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, MW-7S, and MW-8 are located downgradient of the waste disposal area and represent the facility’s downgradient compliance wells. The well locations were selected to yield groundwater samples representative of the conditions in the uppermost aquifer underlying the facility and monitor for potential releases from the landfill unit. Depth-to-water measurements were recorded to the nearest 0.01 foot prior to initiating groundwater purging and sampling activities. The respective groundwater level elevations for this event are presented in Table 1 along with historical water level data. As presented, the data indicate that the hydraulic head level in the uppermost aquifer beneath the facility is fairly consistent, with temporal variation from the long-term average limited to approximately 5 feet (plus or minus). As expected, the range in fluctuation appears to be greater in the upgradient well MW-1, as this well is located in a groundwater recharge area. The range in fluctuation in downgradient compliance wells, which are located near groundwater discharge areas, is much less, presumably due to the stabilizing effect of the hydraulic discharge boundary. April 2016 5 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx 2.3 February 2016 Groundwater and Surface Water Monitoring Event Personnel from Golder visited the facility on February 17-18, 2016, to purge and sample monitoring wells MW-1, MW-2, MW-3, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, MW-7S, and MW-8 and to sample surface water monitoring points SW-1, SW-2, SW-3, and SW-4. Depth-to-water measurements were obtained from the network monitoring wells and additional wells (MW-4D and MW-7D) to the nearest 0.01 foot using an electronic water level indicator prior to purging the wells. Monitoring wells were purged and sampled using low-flow sampling techniques from dedicated bladder pumps. Measurements of temperature, pH, specific conductivity, dissolved oxygen (DO), oxidation- reduction potential (ORP), and turbidity were recorded on approximately 3- to 5-minute intervals during the purge, depending on the purge rate. In general, the purge rate was matched to the yield of the monitoring well, as determined by continuously monitoring the depth-to-water, not allowing the purge rate to exceed 500 milliliters per minute. Purging was continued until stabilization was indicated by the field parameters. Prior to sampling, the laboratory-supplied sample containers were prepared. Each sample container was labeled with the sample identification number, sampling personnel, date and time of sample collection, project name and number, and requested chemical analyses. The required groundwater samples were collected directly from the dedicated bladder pump discharge lines into the labeled, laboratory-supplied, pre-preserved sample containers after purging was completed based on stabilization of field parameters. The surface water samples were collected directly from the stream flow, by lowering the sample containers into the stream flow with the opening facing away from the current flow, taking care to prevent the over flow of the sample containers and to minimize sample-induced turbidity. Measurements of temperature, pH, specific conductivity, DO, ORP, and turbidity were recorded during the collection of the surface water samples. After collection, the samples were placed in a cooler on ice, under chain-of-custody control. Copies of the sampling logs are presented in Appendix A. Included in each log is a description of the sampling equipment, sampling location, sampling method, field observations, and field measurements. 2.4 Laboratory Analysis Program The February 2016 groundwater and surface water samples were shipped to Environmental Conservation Laboratories, Inc. (ENCO) of Cary, NC under chain-of-custody control for analysis. As presented, groundwater samples from MW-1 and MW-2 were analyzed for the NC Appendix II list of constituents plus required indicator parameters specific to 15A NCAC 13B .544(a)(1)(D). Groundwater samples from MW-3, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, MW-7S, and MW-8 were analyzed for the NC Appendix I list of constituents plus the C&D indicator parameters. The surface water samples at the facility were analyzed April 2016 6 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx for the NC Appendix I list of constituents. Groundwater and surface water samples were also analyzed for tetrahydrofuran, as required in a memo issued by NC DENR dated June 25, 2010. The pore water samples were analyzed for NC Appendix I volatile organic compounds (VOCs), as instructed in the January 28, 2016, letter from the NC DEQ. The samples were received at the laboratory on February 19, 2016, in good condition and properly preserved. 2.5 February 2016 Sampling Results Analytical results and field parameters for the February 2016 groundwater samples are summarized in Tables 4 and 5 with available historical data. Analytical results and field parameters for the February 2016 surface water samples are summarized in Tables 6 and 7 with available historical data. The laboratory certificate-of-analysis, chain-of-custody form and laboratory data review for the sampling event are included in Appendix B. As presented in Table 4, three NC Appendix I inorganic constituents were detected above their SWSLs in samples from one or more downgradient compliance monitoring wells at the facility during the February 2016 monitoring event. Barium was detected above the SWSL in samples from downgradient wells MW-2, MW-6, and MW-7S. Cobalt was detected above the SWSL in the samples from MW-2 and MW-6. Zinc was detected above the SWSL in the sample from MW-4S. Indicator parameters iron and manganese were detected above the SWSLs in samples from MW-2, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, and MW-8. Total dissolved solids (TDS) and alkalinity were detected at all of the monitoring locations and results are generally consistent with historical data. Toluene was detected above the SWSL in the sample from MW-8 for the first time during this event. No other VOCs were detected at quantifiable concentrations above the SWSLs in samples from groundwater monitoring wells during the February 2016 monitoring event. As presented in Table 6, five NC Appendix I inorganic constituents were detected above their respective SWSLs in samples from surface water monitoring locations during the February 2016 event. Chromium, vanadium, and zinc were detected at quantifiable concentrations above their respective SWSLs in the sample from upstream monitoring point SW-3. Zinc was also detected at quantifiable concentrations above the SWSL in the samples from upstream point SW-1 and downstream point SW-2. Barium, cobalt, copper, chromium, nickel, vanadium, and zinc were detected at quantifiable concentrations above their respective SWSLs in the sample from downstream monitoring point SW-4. Antimony, beryllium, and lead were detected at estimated concentrations (due to dilution) above their respective SWSLs in the sample from SW-4. The inorganic detections in the sample from SW-4 are due to a high sediment load in the stream from an off-site source. No NC Appendix I VOCs were detected at quantifiable concentrations above the SWSLs in samples from surface water monitoring locations during the February 2016 monitoring event. April 2016 7 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx 3.0 LABORATORY AND FIELD QA/QC A field blank was collected by Golder personnel as part of the February 2016 sampling event. ENCO analyzed the field blank for the NC Appendix II list of constituents plus iron, manganese, and tetrahydrofuran. In addition to the field blank, a laboratory-prepared trip blank accompanied the volatile sample containers to and from the laboratory and was analyzed for NC Appendix II VOCs plus tetrahydrofuran. ENCO analyzed the laboratory blanks for NC Appendix II constituents plus iron, manganese, and tetrahydrofuran and the trip blank for NC Appendix I volatile organic compounds and tetrahydrofuran. A review of the laboratory data was performed by Golder personnel and is included in Appendix B. There were two detections of NC Appendix I constituents in the field blank during the February 2016 event. Copper and manganese were detected in the field blank at estimated concentrations. Based on data reviews performed by Golder, the following concentrations are considered blank qualified: copper in samples MW-8, SW-1, SW-2, and SW-3, and manganese in sample MW-7S. 4.0 DATA EVALUATION 4.1 North Carolina Groundwater and Surface Water Quality Standard Comparisons As presented in Table 4, cobalt was detected above the SWSL and Solid Waste Section Groundwater Protection Standard (GPS) in the samples from MW-2 and MW-6. Cobalt was also detected below the SWSL, but above the GPS, in samples from upgradient well MW-1 and downgradient wells MW-4S, MW-5, and MW-8. Vanadium was detected below the SWSL, but above the NC 2L Standard, in the samples from MW-4S and MW-7S. The concentrations of cobalt and vanadium are similar to historical data and are considered to be representative of natural conditions, and no further action is warranted. The indicator parameters iron and manganese were detected in samples from downgradient wells MW-2, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, and MW-8 at concentrations above their respective SWSLs and NC 2L Standards. Because the concentrations in the downgradient wells are similar to concentrations in background data for the facility, as described in the following section, the concentrations of iron and manganese are interpreted to be naturally occurring and do not represent groundwater quality issues. As presented, no NC Appendix I VOCs were detected at concentrations above their respective groundwater standard during the February 2016 event. As shown in Table 6, copper, chromium, nickel, and zinc were detected at quantifiable concentrations above their respective SWSLs and applicable surface water standards in downstream surface water monitoring point SW-4. Lead was detected at an estimated concentration (due to a dilution) above the SWSL and applicable surface water standard. The elevated metal concentrations in the sample from April 2016 8 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx SW-4 are biased high by entrained sediment as evidenced by high turbidity values. There are no landfill or other land disturbance activities on the landfill property in the vicinity of SW-4. An offsite source from an adjacent property coupled with heavy rains preceding the event is likely the source of the high sediment load in the stream. Future results will be monitored to determine trends for metals concentrations. 4.2 Statistical Evaluations As discussed above, cobalt was detected in samples from downgradient wells MW-2 and MW-6 at concentrations that exceeded the SWSL and GPS. Iron and manganese were detected in samples from downgradient wells MW-2, MW-4S, MW-5, MW-6, and MW-8 at concentrations that exceeded their respective SWSLs and NC 2L Standards. TDS was reported in the sample from MW-6 at a quantifiable concentration that exceeded the NC 2L Standard. Therefore, the concentrations of cobalt, iron, manganese, and TDS were statistically evaluated to determine if the reported concentrations exceeded facility background concentrations. The statistical worksheets and summary table are presented as Appendix C. Upon completion of statistical analysis, the concentrations of cobalt, iron, manganese, and TDS were determined not to represent statistically significant increases over background concentrations in the samples from downgradient wells during the February 2016 event. The concentrations of cobalt, iron, manganese, and TDS are interpreted to be naturally occurring and no further action is warranted. 5.0 PORE WATER SAMPLING As discussed in Section 1.2, pore water sampling was requested by the NC DEQ to evaluate if a new surface water sample location downgradient of MW-2 can serve as an assessment monitoring location as required by 15A NCAC 13B .0545(a)(1). On February 28, 2016, Golder personnel collected one upstream pore water sample (PWS-1) and two downstream pore water samples (PWS-2 and PWS-3) in the portion of the stream likely to receive groundwater from MW-2. The locations of the pore water samples are shown on Drawing 1. The samples were collected with an AMS Retract-A-Tip Sampler and a peristaltic pump. The sampler was decontaminated prior to collecting each sample and new tubing was used at each sampling location. The sampler was hammered into the subsurface in the stream bottom to refusal at depths that ranged from approximately 0.7 to 0.8 feet below ground surface. The rods of the sampler were retracted approximately one inch to expose a screen at the bottom of the sampler. Samples were collected from the sampler’s rods with the peristaltic pump. The samples were analyzed for NC Appendix I VOCs and no VOCs were detected in the samples. Field parameters were used to evaluate whether the pore water samples represent groundwater that is April 2016 9 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx discharging to the stream. Table 8 compares field parameters from the pore water samples with groundwater samples from MW-2 and MW-8 and upstream surface water samples from SW-1 and SW-3. The data is shown graphically on Figure 1. Data from MW-8 was used in the evaluation because it is located in close proximity to pore water sample PWS-1. The results indicate that there is generally a greater range in values for the pore water samples than the groundwater and surface water samples, with the only exception being specific conductivity where groundwater has more variability. Pore water measurements of pH and ORP are more similar to groundwater measurements than surface water. Temperature and DO measurements appear to be distributed between the groundwater and surface water measurements. Shallow subsurface water (pore water) measurements of temperature and DO are expected to be impacted by surface water, given that there is a difference in parameter measurements between groundwater and surface water. Also, the transfer of heat between shallow groundwater and the much cooler surface water is expected. Pore water measurements of specific conductivity are more similar to surface water than groundwater. Generally, specific conductivity of impacted groundwater is expected to be higher than unimpacted groundwater. Therefore, specific conductivity measurements are expected to decrease downgradient of the monitoring wells, which have had detections of VOCs. Based on these results, there is sufficient evidence to support that the stream receives groundwater from the MW-2 location and a surface water monitoring location can serve as a new monitoring location. 6.0 CONCLUSIONS No NC Appendix I organic compounds were reported at concentrations above the SWSLs and NC 2L Standards during the February 2016 monitoring event. The inorganic concentrations in the sample from SW-4 are biased high by entrained sediment as evidenced by high turbidity due to a high sediment load in the stream, likely from an offsite source coupled with heavy rains preceding the event. Pore water sampling results indicate that there is sufficient evidence that groundwater from the MW-2 area discharges to the downgradient stream. Therefore, Golder recommends that a new surface water location (SW-42A) be utilized as a groundwater assessment monitoring location during future Assessment Monitoring events. The next groundwater monitoring event is tentatively scheduled for July 2016. 7.0 REFERENCES Butler, J. Robert and Secor, Donald T., Jr., 1991, The Central Piedmont, in Horton, J. W., Jr., and Zullo, V.A., eds., The Geology of the Carolinas: The University of Tennessee Press, p. 59 78. Joyce Engineering, Inc., 2002, Hydrogeologic Report & Groundwater Monitoring Plan; Volume One; Site Application, Section II; MRR of High Point, LLC Construction and Demolition Debris Landfill, High Point, North Carolina. Revised January 2003 and March 2003. April 2016 10 1239-651616.101 g:\projects\waste industries\high point\groundwater\wqmr\february 2016\final\final 1st semi-annual 2016 wi-hp wqmr.docx NCGS (North Carolina Geologic Survey), 1985. Geologic Map of North Carolina TABLES April 2016 1 of 1 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx TOC Elevation (ft AMSL) Date DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) DTW (ft) Elevation (ft AMSL) 10/08/03 17.80 795.37 6.42 748.43 16.00 739.48 5.47 728.29 ------7.52 741.04 8.57 726.66 ------------------ 01/23/04 18.40 794.77 6.97 747.88 16.58 738.90 6.00 727.76 ------12.95 734.88 10.97 724.26 ------------------ 07/08/04 19.09 794.08 6.80 748.05 18.71 736.77 6.16 727.60 ------12.39 735.44 10.90 724.33 ------------------ 01/25/05 19.88 793.29 6.70 748.15 16.95 738.53 5.85 727.91 ------11.65 736.18 11.00 724.23 ------------------ 07/06/05 19.19 793.98 8.01 746.84 18.91 736.57 7.65 726.11 ------13.10 734.73 10.97 724.26 ------------------ 01/09/06 23.20 789.97 6.10 748.75 18.25 737.23 5.52 728.24 0.10 734.13 11.89 735.94 9.53 725.70 ------------------ 07/12/06 19.80 793.37 6.05 748.80 18.35 737.13 5.91 727.85 0.10 734.13 12.44 735.39 10.86 724.37 ------32.70 730.57 ------ 01/16/07 19.26 793.91 6.41 748.44 16.37 739.11 5.35 728.41 0.10 734.13 11.55 736.28 9.01 726.22 30.85 730.35 31.29 731.98 2.40 760.20 07/02/07 19.32 793.85 9.00 745.85 19.02 736.46 7.93 725.83 0.10 734.13 13.41 734.42 11.10 724.13 30.90 730.30 31.60 731.67 5.74 756.86 01/29/08 22.68 790.49 7.01 747.84 18.76 736.72 5.88 727.88 0.10 734.13 12.04 735.79 10.10 725.13 32.95 728.25 33.20 730.07 4.57 758.03 07/17/08 20.51 792.66 10.35 744.50 19.51 735.97 8.91 724.85 0.13 734.10 13.38 734.45 11.02 724.21 32.36 728.84 33.17 730.10 6.58 756.02 01/15/09 20.09 793.08 6.49 748.36 17.31 738.17 5.16 728.6 0.00 734.23 11.54 736.29 7.88 727.35 31.56 729.64 31.94 731.33 2.02 760.58 07/16/09 18.96 794.21 8.12 746.73 18.53 736.95 7.55 726.21 0.00 734.23 12.80 735.03 10.08 725.15 31.01 730.19 30.78 732.49 3.55 759.05 01/04/10 18.06 795.11 6.43 748.42 16.15 739.33 5.25 728.51 0.00 734.23 11.24 736.59 7.78 727.45 30.25 730.95 34.04 729.23 2.58 760.02 07/01/10 17.43 795.74 8.03 746.82 18.41 737.07 6.90 726.86 0.00 734.23 12.06 735.77 10.02 725.21 30.09 731.11 ------4.40 758.20 01/13/11 19.57 793.60 7.35 747.50 18.78 736.70 6.41 727.35 0.07 734.16 13.47 734.36 9.79 725.44 32.41 728.79 32.41 730.86 4.21 758.39 07/21/11 18.25 794.92 7.83 747.02 18.71 736.77 6.95 726.81 0.00 734.23 12.25 735.58 9.21 726.02 31.20 730.00 31.99 731.28 4.39 758.21 01/16/12 17.97 795.20 6.52 748.33 16.49 738.99 5.23 728.53 0.00 734.23 11.39 736.44 6.76 728.47 30.75 730.45 31.26 732.01 3.19 759.41 07/09/12 18.02 795.15 8.62 746.23 18.89 736.59 7.60 726.16 0.00 734.23 13.00 734.83 9.25 725.98 30.58 730.62 31.46 731.81 5.36 757.24 01/14/13 19.72 793.45 7.29 747.56 18.16 737.32 6.06 727.70 0.00 734.23 12.45 735.38 9.01 726.22 31.54 729.66 32.26 731.01 4.50 758.10 07/09/13 17.16 796.01 7.38 747.47 17.99 737.49 6.24 727.52 0.00 734.23 12.06 735.77 7.24 727.99 29.69 731.51 30.50 732.77 4.30 758.30 01/30/14 18.94 794.23 7.02 747.83 17.51 737.97 5.62 728.14 0.00 734.23 11.61 736.22 7.26 727.97 30.92 730.28 31.63 731.64 4.16 758.44 07/08/14 17.69 795.48 8.24 746.61 18.51 736.97 7.68 726.08 0.00 734.23 12.80 735.03 7.96 727.27 30.26 730.94 31.13 732.14 5.53 757.07 03/03/15 19.16 794.01 6.68 748.17 17.78 737.70 4.88 728.88 0.00 734.23 11.39 736.44 7.45 727.78 31.03 730.17 31.56 731.71 3.73 758.87 08/12/15 19.13 794.04 8.12 746.73 19.67 735.81 8.43 725.33 ----12.71 735.12 8.51 726.72 31.51 729.69 ------9.54 753.06 02/17/16 17.08 796.09 6.40 748.45 15.21 740.27 4.84 728.92 0.00 734.23 10.68 737.15 5.19 730.04 28.78 732.42 29.24 734.03 2.79 759.81 MEAN 19.09 794.08 7.32 747.53 17.90 737.58 6.36 727.40 0.04 734.20 12.07 735.79 9.13 726.10 30.98 730.22 31.79 731.48 4.40 758.20 MAXIMUM 23.20 796.09 10.35 748.80 19.67 740.27 8.91 728.92 0.13 734.23 13.47 741.04 11.10 730.04 32.95 732.42 34.04 734.03 9.54 760.58 MINIMUM 17.08 789.97 6.05 744.50 15.21 735.81 4.84 724.85 0.00 734.10 7.52 734.36 5.19 724.13 28.78 728.25 29.24 729.23 2.02 753.06 Notes: 1. TOC = top of casing 2. ft AMSL = feet above mean sea level 3. Monitoring well MW-1 is the facility background well. 4. --- = no data available MW-3MW-2 734.23733.76755.48 TABLE 1 Summary of Historical Groundwater Elevation Data in Monitoring Wells Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Monitoring Wells 754.85 762.60 MW-8 763.27 MW-7D 761.20 MW-7S 735.23747.83 MW-6MW-5MW-1 813.17 MW-4DMW-4S April 2016 1 of 1 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx Gradient Calculation Segment Flow Direction Gradient Segment Length (feet) Gradient Segment Elevations (feet) Horizontal Gradient (i, feet) Effective Porosity (ne) Hydraulic Conductivity (K, cm/sec) Velocity (Vgw, feet/year) 790 760 790 740 790 750 Notes: 1. Horizontal velocities based on the modified Darcy equation Vgw = Ki/ne. 2. The geometric mean of K from individual well aquifer tests was used to calculate the hydraulic conductivity (tests conducted by Golder as part of the Phase 2 investigation not yet submitted). 3. The effective porosity for bedrock was used in velocity calculations. 4. cm/sec = centimeters per second 6.99 5.67 8.34 0.09 0.09 0.09 1.37E-05 1.37E-05 1.37E-05 TABLE 2 Summary of Estimated Horizontal Flow Velocities Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 February 2016 Guilford County, North Carolina i 1 0.0444 i 2 i 3 W SW S 675 1388 755 0.0360 0.0529 April 2016 1 of 1 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx from to from to MW-1 09/29/03 2 802679.07 1727481.97 809.79 813.17 30.0 779.79 15.0 30.0 794.79 779.79 Bedrock Compliance Well MW-2 09/30/03 2 802512.12 1726072.14 752.30 754.85 16.5 735.80 6.5 16.5 745.80 735.80 PWR/Bedrock Compliance Well MW-3 10/02/03 2 802153.76 1725818.69 752.65 755.48 27.0 725.65 12.0 27.0 740.65 725.65 PWR/Bedrock Compliance Well MW-4S 02/20/02 2 801841.41 1725570.04 731.60 733.76 20.0 711.60 5.0 20.0 726.60 711.60 PWR/Bedrock Compliance Well MW-4D 02/19/02 2 801847.04 1725576.62 731.88 734.23 80.0 651.88 60.0 80.0 671.88 651.88 Bedrock Water Levels Only MW-5 02/19/02 2 801517.31 1726103.70 741.16 743.44 20.0 721.16 5.0 20.0 736.16 721.16 Saprolite/PWR/Bedrock Compliance Well MW-6 12/17/02 2 801625.07 1725754.72 733.53 735.23 15.5 718.03 8.5 15.5 725.03 718.03 PWR/Bedrock Compliance Well MW-7S 07/13/06 2 801358.30 1726660.50 761.20 763.52 45.0 716.20 30.0 45.0 731.20 716.20 PWR Compliance Well MW-7D 07/11/06 2 801341.60 1726657.80 761.24 763.27 70.0 691.24 60.0 70.0 701.24 691.24 Bedrock Water Levels Only MW-8 07/05/06 2 802748.00 1726285.20 760.57 762.60 25.0 735.57 15.0 25.0 745.57 735.57 Bedrock Compliance Well Notes: 1. All elevations are referenced to mean sea level; depths are referenced to ground surface. 2. AMSL = above mean sea level 3. bgs = below ground surface 4. TOC = top of casing 6. MW-4S and MW-4D were installed as piezometers P-15S and P-15D, respectively, on February 19-20, 2002. 7. MW-5 was installed as piezometer P-12 on February 19, 2002. 8. MW-6 was installed as piezometer P-18 on December 17, 2002. 9. MW-7S and MW-7D were installed as piezometers P-30S and P-30D, respectively, on July 13 and 11, 2006. 10. MW-8 was installed as piezometer P-23 on July 5, 2006. Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Well Construction Information TABLE 3 Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Status Screened IntervalWell & Piezometer Number Date Installed Depth (ft bgs) Elevation (ft AMSL) 5. PWR = partially weathered rock Lithology of Screened IntervalTOC Well Elevations ft AMSL Depth (ft bgs) Total Depth Drilled Elevation (ft AMSL) Casing Diameter (inches) Ground Surface Coordinates Northing Easting April 2016 1 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 Antimony ug/L 01/16/07 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND SWS GPS = 1 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND EPA MCL = 6 ug/L ug/L 01/30/08 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 6 --ND ND 0.96 J ND ND 0.94 J ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 6 --ND ND 0.107 J ND ND 0.0910 J 0.206 J ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 6 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 6 --0.307 J 0.620 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 6 --0.257 B 1.30 B ND ND ND ND ND ND 0.461 J ug/L 01/14/13 6 --ND 0.672 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 6 --0.221 J 0.767 J ND ND 0.238 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 6 --0.229 J 1.66 J ND ND 0.347 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 6 --ND 1.30 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 6 0.220 ND 0.953 J 0.224 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 6 0.220 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 6 0.220 0.277 J ND ND ND 0.252 J ND ND ND ND Arsenic ug/L 10/08/03 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 10 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 10 ug/L ug/L 07/08/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 10 --ND 2.5 B 2.8 B 2.4 B ND ND ND ND 2.4 J ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND ND ND ND 5.1 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 2.1 J ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND ND ND 2.8 J ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --3.56 J ND 4.21 J 4.82 J ND 3.76 J ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 10 --3.96 B 6.39 B 5.99 B 6.13 B 6.64 B 3.12 B 3.16 B ND 3.54 J ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND 4.13 J ND 3.35 J 2.82 J 4.74 J 3.81 J ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND ND ND 3.12 J ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --3.41 B ND ND 4.41 B ND ND 3.18 B ND 3.13 J ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND ND ND ND 6.93 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND 5.83 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 5.40 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 6.80 ND 8.12 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 6.80 ND 6.94 J ND ND ND 9.29 J ND ND ND Barium ug/L 10/08/03 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 700 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 2000 ug/L ug/L 07/08/04 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 500 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 100 --141 187 25.5 J 73.9 J 86.7 J 53.5 J 210 46.4 J 0.90 J ug/L 07/02/07 100 --137 338 29.4 J 33.4 J 87.8 J 57.5 J 230 42.4 J 1.2 J ug/L 01/30/08 100 --100 190 46.9 J 66.6 J 110 82.2 J 143 66.8 J 0.30 J ug/L 07/17/08 100 --102 279 36.5 J 52.5 J 92.8 J 65.1 J 108 49.2 J ND ug/L 01/14/09 100 --101 152 38.3 J 79.7 J 68.0 J 93.9 J ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 100 --132 252 39.1 J 65.9 J 71.6 J 99.0 J ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 100 --107 188 37.4 J 117 51.7 J 111 98.5 J 37.3 J 0.552 J ug/L 07/01/10 100 --117 156 42.2 J 45.4 J 72.6 J 153 107 23.3 J ND ug/L 01/13/11 100 --100 193 35.0 J 69.4 J 70.8 J 117 98.5 J 26.6 J ND ug/L 07/21/11 100 --125 273 33.7 J 87.7 J 75.1 J 140 115 30.1 J ND ug/L 01/16/12 100 --108 197 34.9 J 114 58.2 J 161 118 36.3 J ND ug/L 07/09/12 100 --115 338 31.5 J 48.3 J 67.5 J 223 122 40.0 J ND ug/L 01/14/13 100 --125 333 47.2 J 74.0 J 66.4 J 162 142 50.2 J 1.46 J ug/L 07/09/13 100 --88.7 J 308 36.9 J 46.2 J 60.3 J 126 137 61.9 J 1.37 J ug/L 01/30/14 100 --78.8 J 297 44.6 J 88.7 J 59.5 J 146 154 79.7 J 1.08 J ug/L 07/08/14 100 --73.8 J 542 40.3 J 53.5 J 57.3 J 174 156 69.6 J 1.13 J ug/L 03/03/15 100 1.00 62.3 J 427 42.5 J 51.4 J 49.5 J 192 181 86.0 J 3.04 J ug/L 08/12/15 100 1.00 62.7 J 649 35.3 J 74.7 J 61.8 J 203 181 47.6 J 2.33 J ug/L 02/17/16 100 1.00 53.3 J 428 33.4 J 96.6 J 46.6 J 269 194 57.0 J ND Beryllium ug/L 01/16/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND SWS GPS = 4 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND EPA MCL = 4 ug/L ug/L 01/30/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND 0.135 J ND ND 0.0900 J ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND 0.674 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND 0.176 J ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.100 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.100 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.100 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units April 2016 2 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units Cadmium ug/L 10/08/03 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 2 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 5 ug/L ug/L 07/08/04 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --0.350 B 0.390 B 0.310 B 0.200 B 0.111 B 0.293 B ----1.19 ug/L 01/04/10 1 --0.299 J 0.770 J 0.269 J ND ND 0.296 J 0.153 J 0.344 J ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.360 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.360 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.360 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Chromium ug/L 10/08/03 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 10 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 100 ug/L ug/L 07/08/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 10 --2.2 J ND ND ND ND ND 17.0 ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND 19.0 ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND ND 5.3 J 4.9 J ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --0.772 J 4.78 J 1.01 J 0.793 J 0.722 J 0.736 J ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND 4.22 J 2.58 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 10 --6.26 B ND 6.00 B ND ND ND 1.29 B ND 1.80 J ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND 1.26 J ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND 3.62 J ND 14.3 (1.06 J)ND 1.95 J 2.46 J ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND 3.77 J ND 1.70 J ND 4.53 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND 6.97 J ND ND ND 5.41 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND 3.73 B 1.19 B 1.03 B 1.08 B 2.77 B 1.57 B 1.32 B 1.40 J ug/L 07/09/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 1.78 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 2.42 J ND 2.08 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND 3.68 J 2.83 J 10.9 (ND)ND 3.76 J 1.44 J ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 1.40 ND 6.93 B ND 1.54 B ND 5.74 B 1.43 B 2.11 B 1.66 J ug/L 08/12/15 10 1.40 ND 1.66 J ND ND ND 3.94 J ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 1.40 ND 5.24 J 6.61 J 1.40 J ND 4.34 J ND ND ND Cobalt ug/L 01/16/07 10 --ND 14.6 ND ND 3.0 J 5.9 J 3.9 J ND ND SWS GPS = 1 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND 27.4 ND ND 4.7 J ND 6.0 J ND ND No EPA MCL ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND 11.6 ND ND 5.6 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND 27.6 ND ND 1.4 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND 9.4 J ND 1.2 J 4.1 J 13.0 ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --ND 26.5 ND 1.65 J 3.30 J 5.05 J ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND 17.8 ND ND 3.90 J 9.94 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 10 --ND 14.4 ND ND 3.65 J 24.0 ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND 15.7 ND ND 5.50 J 11.0 ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND 19.7 ND 1.27 J 5.87 J 17.0 ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND 14.3 ND ND 3.61 J 24.8 ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND 18.4 ND 1.43 J 6.03 J 24.8 ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND 13.5 ND 1.74 J 3.55 J 18.8 ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --ND 13.5 ND 1.26 J 2.54 J 9.81 J ND 3.33 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND 13.0 ND ND 2.39 J 14.8 ND 4.60 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND 23.4 ND 1.83 J 1.87 J 21.0 ND 4.34 J ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 1.10 ND 15.2 ND ND 2.20 J 25.3 ND 4.31 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 1.10 1.18 J 19.4 ND 3.09 J 2.34 J 20.8 ND 3.55 J ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 1.10 1.14 J 14.9 ND 1.59 J 1.70 J 14.3 ND 2.83 J ND Copper ug/L 01/16/07 10 --14.5 ND ND 4.60 J ND ND 12.3 ND ND NC 2L = 1000 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 10 --8.8 J ND ND ND ND ND 16.3 3.4 J ND EPA MCL = 1300 ug/L#ug/L 01/30/08 10 --3.00 J ND ND 1.90 J ND ND 2.70 J 5.30 J ND ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----6.42 J ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND ND ND 2.72 B ND ND ND ND 1.65 J ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND ND 1.67 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --1.63 J ND ND 1.93 J ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 2.73 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 1.60 4.20 J ND ND 2.18 J ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 1.60 ND ND ND ND ND 6.76 J ND 20.3 ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 1.60 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 3.28 B 3.66 J April 2016 3 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units Lead ug/L 10/08/03 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 15 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 15 ug/L#ug/L 07/08/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 3.1 J 4.5 J ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --ND 3.10 J ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND 4.04 B 1.46 B ND 2.76 B 2.08 B ND ND 1.24 J ug/L 07/01/10 10 --ND 2.61 J ND ND 2.84 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND 4.02 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND 3.08 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND 4.54 J ND 2.45 J 6.10 J ND ND 1.90 J ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND 4.05 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND 3.42 J ND ND 4.35 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 2.10 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 3.10 ND 5.51 J ND ND ND 3.62 J ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 3.10 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Nickel ug/L 01/16/07 50 --3.8 J ND ND ND ND ND 17.2 J ND ND NC 2L = 100 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 50 --ND 3.0 J ND ND ND ND 19.0 J ND ND No EPA MCL ug/L 01/30/08 50 --2.5 J 3.6 J 2.4 J 3.7 J 6.5 J ND 6.0 J 3.3 J ND ug/L 07/17/08 50 --2.1 J ND ND ND 3.8 J ND 2.3 J ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 50 --2.4 J ND 5.1 J 5.3 J ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 50 --0.790 B 4.11 B 1.47 B 0.988 B 1.04 B 1.05 B ----3.80 J ug/L 01/04/10 50 --ND 2.59 J ND ND 3.20 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 50 --ND ND ND ND ND 2.29 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 50 --ND ND ND ND ND 5.20 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 50 --ND ND ND 2.44 J ND 5.56 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 50 --ND ND ND ND ND 2.77 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 50 --ND ND ND ND ND 6.24 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 50 --ND ND 2.05 J ND 4.29 J 3.86 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 50 --ND 2.37 J ND ND ND 4.34 J 2.81 J 3.27 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 50 --ND ND ND 1.86 J ND 5.05 J ND 5.44 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 50 --ND 2.85 J 1.86 J 6.10 J ND 4.71 J ND 3.36 J ND ug/L 03/03/15 50 1.80 ND 3.01 J ND ND ND 6.41 J ND 3.19 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 50 1.80 ND 2.73 J ND ND ND 5.84 J ND 3.37 J ND ug/L 02/17/16 50 1.80 ND ND 2.27 J ND ND 3.23 J ND 5.44 J ND Selenium ug/L 10/08/03 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 20 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 50 ug/L ug/L 07/08/04 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 20 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 2.0 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND ND 4.0 J ND ND 3.1 J ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND 1.59 J ND ND ND 2.05 J ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 10 --ND 2.72 J ND ND ND 3.59 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 0.910 ND 1.55 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 5.00 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 5.00 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Silver ug/L 10/08/03 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND SWS GPS = 20 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 100 ug/L ug/L 07/08/04 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/25/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/06/05 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/09/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/12/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/16/07 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND ND ND ND 2.5 J ND ND 2.0 J ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --ND 3.75 J 0.990 J ND 1.70 J ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 10 --ND 1.92 J ND ND 1.09 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 10 --ND 2.66 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND 3.19 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --3.59 J 2.28 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND 2.37 J ND 3.30 J ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND 2.38 J ND ND ND 2.88 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND 3.43 J 3.86 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --2.69 J 4.48 J ND 3.36 J 1.90 J 2.31 J 4.86 J 6.81 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --ND 2.95 J ND ND ND ND ND 2.21 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND 5.41 J ND ND ND ND ND 2.58 J ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 1.90 ND 7.35 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 1.90 2.57 B 9.84 B ND 4.90 B 5.27 B 10.6 B 2.14 B 4.53 B 2.59 J ug/L 02/17/16 10 1.90 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND April 2016 4 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units Thallium ug/L 01/16/07 5.5 --ND 0.048 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND SWS GPS = 0.28 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 5.5 --0.043 J 0.097 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND EPA MCL = 2 ug/L ug/L 01/30/08 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 5.5 --ND 0.046 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 5.5 --ND ND ND ND 0.489 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 5.5 0.110 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 5.5 0.110 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 5.5 0.110 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Vanadium ug/L 01/16/07 25 --7.5 J ND ND 4.4 J ND ND 34.4 ND ND SWS GPS = 0.3 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 25 --5.9 J ND 1.9 J 2.3 J ND ND 44.3 2.6 J ND No EPA MCL ug/L 01/30/08 25 --3.7 J ND ND 3.6 J ND ND 13.3 J ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 25 --2.5 J ND ND 2.9 J ND ND 11.4 J ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 25 --1.7 J ND ND 6.8 J ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 25 --2.16 J ND 1.08 J 3.75 J 1.59 J 0.965 J ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 25 --1.91 J ND 0.544 J 3.00 J ND ND 10.1 J 2.43 J ND ug/L 07/01/10 25 --ND ND ND ND ND ND 10.5 J ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 25 --1.80 J ND ND 2.32 J ND ND 10.2 J ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 25 --ND ND ND 24.6 J ND ND 9.72 J ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 25 --1.73 J ND ND 42.6 ND ND 9.90 J ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 25 --1.55 J ND ND 2.05 J ND ND 9.46 J ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 25 --1.81 J ND ND ND ND ND 10.6 J ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 25 --ND ND ND 2.32 J ND ND 9.62 J ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 25 --ND ND ND 6.97 J ND ND 9.31 J ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 25 --ND ND ND ND ND ND 9.21 J ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 25 1.40 ND ND ND 6.10 J ND ND 9.36 J ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 25 1.40 ND ND ND 4.78 J ND 1.59 J 9.20 J ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 25 1.40 ND ND ND 11.2 J ND ND 9.15 J ND ND Zinc ug/L 01/16/07 10 --25.7 B 4.0 B 6.5 B 23.4 B 9.1 B 11.0 B 48.1 B 7.4 B 10.0 NC 2L = 1000 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 10 --ND 28.0 ND ND ND 10.1 41.1 3.9 J ND EPA MCL = 5000 ug/L*ug/L 01/30/08 10 --2.3 B 1.8 B 2.9 B 3.8 B 3.0 B 4.9 B 9.1 J 4.4 B 1.6 J ug/L 07/17/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 4.2 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 10 --ND 3.8 J ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 10 --6.77 B 4.89 B 5.55 B 7.01 B 5.28 B 3.44 B ----20.5 ug/L 01/04/10 10 --1.72 B 6.20 B 2.24 B 2.35 B 2.57 B 3.88 B ND 2.98 B 2.25 J ug/L 07/01/10 10 --ND ND ND ND 6.66 J 7.04 J 4.90 J ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 10 --ND ND ND 4.06 J ND 5.52 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 5.67 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 10 --ND ND ND ND ND 4.35 J ND 3.98 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 10 --3.97 J 4.83 J 4.13 J 5.51 J ND 5.86 J ND 7.30 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 10 --ND ND 3.86 J ND 9.69 J ND ND 5.50 J ND ug/L 03/03/15 10 3.80 ND ND ND 4.77 J ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 10 3.80 ND 4.12 J ND 8.46 J ND 15.8 ND 9.95 J ND ug/L 02/17/16 10 3.80 60.0 5.54 J ND 25.8 6.06 J ND ND 4.75 J ND Iron ug/L 01/16/07 ----2530 3410 80 J 1020 9860 700 16400 680 -- NC 2L = 300 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 300 --1510 18600 46 J 314 4960 592 19500 497 -- EPA MCL = 300 ug/L*ug/L 01/30/08 300 --533 327 31 J 2220 21100 106 J 3320 1110 ND ug/L 07/17/08 300 --161 J 10300 ND 1730 8620 ND 448 69 J ND ug/L 01/14/09 300 --65 J 2740 26 J 3300 28800 1110 ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 300 --84.2 J 18000 ND 2490 7570 642 ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 300 --155 J 10700 90.1 J 1980 33600 1750 58.6 J 228 J ND ug/L 07/01/10 300 --42.7 J 21100 63.2 J 1050 42000 4290 132 J ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 300 --30.4 J 29100 36.4 J 803 4120 1170 269 J 90.9 J ND ug/L 07/21/11 300 --44.5 J 35900 47.1 J 21100 37800 1900 85.7 J 41.0 J -- ug/L 01/16/12 300 --133 J 15700 37.9 J 11300 45400 5270 90.1 J 27.6 J ND ug/L 07/09/12 300 --32.7 J 44700 28.2 J 1800 17000 7570 43.8 J 49.2 J ND ug/L 01/14/13 300 --50.4 J 31300 72.9 J 1440 5230 3040 143 J 148 J ND ug/L 07/09/13 300 --76.6 J 27200 39.0 J 1690 41300 2080 79.4 J 325 ND ug/L 01/30/14 300 --87.8 J 24500 208 J 5330 56300 2110 49.6 J 2570 ND ug/L 07/08/14 300 --ND 56100 65.3 J 1400 35300 4260 61.3 J 3900 ND ug/L 03/03/15 300 22.0 61.4 B 30800 38.2 B 1860 91700 3660 ND 6600 73.8 J ug/L 08/12/15 300 22.0 ND 59100 47.7 J 1630 46200 9550 28.6 J 876 ND ug/L 02/17/16 300 22.0 51.8 J 21200 100 J 2440 39400 5840 38.4 J 1020 ND Manganese ug/L 01/16/07 ----50.6 6160 4.7 J 39.1 2620 361 205 204 -- NC 2L = 50 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 50 --30.6 J 9540 4.2 J 29.5 J 1040 21.3 J 229 244 -- EPA MCL = 50 ug/L*ug/L 01/30/08 50 --16.1 J 7760 8.0 J 27.3 J 4340 12.6 J 64.8 208 ND ug/L 07/17/08 50 --26.7 J 25900 14.1 J 35.8 J 1080 10.5 J 11.1 J 94.2 ND ug/L 01/14/09 50 --3.5 J 10400 10.7 J 24.4 J 3450 718 ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 50 --15.7 J 25200 16.8 J 76.9 2480 340 ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 50 --5.12 J 13200 21.9 J 36.3 J 3200 707 2.50 J 77.3 ND ug/L 07/01/10 50 --8.43 B 15300 21.0 J 42.3 J 3420 1850 6.80 B 85.1 2.75 J ug/L 01/13/11 50 --6.90 J 20100 20.9 J 17.7 J 3290 2490 9.13 J 73.4 ND ug/L 07/21/11 50 --6.10 J 19600 19.0 J 54.5 3020 2470 3.62 J 551 -- ug/L 01/16/12 50 --5.41 J 8520 22.4 J 37.6 J 3280 2440 ND 73.1 ND ug/L 07/09/12 50 --3.82 J 17900 12.1 J 54.2 1890 3530 1.79 J 1160 ND ug/L 01/14/13 50 --4.14 B 14300 24.2 J 92.2 2280 2720 4.32 B 183 1.28 J ug/L 07/09/13 50 --18.1 J 19000 16.9 J 62.6 2290 1790 6.22 J 1840 ND ug/L 01/30/14 50 --7.75 J 16800 36.8 J 37.8 J 3120 2580 2.73 J 2090 ND ug/L 07/08/14 50 --5.04 B 24900 16.4 J 59.0 2060 2640 8.60 B 2010 1.97 J ug/L 03/03/15 50 1.10 6.00 J 17300 16.1 J 20.4 J 2480 3120 ND 2480 ND ug/L 08/12/15 50 1.10 4.21 B 20800 14.3 J 76.4 2410 3030 2.08 B 1670 1.18 J ug/L 02/17/16 50 1.10 7.36 J 16800 15.8 J 53.1 2240 3530 2.26 B 2040 1.19 J April 2016 5 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units Acetone ug/L 01/09/06 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 6000 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND No EPA MCL ug/L 01/16/07 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 1.2 J ug/L 01/30/08 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 7.1 J ug/L 07/01/10 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 100 --ND ND ND ND ND 5.6 J ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 100 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 100 --ND 9.8 J ND ND 1.3 J 2.1 J ND 1.9 J ND ug/L 03/03/15 100 1.2 ND 4.4 J ND ND 2.5 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 100 1.2 ND ND ND ND ND 11 J ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 100 1.2 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Benzene ug/L 01/09/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 1 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 5 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 3 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND 0.78 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND 0.72 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND 0.57 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND 1.6 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.15 ND 0.79 J ND ND ND ND ND 0.49 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.15 ND 2.0 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Verification Event ug/L 09/28/15 1 0.15 --2.6 ------------ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.15 ND 0.98 J ND ND ND 0.63 J ND ND ND 1,2-Dichloroethane ug/L 01/09/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 0.4 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 5 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 3 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND 0.57 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.21 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.21 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.21 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND cis-1,2-Dichloroethene ug/L 01/09/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 70 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 70 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 5 --ND 0.87 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 5 --ND 0.83 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 5 --ND 0.69 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 5 0.15 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 0.47 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 5 0.15 ND 0.57 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 5 0.15 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND April 2016 6 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units Ethylbenzene ug/L 01/09/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 600 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 700 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.13 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.13 ND 0.46 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.13 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Methylene chloride ug/L 01/09/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 5 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 5 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND 0.51 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND 0.92 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND 1.1 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND 0.41 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.23 ND 0.48 J ND ND ND ND ND 0.84 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.23 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 0.96 J ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.23 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Toluene ug/L 01/09/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 600 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 1000 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 0.63 J ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND 0.43 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.14 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.14 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND NDug/L 02/17/16 1 0.14 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 1.2 ND Vinyl chloride ug/L 01/09/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND NC 2L = 0.03 ug/L ug/L 07/12/06 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND EPA MCL = 2 ug/L ug/L 01/16/07 5.5 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/08 10 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 07/16/09 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ----ND ug/L 01/04/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 1 --ND 0.78 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 1 --ND 0.93 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 1 --ND 0.90 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 1 --ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 1 --ND 1.40 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1 0.32 ND 0.58 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1 0.32 ND 0.95 J ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1 0.32 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND Tetrahydrofuran ug/L 01/13/11 ----ND ND ND ND ND 6.2 ND ND ND No Standard ug/L 07/21/11 ----ND ND ND ND ND 21 ND ND ND No EPA MCL ug/L 01/16/12 ----ND ND ND ND ND 61 ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 ----ND ND ND ND ND 30 ND ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 ----ND 0.95 J ND ND ND 22 ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 ----ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 ----ND ND ND ND ND 8.1 ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 ----ND 3.3 ND ND ND 14 ND ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 --0.80 ND 1.4 ND ND ND 6.3 ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 --0.80 2.8 ND 1.5 ND ND 25 ND ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 0.80 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND ND April 2016 7 of 7 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 TABLE 4 Guilford County, North Carolina Summary of Detected Constituents in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DowngradientUpgradientSWS Reporting Limit BlanksMDLParameterSample Date Reporting Units Chloride mg/L 01/16/07 ----11.0 13.0 4.0 7.0 19.0 16.0 4.0 11.0 -- NC 2L = 250 mg/L mg/L 07/02/07 ----5.2 6.9 2.8 B 7.0 9.0 9.3 3.3 6.7 0.57 J EPA MCL = 250 ug/L*mg/L 01/30/08 ----6.5 10 3.3 J 10 16 15 3.3 J 9.4 ND mg/L 07/17/08 ----8.0 14 4.3 B 9.8 21 14 3.9 B 8.4 1.3 J mg/L 01/14/09 ----7.2 6.9 1.8 J 5.0 12 14 ----ND mg/L 07/16/09 ----8.4 12 5.3 12 17 15 ----ND mg/L 01/04/10 ----9.7 8.0 6.4 7.4 10 20 5.0 7.0 ND mg/L 07/01/10 ----9.9 10 5.5 7.7 10 40 5.1 7.2 ND mg/L 01/13/11 ----10 24 5.8 12 11 41 4.9 J 7.7 ND mg/L 07/21/11 ----12 30 3.8 B 13 14 47 4.5 B 8.2 1.5 J mg/L 01/16/12 ----13 21 4.1 6.9 7 63 4.7 8.8 ND mg/L 07/09/12 ----14 24 4.0 B 11 14 66 4.8 B 11 1.4 J mg/L 01/14/13 ----14 61 5.3 B 12 5.8 B 55 4.9 B 12 1.4 J mg/L 07/09/13 ----15 61 4.2 J 7.5 7.1 46 5.3 14 ND mg/L 01/30/14 ----14 48 6.6 7.2 3.5 55 5.3 19 ND mg/L 07/08/14 ----16 120 6.3 8.6 9.1 63 5.5 28 ND mg/L 03/03/15 --2.2 16 130 6.5 5.7 3.2 J 71 5.6 42 ND mg/L 08/12/15 --2.2 21 150 5.3 14 11 76 6.2 32 ND mg/L 02/17/16 --2.2 17 110 15 7.1 4.2 J 100 5.2 40 ND Total Dissolved Solids mg/L 01/16/07 ----214 180 68 82 280 212 236 236 -- NC 2L = 1000 mg/L mg/L 07/02/07 ----190 180 74 82 200 260 150 200 ND No EPA MCL mg/L 01/30/08 ----210 200 100 110 410 310 180 240 ND mg/L 07/17/08 ----220 270 54 90 280 220 140 190 ND mg/L 01/14/09 ----240 190 100 100 320 240 ----ND mg/L 07/16/09 ----240 360 110 120 260 280 ----ND mg/L 01/04/10 ----280 230 86 82 260 310 160 210 ND mg/L 07/01/10 ----270 310 86 96 250 480 190 240 ND mg/L 01/13/11 ----220 330 190 150 280 490 190 220 ND mg/L 07/21/11 ----260 370 48 120 320 520 190 230 ND mg/L 01/16/12 ----300 300 98 94 280 560 180 250 ND mg/L 07/09/12 ----330 550 96 140 270 760 230 340 ND mg/L 01/14/13 ----350 580 120 130 290 670 200 370 ND mg/L 07/09/13 ----350 530 64 70 230 600 190 360 ND mg/L 01/30/14 ----350 500 88 130 180 660 210 400 ND mg/L 07/08/14 ----360 910 66 110 230 750 210 460 ND mg/L 03/03/15 --10 390 770 56 56 120 860 210 510 ND mg/L 08/12/15 --50 370 1200 ND 130 200 860 210 360 ND mg/L 02/17/16 --50 430 810 110 100 150 1100 240 450 ND Sulfate as SO4 mg/L 01/16/07 ----48.4 44.3 7.03 B 33.4 41.7 51.2 24.0 13.6 2.25 J NC 2L = 250 mg/L mg/L 07/02/07 250 --39 25 6.4 19 25 69 11 10 ND No EPA MCL mg/L 01/30/08 250 --35 J 24 J 5.9 J 23 J 79 J 26 J 10 J 9.2 J ND mg/L 07/17/08 250 --62 J 41 J 8.9 J 23 J 39 J 73 J 14 J 14 J ND mg/L 01/14/09 250 --66 J 54 J 11 J 21 J 24 J 73 J ----ND mg/L 07/16/09 250 --74 J 36 J 8.3 J 33 J 33 J 100 ----ND mg/L 01/04/10 250 --95 J 37 J 11 J 26 J 25 J 110 J 12 J 19 J ND mg/L 07/01/10 250 --93 J 41 J 9.6 J 27 J 22 J 150 J 13 J 23 J ND mg/L 01/13/11 250 --99 J 42 J 10 J 44 J 13 J 140 J 14 J 36 J ND mg/L 07/21/11 250 --110 J 66 J 8.3 J 40 J 25 J 140 J 15 J 46 J ND mg/L 01/16/12 250 --100 J 55 J 9.1 J 23 J 13 J 130 J 18 J 50 J ND mg/L 07/09/12 250 --110 J 26 J 7.9 J 40 J 31 J 190 J 20 J 56 J ND mg/L 01/14/13 250 --120 J 55 J 13 J 58 J 9.6 J 190 J 23 J 62 J ND mg/L 07/09/13 250 --140 J 55 J 8.6 J 37 J 17 J 180 J 24 J 71 J 1.6 J mg/L 01/30/14 250 --160 J 68 J 15 J 52 J 6.4 J 200 J 28 J 67 J ND mg/L 07/08/14 250 --150 J 45 J 11 J 49 J 26 J 210 J 28 J 87 J ND mg/L 03/03/15 250 2.9 170 J 57 J 11 J 31 J 13 J 270 35 J 92 J ND mg/L 08/12/15 250 2.9 160 J 26 J 8.6 J 71 J 19 J 210 J 35 J 54 J ND mg/L 02/17/16 250 2.9 200 J 34 J 15 J 31 J 14 J 200 J 38 J 54 J ND Total Alkalinity mg/L 01/16/07 ----39 53 5.0 25 17 160 100 170 -- No NC 2L Standard mg/L 07/02/07 ----20 100 46 12 110 100 99 160 ND No EPA MCL mg/L 01/30/08 ------------310 ------ND mg/L 01/30/08 ----17 81 32 ND --89 100 170 ND mg/L 07/17/08 ----22 B 210 30 19 B 180 68 100 150 4.8 J mg/L 01/14/09 ----25 88 32 5.6 J 180 42 ----ND mg/L 07/16/09 ----17 150 34 ND 160 59 ----ND mg/L 01/04/10 ----43 160 51 24 100 76 110 160 ND mg/L 07/01/10 ----29 200 31 13 J 170 85 110 130 ND mg/L 01/13/11 ----23 230 29 ND 210 140 110 130 ND mg/L 07/21/11 ----25 170 30 12 J 220 140 110 110 ND mg/L 01/16/12 ----26 160 28 ND 190 170 110 120 ND mg/L 07/09/12 ----23 280 31 13 130 200 120 150 ND mg/L 01/14/13 ----20 280 32 ND 190 190 130 170 ND mg/L 07/09/13 ----29 260 32 ND 100 160 130 190 ND mg/L 01/30/14 ----23 250 32 ND 140 210 140 200 ND mg/L 07/08/14 ----29 500 41 22 110 270 150 230 ND mg/L 03/03/15 --14 30 440 33 ND 110 310 150 270 ND mg/L 08/12/15 --14 20 730 36 17 180 330 150 220 ND mg/L 02/17/16 --14 23 480 39 ND 950 510 160 250 ND Notes: 1. MW = groundwater monitoring well 2. ug/L = micrograms per liter 3. mg/L = milligrams per liter 4. J = estimated value 5. B = blank-qualified data 6. ND = not detected at or above the stated reporting limit 7. Standards = NC 2L Groundwater Standards or North Carolina Solid Waste Section Groundwater Protection Standards 8. --- = no data available 9. Bolded = Concentrations above the current NC 2L Groundwater Standards or Solid Waste Section Groundwater Protection Standards (SWS GPS) have been bolded. 10. Shaded = Concentrations above the current EPA Maximum Contaminate Level (MCL) have been shaded. 11. Blanks = Field, trip, and laboratory blanks. 12. SWS Reporting Limit = NCPQL prior to 2007 and NCSWSL starting in 01/18/07 13. # = EPA Action Level 14. * = EPA Secondary MCL 15. Data prior to 1/9/06 provided by Joyce Engineering, Inc. 16. The following dilutions were noted for the February 2016 event: Total Alkalinity: MW-6 (3x) and MW-8 (2x), Chloride: MW-6 (2x), and Sulfate: MW-1 (2x) and MW-6 (2x) April 2016 1 of 2 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 pH (Field)S.U.07/06/05 6.47 5.44 6.00 5.85 5.88 6.42 ---- S.U.01/09/06 5.96 5.76 6.37 6.02 6.27 6.10 ---- S.U.07/12/06 6.20 5.64 6.10 5.70 6.38 6.85 ---- S.U.01/16/07 7.35 6.82 6.88 6.61 6.22 6.59 6.74 7.20 S.U.07/02/07 7.47 7.24 7.14 6.77 7.13 7.40 7.30 7.13 S.U.01/30/08 5.78 5.51 5.92 5.34 6.29 6.25 6.58 7.35 S.U.07/17/08 5.75 5.75 5.70 5.86 6.05 5.91 6.47 7.23 S.U.01/14/09 5.77 5.64 5.60 5.11 6.28 5.45 ---- S.U.07/16/09 5.64 5.85 5.59 5.30 6.04 5.96 ---- S.U.01/04/10 5.49 5.59 5.36 4.73 6.08 6.05 6.30 6.96 S.U.07/01/10 5.53 5.72 5.37 5.22 5.96 5.49 6.34 6.48 S.U.01/13/11 5.54 5.80 5.57 5.24 5.96 6.28 6.45 6.52 S.U.07/21/11 5.27 5.50 5.10 5.02 6.02 5.84 6.22 6.00 S.U.01/16/12 5.59 5.76 5.59 5.11 6.26 5.79 6.43 6.36 S.U.07/09/12 5.92 6.12 5.53 5.57 6.20 6.45 6.60 6.30 S.U.01/14/13 5.47 6.00 5.78 5.45 6.11 6.41 6.44 6.29 S.U.07/09/13 5.02 5.40 4.83 4.60 5.97 5.67 5.56 5.70 S.U.01/30/14 5.58 6.04 5.75 5.48 6.35 6.42 6.44 6.30 S.U.07/08/14 5.63 6.32 5.86 5.72 6.42 6.60 6.62 6.27 S.U.03/03/15 5.49 6.23 5.88 5.50 6.39 6.61 6.50 6.18 S.U.08/12/15 5.66 6.08 5.37 5.54 5.98 6.54 6.03 6.10 Verification Event S.U.09/28/15 --6.31 ------------ S.U.02/17/16 5.25 6.32 5.22 5.06 6.07 6.25 6.16 6.38 Specific Conductance uS/cm 07/06/05 253 222 178 168 313 520 ---- (Field)uS/cm 01/09/06 146 164 82 81 334 142 ---- uS/cm 07/12/06 235 222 118 215 363 367 ---- uS/cm 01/16/07 224 279 850 110 497 226 268 374 uS/cm 07/02/07 234 330 131 125 355 413 261 384 uS/cm 01/30/08 317 411 269 346 999 595 318 505 uS/cm 07/17/08 266 528 105 153 510 376 248 360 uS/cm 01/14/09 279 319 109 95 588 337 ---- uS/cm 07/16/09 288 547 122 160 460 424 ---- uS/cm 01/04/10 371 429 130 124 561 510 257 371 uS/cm 07/01/10 318 466 101 123 465 631 235 302 uS/cm 01/13/11 327 578 118 189 454 700 251 344 uS/cm 07/21/11 408 589 101 198 595 769 280 382 uS/cm 01/16/12 369 432 97 102 460 815 269 367 uS/cm 07/09/12 341 675 90 152 337 943 246 412 uS/cm 01/14/13 334 659 107 166 382 722 247 388 uS/cm 07/09/13 468 847 102 154 432 864 311 551 uS/cm 01/30/14 530 915 156 209 443 1072 367 649 uS/cm 07/08/14 506 1502 138 207 425 1066 356 717 uS/cm 03/03/15 570 1344 133 128 330 1356 312 820 uS/cm 08/12/15 458 1600 94 220 401 1120 332 559 Verification Event uS/cm 09/28/15 --1845 ------------ uS/cm 02/17/16 554 1363 165 134 316 1507 380 731 Temperature (Field)oC 07/06/05 20.80 20.50 16.20 19.30 19.00 19.60 ---- oC 01/09/06 17.86 14.23 15.62 13.82 16.72 14.35 ---- oC 07/12/06 23.85 24.21 20.80 21.80 20.59 20.91 ---- oC 01/16/07 15.80 12.10 13.80 18.80 12.50 12.00 12.20 12.50 oC 07/02/07 19.65 18.72 17.72 18.23 18.54 17.27 16.27 18.76 oC 01/30/08 16.01 12.32 15.12 13.19 14.84 13.01 14.34 12.35 oC 07/17/08 18.58 17.34 17.47 17.02 19.68 20.10 17.33 17.16 oC 01/14/09 15.08 10.34 13.80 12.34 14.24 11.14 ---- oC 07/16/09 18.48 16.95 17.80 16.62 18.38 19.07 ---- oC 01/04/10 12.50 10.57 12.82 10.59 14.03 11.46 12.37 10.40 oC 07/01/10 18.65 16.14 15.30 16.12 17.55 19.93 16.11 18.97 oC 01/13/11 12.86 11.04 13.45 11.39 13.50 10.63 12.51 9.74 oC 07/21/11 19.57 17.91 17.25 18.02 18.06 19.68 17.72 21.63 oC 01/16/12 15.62 11.97 14.60 13.16 14.77 12.66 14.01 11.33 oC 07/09/12 19.26 17.83 17.60 18.80 18.57 23.63 17.25 20.90 oC 01/14/13 16.81 13.86 15.34 13.68 15.68 14.04 15.12 14.27 oC 07/09/13 18.75 17.51 17.16 17.14 17.54 18.92 17.16 20.77 oC 01/30/14 14.7 10.5 12.7 11.1 13.9 10.2 13.1 10.6 oC 07/08/14 19.0 15.8 15.2 16.1 17.6 18.9 18.8 18.9 oC 03/03/15 14.2 9.88 12.5 10.3 12.0 9.46 13.0 9.43 oC 08/12/15 18.6 17.5 15.1 16.3 17.6 19.3 15.8 17.1 Verification Event oC 09/28/15 --17.41 ------------ oC 02/17/16 14.70 11.9 13.8 11.4 14.4 11.6 14.8 12.8 Upgradient Downgradient TABLE 5 Summary of Field Parameters in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Parameter Reporting Units Sample Date April 2016 2 of 2 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx MW-1 MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 Upgradient Downgradient TABLE 5 Summary of Field Parameters in Groundwater Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Parameter Reporting Units Sample Date Turbidity (Field)NTU 07/06/05 92.1 126 241 65.2 71.4 71.4 ---- NTU 01/09/06 165 293 48.5 55.2 28.4 130 ---- NTU 07/12/06 130 89.2 49.2 28 64 387 ---- NTU 01/16/07 372 62.5 73.3 188 497 294 >1000 130 NTU 07/02/07 222 521 37 146 61.2 405 >1000 66.3 NTU 01/30/08 13.7 15.5 3.08 44.6 56.1 6.81 64.1 58.4 NTU 07/17/08 4.48 0.97 1.11 18.3 45.7 2.41 7 5.21 NTU 01/14/09 3.02 38.7 1.64 24.7 71.3 2.95 ---- NTU 07/16/09 2.38 2.65 4.1 27.5 18.4 2.31 ---- NTU 01/04/10 2.50 13.0 3.64 21.0 13.2 3.11 3.48 20.5 NTU 07/01/10 1.58 25.9 1.87 5.66 3.51 2.53 3.99 1.83 NTU 01/13/11 0.43 12.6 1.19 7.57 11.6 1.24 0.73 0.52 NTU 07/21/11 1.33 25.0 1.28 11.89 6.92 8.59 1.31 0.50 NTU 01/16/12 1.10 24.8 2.13 14.6 44.4 1.70 1.45 0.51 NTU 07/09/12 3.25 27.6 3.99 98.5 5.23 20.2 4.81 3.95 NTU 01/14/13 4.05 9.87 10.5 14.8 4.20 4.98 6.70 2.09 NTU 07/09/13 2.14 11.7 1.36 16.1 4.00 2.30 3.31 1.20 NTU 01/30/14 2.71 81.0 8.48 62.8 51.3 1.03 2.71 27.5 NTU 07/08/14 3.40 19.1 3.11 12.9 6.77 3.13 3.44 7.84 NTU 03/03/15 0.63 26.1 1.93 21.3 363 9.97 0.83 0.80 NTU 08/12/15 0.47 88.3 0.87 14.6 5.57 4.83 0.82 1.86 NTU 09/28/15 --11.9 ------------ NTU 02/17/16 1.58 25.0 3.52 16.9 49.1 3.53 1.54 5.37 Oxidation Reduction mV 07/06/05 ---------------- Potential (Field)mV 01/09/06 203 132 129 217 78 233 ---- mV 01/09/06 7.51 4.73 9.67 5.06 5.75 9.96 ---- mV 07/12/06 140 179 150 211 32 144 ---- mV 07/12/06 11.63 12.28 13.84 12.60 12.19 12.23 ---- mV 01/16/07 106 95 65 130 64 187 63 105 mV 01/16/07 9.10 4.90 11.20 8.60 10.50 10.90 9.70 9.80 mV 01/30/08 213 194 177 226 -21 203 160 166 mV 07/17/08 178 -1 151 68 106 122 117 117 mV 01/14/09 78.5 96.3 200.6 152.5 -7.8 171.1 ---- mV 07/16/09 174.7 30.1 148.0 183.6 27.4 134.9 ---- mV 01/04/10 111.1 62.0 153.1 192.9 -49 117.2 83.3 55.1 mV 07/01/10 64.6 0.4 158.6 -73.3 -119.7 67.6 32.2 2.5 mV 01/13/11 160.7 66.5 188.6 227.6 99.1 130.3 152.9 99.0 mV 07/21/11 103.9 11.2 142.1 131.2 -37.6 77.7 77.9 45.7 mV 01/16/12 169.2 40.5 179.1 249.5 -49.4 58.9 75.3 105.6 mV 07/09/12 52.6 7.3 89.2 53.8 18.4 10.2 30.8 32.8 mV 01/14/13 33.5 7.9 23.1 17.4 -81.7 8.7 15.0 19.1 mV 07/09/13 121.4 -10.5 107.6 105.3 -31.1 12.6 82.1 -16.7 mV 01/30/14 210.2 -60.6 131.6 190.6 -74.6 6.2 85.7 -121.9 mV 07/08/14 246.9 -55.3 193.8 143.2 -48.9 -21.4 141.7 -43.7 mV 03/03/15 218.8 -13.5 98.5 145.6 -35.1 24.3 87.9 2.7 mV 08/12/15 272.1 27.2 181.3 149.2 -28.7 -149.4 230.8 14.0 Verification Event mV 09/28/15 ---97.4 ------------ mV 02/17/16 297.4 2.7 230.1 294.6 -13.9 -14.4 149.9 -7.2 Dissolved Oxygen (Field)mg/L 01/30/08 3.83 5.13 5.56 2.52 3.48 5.34 6.40 3.27 mg/L 07/17/08 4.55 0.54 4.58 0.36 1.81 5.61 5.78 1.50 mg/L 01/14/09 5.86 4.45 6.24 3.24 2.12 2.43 ---- mg/L 07/16/09 4.79 0.99 4.31 1.05 1.60 4.66 ---- mg/L 01/04/10 5.21 0.94 5.39 1.72 1.54 6.53 6.05 3.02 mg/L 07/01/10 4.37 0.49 5.49 0.80 1.18 0.93 6.20 1.11 mg/L 01/13/11 5.19 0.92 3.62 4.96 1.54 5.01 5.80 2.60 mg/L 07/21/11 5.64 0.69 3.96 1.16 2.31 1.17 5.51 1.33 mg/L 01/16/12 4.63 1.18 4.64 1.03 0.20 0.69 5.18 2.38 mg/L 07/09/12 4.67 0.54 3.99 0.62 0.54 1.92 5.02 0.93 mg/L 01/14/13 4.78 0.38 3.22 0.82 1.02 3.71 5.08 0.78 mg/L 07/09/13 4.68 3.30 4.79 1.88 2.07 1.80 6.19 3.42 mg/L 01/30/14 3.95 0.23 5.16 0.80 0.38 2.39 4.15 0.35 mg/L 07/08/14 4.14 0.44 5.60 0.46 0.61 0.61 5.09 0.84 mg/L 03/03/15 3.41 2.77 4.21 4.60 0.73 3.33 5.53 0.86 mg/L 08/12/15 3.52 0.76 3.68 1.00 0.62 0.58 4.00 0.39 Verification Event mg/L 09/28/15 --0.85 ------------ mg/L 02/17/16 4.04 1.53 6.05 1.51 1.05 0.75 3.76 1.21 Notes: 1. MW = groundwater monitoring well 2. mg/L = milligrams per liter 3. S.U. = Standard Units 4. NTU = Nephelometric Turbidity Units 5. uS/cm = microsiemens per centimeter 6. --- = no data available 7. Data prior to 1/9/06 provided by Joyce Engineering, Inc. April 2016 1 of 5 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4Antimonyug/L 01/16/07 --6 ND ND ND ND ND (No SW Standard)ug/L 07/02/07 --6 --ND --ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --6 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/17/08 --6 --ND --ND NDug/L 02/27/09 --6 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --6 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/04/10 --6 0.0870 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --6 dry dry dry ND NDug/L 01/13/11 --6 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --6 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --6 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --6 dry ND dry ND 0.461 Jug/L 01/14/13 --6 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/09/13 --6 ND 0.371 J ND 0.436 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 --6 ND ND ND 0.308 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 --6 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 0.220 6 ND 0.255 J ND ND NDug/L 08/12/15 0.220 6 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 0.220 6 ND ND ND 8.13 J ND Arsenic ug/L 10/08/03 --10 ND ND ND ND ND SW Standard = 50 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/04 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/25/05 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/06/05 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/12/06 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/07 --10 ND 3.1 B 3.8 B ND 2.4 Jug/L 07/02/07 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --10 ND ND ND ND 2.1 J ug/L 07/17/08 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 3.5 J ND ND ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry 2.82 J dry ND ND ug/L 01/04/10 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry ND 3.54 J ug/L 01/13/11 --10 3.38 J 3.72 J 3.51 J 3.70 J NDug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --ND NDug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry 2.86 B dry 3.18 B 3.13 J ug/L 01/14/13 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 5.40 10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 6.80 10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 02/17/16 6.80 10 ND ND ND ND NDBarium ug/L 10/08/03 --500 ND ND ND ND ND (No SW Standard)ug/L 01/23/04 --500 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/04 --500 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/25/05 --500 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/06/05 --500 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --500 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/12/06 --500 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/16/07 --100 38.7 J 47.6 J 39.5 J 46.0 J 0.90 J ug/L 07/02/07 --100 dry 62.6 J dry 51.7 J 1.2 Jug/L 01/29/08 --100 49.8 J 74.1 J 62.2 J 71.2 J 0.3 J ug/L 07/17/08 --100 dry 67.3 J dry 71.9 J ND ug/L 02/27/09 --100 36.0 J 39.1 J 52.7 J 46.7 J ND ug/L 07/16/09 --100 dry 94.5 J dry 84.4 J NDug/L 01/04/10 --100 34.0 J 66.2 J 38.0 J 50.3 J 0.552 Jug/L 07/01/10 --100 dry dry dry 71.0 J ND ug/L 01/13/11 --100 47.9 J 71.4 J 49.1 J 54.3 J ND ug/L 07/21/11 --100 dry 87.5 J --69.4 J ND ug/L 01/16/12 --100 37.2 J 37.3 J 54.8 J 47.4 J NDug/L 07/09/12 --100 dry 72.4 J dry 55.2 J ND ug/L 01/14/13 --100 54.6 J 71.2 J 56.4 J 90.0 J 1.46 J ug/L 07/09/13 --100 73.5 J 58.3 J 63.2 J 46.3 J 1.37 J ug/L 01/30/14 --100 41.0 J 62.3 J 45.1 J 52.1 J 1.08 Jug/L 07/08/14 --100 dry 74.4 J dry 61.0 J 1.13 Jug/L 03/03/15 1.00 100 47.0 J 82.6 J 45.8 J 60.9 J 3.04 J ug/L 08/12/15 1.00 100 dry 163 dry 167 2.33 J ug/L 02/17/16 1.00 100 39.3 J 77.0 J 40.9 J 815 ND Beryllium ug/L 01/16/07 --1 ND ND ND ND NDSW Standard = 6.5 ug/L ug/L 07/02/07 --1 --ND --ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 --1 --ND --ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --1 dry 0.220 J dry 0.178 J NDug/L 01/04/10 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --1 dry dry dry ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --1 dry ND --ND NDug/L 01/16/12 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/14 --1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 0.100 1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 0.100 1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 0.100 1 ND ND ND 1.58 J ND TABLE 6 Summary of Detected Constituents in Surface Water Guilford County, North Carolina Reporting Units DownstreamUpstreamSWS Reporting Limit BlanksParameterSample Date Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 MDL April 2016 2 of 5 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4 TABLE 6 Summary of Detected Constituents in Surface Water Guilford County, North Carolina Reporting Units DownstreamUpstreamSWS Reporting Limit BlanksParameterSample Date Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 MDL Cadmium ug/L 10/08/03 --1 ND ND ND ND ND SW Standard = 2 ug/L (N)ug/L 01/23/04 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/04 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/25/05 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/06/05 --1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/12/06 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/16/07 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/02/07 --1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 --1 dry 0.40 J dry ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --1 dry 0.134 B dry 0.442 B 1.19ug/L 01/04/10 --1 0.317 J 0.230 J 0.830 J 0.143 J ND ug/L 07/01/10 --1 dry dry dry ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --1 dry ND --ND NDug/L 01/16/12 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/30/14 --1 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/14 --1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 0.360 1 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 0.360 1 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 0.360 1 ND ND ND ND NDChromiumug/L 10/08/03 --10 ND ND ND ND ND SW Standard = 50 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/04 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/25/05 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/06/05 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/12/06 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/16/07 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 --10 --ND --ND NDug/L 01/29/08 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/17/08 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry 8.45 J dry 5.87 J ND ug/L 01/04/10 --10 ND 2.49 J ND ND NDug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry 1.37 B 1.80 J ug/L 01/13/11 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND 2.35 J 1.42 J NDug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 01/14/13 --10 1.69 B 2.92 B ND 6.53 B 1.40 J ug/L 07/09/13 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 03/03/15 1.40 10 ND 6.99 B ND 4.03 B 1.66 J ug/L 08/12/15 1.40 10 dry 58.2 dry 43.7 ND ug/L 02/17/16 1.40 10 ND 13.8 ND 343 ND Cobalt ug/L 01/16/07 --10 ND ND ND ND ND (No SW Standard)ug/L 07/02/07 --10 --ND --ND NDug/L 01/29/08 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 2.0 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry 1.96 J dry 1.69 J NDug/L 01/04/10 --10 0.961 J 2.050 J 0.97 J 1.65 J NDug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry 1.18 J ND ug/L 01/13/11 --10 1.15 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --10 1.59 J 1.77 J ND 4.73 J ND ug/L 07/09/13 --10 1.50 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND 1.58 J 1.27 J 1.91 J NDug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 03/03/15 1.10 10 ND 2.65 J ND 1.35 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 1.10 10 dry 20.2 dry 17.8 ND ug/L 02/17/16 1.10 10 1.18 J 6.32 J 1.36 J 168 ND Copper ug/L 01/16/07 --10 ND 1.50 J 1.00 J ND NDSW Standard = 7 ug/L (AL)ug/L 07/02/07 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --10 1.00 J 1.20 J ND 1.10 J ND ug/L 07/17/08 --10 dry ND dry 1.90 J ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 1.90 J ND 1.80 J ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry 7.67 B dry 5.37 B 6.42 Jug/L 01/04/10 --10 2.39 J 4.12 J ND 2.06 J ND ug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry 1.69 B --1.62 B 1.65 Jug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND 2.89 J ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --10 5.01 J 4.24 J ND 13.4 ND ug/L 07/09/13 --10 1.63 J 2.44 J ND 2.28 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry 1.63 J ND ug/L 03/03/15 1.60 10 3.91 J 10.4 3.79 J 8.05 J ND ug/L 08/12/15 1.60 10 dry 52.4 dry 43.3 ND ug/L 02/17/16 1.60 10 4.03 B 14.4 B 2.76 B 357 3.66 J April 2016 3 of 5 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4 TABLE 6 Summary of Detected Constituents in Surface Water Guilford County, North Carolina Reporting Units DownstreamUpstreamSWS Reporting Limit BlanksParameterSample Date Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 MDL Lead ug/L 10/08/03 --10 ND ND ND ND ND SW Standard = 25 ug/L (N)ug/L 01/23/04 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/04 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/25/05 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/06/05 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/12/06 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/16/07 --10 4.6 J ND 2.6 J 3.6 J NDug/L 07/02/07 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry 4.30 J dry 4.68 J NDug/L 01/04/10 --10 1.68 B 4.41 B ND ND 1.24 J ug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry 2.56 J ND ug/L 01/13/11 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --2.32 J NDug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --10 ND ND ND 3.58 J ND ug/L 07/09/13 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 2.10 10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 3.10 10 dry 15.7 dry 14.8 ND ug/L 02/17/16 3.10 10 ND ND ND 32.5 J NDNickel ug/L 01/16/07 --50 2.9 J ND ND ND ND SW Standard = 88 ug/L (N)ug/L 07/02/07 --50 dry ND dry 1.7 J ND ug/L 01/29/08 --50 4.8 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 --50 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --50 2.4 J ND ND ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --50 dry 3.92 B dry 3.42 B 3.80 J ug/L 01/04/10 --50 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --50 dry dry dry ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 --50 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/21/11 --50 dry ND --ND NDug/L 01/16/12 --50 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --50 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --50 2.29 J ND ND 2.84 J ND ug/L 07/09/13 --50 1.91 J ND ND ND NDug/L 01/30/14 --50 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 --50 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1.80 50 ND 3.67 J ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1.80 50 dry 29.9 J dry 25.3 J NDug/L 02/17/16 1.80 50 ND 8.79 J ND 230 NDSeleniumug/L 10/08/03 --20 ND ND ND ND ND SW Standard = 5 ug/L ug/L 01/23/04 --20 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/04 --20 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/25/05 --20 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/06/05 --20 --ND --ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --20 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/12/06 --20 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/16/07 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 --10 --ND --ND NDug/L 01/29/08 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/17/08 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 4.7 J ND 5.8 J ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 01/04/10 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 03/03/15 5.00 10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 5.00 10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 5.00 10 ND ND ND ND ND Silver ug/L 10/08/03 --10 ND ND ND ND NDSW Standard = 0.06 ug/L (AL)ug/L 01/23/04 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/04 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/25/05 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/06/05 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 01/09/06 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/12/06 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/16/07 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/02/07 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/17/08 --10 --ND --ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/04/10 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry ND NDug/L 01/13/11 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 01/14/13 --10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/09/13 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --10 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1.90 10 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 08/12/15 1.90 10 dry ND dry ND 2.59 J ug/L 02/17/16 1.90 10 ND ND ND ND ND April 2016 4 of 5 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4 TABLE 6 Summary of Detected Constituents in Surface Water Guilford County, North Carolina Reporting Units DownstreamUpstreamSWS Reporting Limit BlanksParameterSample Date Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 MDL Thallium ug/L 01/16/07 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND (No SW Standard)ug/L 07/02/07 --5.5 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/29/08 --5.5 ND ND 0.041 J ND NDug/L 07/17/08 --5.5 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 02/27/09 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --5.5 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/04/10 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --5.5 dry dry dry ND NDug/L 01/13/11 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --5.5 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --5.5 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 01/14/13 --5.5 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/09/13 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --5.5 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 --5.5 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 0.110 5.5 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 08/12/15 0.110 5.5 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 0.110 5.5 ND ND ND ND ND Vanadium ug/L 01/16/07 --25 ND ND ND ND ND (No SW Standard)ug/L 07/02/07 --25 dry 2.1 J dry 2.6 J NDug/L 01/29/08 --25 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/17/08 --25 dry ND dry 1.7 J ND ug/L 02/27/09 --25 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --25 dry 23.4 J dry 16.1 J ND ug/L 01/04/10 --25 1.27 J 7.24 J 0.821 J 4.46 J NDug/L 07/01/10 --25 dry dry dry 4.33 J NDug/L 01/13/11 --25 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --25 dry 2.31 J --2.39 J ND ug/L 01/16/12 --25 1.52 J 1.79 J 7.01 J 4.69 J ND ug/L 07/09/12 --25 dry ND dry 1.81 J NDug/L 01/14/13 --25 3.46 J 6.21 J ND 14.0 J ND ug/L 07/09/13 --25 ND 2.85 J ND 2.79 J ND ug/L 01/30/14 --25 ND 1.53 J ND 2.17 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 --25 dry 2.53 J dry 3.14 J NDug/L 03/03/15 1.40 25 ND 17.3 J ND 8.48 J NDug/L 08/12/15 1.40 25 dry 155 dry 118 ND ug/L 02/17/16 1.40 25 ND 35.2 ND 853 ND Zinc ug/L 01/16/07 --10 27.0 B 9.5 B 27.1 B 4.2 B 10.0 SW Standard = 50 ug/L (AL)ug/L 07/02/07 --10 dry ND dry 7.6 J NDug/L 01/29/08 --10 112 10.6 26.9 6.8 B 1.6 J ug/L 07/17/08 --10 dry 3.8 J dry 4.1 J ND ug/L 02/27/09 --10 29.8 13.8 7.8 J 13.2 ND ug/L 07/16/09 --10 dry 14.0 B dry 26.9 B 20.5ug/L 01/04/10 --10 24.0 11.9 15.3 7.12 B 2.25 Jug/L 07/01/10 --10 dry dry dry 8.81 J ND ug/L 01/13/11 --10 32.6 ND 7.26 J ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --10 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --10 23.1 11.2 7.09 J ND NDug/L 07/09/12 --10 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --10 31.4 7.14 J 4.15 J 21.7 ND ug/L 07/09/13 --10 9.74 J ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --10 33.7 9.78 J 17.5 7.46 J ND ug/L 07/08/14 --10 dry ND dry 3.89 J NDug/L 03/03/15 3.80 10 36.9 20.7 19.5 10.6 ND ug/L 08/12/15 3.80 10 dry 53.6 dry 55.1 ND ug/L 02/17/16 3.80 10 16.7 20.1 14.4 306 ND Acetone ug/L 01/29/08 --100 ND ND ND ND ND(No SW Standard)ug/L 07/17/08 --100 --ND --ND NDug/L 02/27/09 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/16/09 --100 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/04/10 --100 ND ND ND ND 7.1 J ug/L 07/01/10 --100 dry dry dry ND NDug/L 01/13/11 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --100 dry ND --ND ND ug/L 01/16/12 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --100 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 01/14/13 --100 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/09/13 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 01/30/14 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/08/14 --100 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1.2 100 ND 9.6 J ND 3.6 J NDug/L 08/12/15 1.2 100 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1.2 100 ND ND ND ND ND April 2016 5 of 5 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4 TABLE 6 Summary of Detected Constituents in Surface Water Guilford County, North Carolina Reporting Units DownstreamUpstreamSWS Reporting Limit BlanksParameterSample Date Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 MDL 2-Butanone ug/L 01/29/08 --100 ND ND ND ND ND (No SW Standard)ug/L 07/17/08 --100 --ND --ND ND ug/L 02/27/09 --100 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/16/09 --100 dry ND dry ND NDug/L 01/04/10 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/01/10 --100 dry dry dry ND ND ug/L 01/13/11 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/21/11 --100 dry ND --ND NDug/L 01/16/12 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/12 --100 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 01/14/13 --100 ND ND ND ND ND ug/L 07/09/13 --100 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 01/30/14 --100 ND ND ND ND NDug/L 07/08/14 --100 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 03/03/15 1.3 100 ND 3.9 J ND ND ND ug/L 08/12/15 1.3 100 dry ND dry ND ND ug/L 02/17/16 1.3 100 ND ND ND ND ND Notes: 1. SW = surface water monitoring point 2. ug/L = micrograms per liter 3. J = estimated Value 4. B = blank-qualified data 5. ND = not detected at or above the stated reporting limit 7. (AL) = SW Standard is an action level 8. (N) = SW Standard is a narrative standard 9. --- = no data available 10. Bolded = concentrations above their respective NC Surface Water Standards 11. Blanks = field, trip and laboratory blanks. 12. SWS Reporting Limit = NCPQL prior to 2007 and NCSWSL starting in 01/18/07 13. Data prior to 1/9/06 provided by Joyce Engineering, Inc. 14. The following dilutions were noted for the February 2016 event: Metals: SW-4 (5x) 6. Surface Water Standards for NC Appendix I constituents based on Class C Freshwater Aquatic Life stream classification per 15A NCAC 2B. April 2016 1 of 2 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4pH (Field)S.U.07/06/05 --6.49 --7.02 S.U.01/09/06 6.70 6.45 6.01 6.72S.U.07/12/06 6.28 6.38 5.86 6.78S.U.01/16/07 7.44 6.10 6.02 6.35 S.U.07/02/07 dry 6.95 dry 8.19 S.U.01/29/08 5.96 5.76 5.91 6.36S.U.07/17/08 dry 7.24 dry 7.20 S.U.01/14/09 6.63 6.74 6.37 6.98 S.U.07/16/09 dry 6.65 dry 7.39S.U.01/04/10 6.43 6.00 5.62 6.72 S.U.07/01/10 dry dry dry 7.62 S.U.01/13/11 5.84 6.69 6.30 6.86S.U.07/21/11 dry 6.80 --7.35 S.U.01/16/12 7.12 6.30 5.95 7.31 S.U.07/09/12 dry 6.64 dry 7.07S.U.01/14/13 6.64 7.01 6.51 7.15 S.U.07/09/13 5.33 6.40 6.23 6.31 S.U.01/30/14 7.13 6.50 6.12 7.45S.U.07/08/14 dry 6.77 dry 7.53 S.U.03/03/15 7.16 6.54 6.03 6.90 S.U.08/12/15 dry 5.99 dry 8.74S.U.02/17/16 5.81 6.06 5.85 7.53 Specific Conductance (Field)uS/cm 07/06/05 --407 --366 uS/cm 01/09/06 123 143 155 110 uS/cm 07/12/06 175 258 237 213uS/cm 01/16/07 124 184 120 162 uS/cm 07/02/07 dry 298 dry 143 uS/cm 01/29/08 343 390 311 416uS/cm 07/17/08 dry 317 dry 316 uS/cm 01/14/09 160 159 200 183 uS/cm 07/16/09 dry 257 dry 255uS/cm 01/04/10 159 216 159 194 uS/cm 07/01/10 dry dry dry 333 uS/cm 01/13/11 378 419 270 340uS/cm 07/21/11 dry 349 --245 uS/cm 01/16/12 159 182 162 159 uS/cm 07/09/12 dry 380 dry 311uS/cm 01/14/13 218 286 282 264 uS/cm 07/09/13 432 268 313 240 uS/cm 01/30/14 234 275 239 221uS/cm 07/08/14 dry 399 dry 314 uS/cm 03/03/15 264 198 254 197 uS/cm 08/12/15 dry 140 dry 138 uS/cm 02/17/16 155 181 165 117Temperature (Field)oC 07/06/05 dry 23.3 dry 24.6oC01/09/06 10.78 7.15 7.30 9.61oC07/12/06 19.96 22.28 22.51 23.03oC01/16/07 10.70 11.80 11.60 11.50oC07/02/07 dry 20.87 dry 23.49oC01/29/08 8.39 6.21 6.93 6.99oC07/17/08 dry 20.94 dry 19.01oC01/14/09 6.17 5.63 4.98 4.78oC07/16/09 dry 20.68 dry 20.93oC01/04/10 3.37 1.19 1.43 1.63oC07/01/10 dry dry dry 18.27oC01/13/11 3.22 1.08 0.97 1.70oC07/21/11 dry 23.70 --27.15oC01/16/12 5.21 5.58 5.91 6.30oC07/09/12 dry 23.77 dry 28.19oC01/14/13 12.1 12.8 12.9 12.9oC07/09/13 21.03 23.01 23.06 25.16oC01/30/14 0.90 0.70 0.60 0.40oC07/08/14 dry 22.4 dry 24.0oC03/03/15 5.01 6.61 5.31 5.70oC08/12/15 dry 21.7 dry 24.1oC02/17/16 6.5 4.9 5.1 8.3 Upstream Downstream TABLE 7 Summary of Field Parameters in Surface Water Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Parameter Reporting Units Sample Date April 2016 2 of 2 1239-651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx SW-1 SW-3 SW-2 SW-4 Upstream Downstream TABLE 7 Summary of Field Parameters in Surface Water Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Parameter Reporting Units Sample Date Turbidity (Field)NTU 07/06/05 dry 15.5 dry 17.2 NTU 01/09/06 dry 61.3 dry 68.4 NTU 07/12/06 134 dry dry 5.1NTU01/16/07 5.8 37.7 39.5 32.3 NTU 07/02/07 dry 27.1 dry 124 NTU 01/29/08 3.4 100.0 15.2 94.9NTU07/17/08 dry 16.2 dry 17.7 NTU 01/14/09 12.6 8.87 16.6 15.2 NTU 07/16/09 dry 194 dry 125NTU01/04/10 10.2 33.2 18.7 54.7 NTU 07/01/10 dry dry dry 68.2 NTU 01/13/11 20.2 18.6 25.3 11.2 NTU 07/21/11 dry 19.8 --18.5NTU01/16/12 10.2 52.9 16.9 38.4 NTU 07/09/12 dry 23.7 dry 28.1 NTU 01/14/13 63.1 51.5 11.8 169NTU07/09/13 31.6 24.5 11.5 23.8 NTU 01/30/14 12.0 16.8 7.02 23.2 NTU 07/08/14 dry 15.3 dry 25.8NTU03/03/15 9.24 122 12.4 75.1 NTU 08/12/15 dry 927 dry >1000 NTU 02/17/16 13.9 212 13.1 >1000Oxidation Reduction mV 01/29/08 165 202 214 182 Potential (Field)mV 07/17/08 dry 75 dry 76 mV 01/14/09 92.8 113.6 139.6 156.6mV07/16/09 dry 126.1 dry 45.5 mV 01/04/10 82.5 122.6 176.4 5.8 mV 07/01/10 dry dry dry 140.9mV01/13/11 141.9 191.8 224.4 145.8 mV 07/21/11 dry 45.8 --55.8 mV 01/16/12 31.9 137.1 218.6 64.6 mV 07/09/12 dry -7.3 dry -4.3mV01/14/13 -------- mV 07/09/13 67.0 33.4 21.1 71.7 mV 01/30/14 18.1 31.7 96.4 -3.0mV07/08/14 dry 43.0 dry 280.2 mV 03/03/15 -0.8 131.9 143.9 73.2 mV 08/12/15 dry 32.0 dry 47.6mV02/17/16 140.1 184.6 240.4 288.2 Dissolved Oxygen (Field)mg/L 01/29/08 11.03 11.61 11.13 11.98 mg/L 07/17/08 dry 3.33 dry 7.08mg/L 01/14/09 11.52 12.78 13.94 13.96 mg/L 07/16/09 dry 6.33 dry 7.76 mg/L 01/04/10 12.43 14.99 15.13 15.05mg/L 07/01/10 dry dry dry 8.71 mg/L 01/13/11 6.81 15.62 15.94 16.10 mg/L 07/21/11 dry 5.70 --5.41mg/L 01/16/12 10.68 13.44 14.39 13.62 mg/L 07/09/12 dry 7.00 dry 9.31 mg/L 01/14/13 -------- mg/L 07/09/13 5.31 7.12 5.97 8.51mg/L 01/30/14 12.43 13.28 14.04 14.86 mg/L 07/08/14 dry 6.05 dry 8.06 mg/L 03/03/15 9.90 11.23 11.65 11.50mg/L 08/12/15 dry 8.96 dry 8.50 mg/L 02/17/16 8.95 9.52 7.83 10.03 Notes: 1. SW = surface water monitoring point 2. mg/L = milligrams per liter 3. S.U. = Standard Units 4. NTU = Nephelometric Turbidity Units 5. uS = microsiemens 6. --- = no data available 7. Data prior to 1/9/06 provided by Joyce Engineering, Inc. April 2016 1 of 1 1239651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Tables\WI of High Point C&D LF Tables Feb 2016.xlsx Field Parameters Units MW-2 MW-8 PWS-1 PWS-2 PWS-3 SW-1 SW-3 pH S.U.6.32 6.38 6.90 6.29 6.25 5.81 6.06 Specific Conductivity uS/cm 1363 731 463 124 557 155 181 Temperature oC 11.9 12.8 7.1 8.2 8.9 6.5 4.9 Oxidation Reduction Potential mV 2.7 -7.2 -30.1 66.3 55.6 140.1 184.6 Dissolved Oxygen mg/L 1.53 1.21 6.97 5.05 5.12 8.95 9.52 Notes: 1. SW = surface water monitoring point 2. mg/L = milligrams per liter 3. S.U. = Standard Units 4. NTU = Nephelometric Turbidity Units 5. uS = microsiemens Guilford County, North Carolina Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Comparison of Field Parameters to Evaluate Pore Water Sampling TABLE 8 FIGURE LEGEND Range of measurements Average of measurements Reviewed By: RPK Prepared By: DYR Project# 1239651616.101 DATE: 04/06/16 Figure No. 1 Title: COMPARISON OF FIELD PARAMETERS TO EVLUATE PORE WATER SAMPLING Waste Industries of High Point C&D Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 DRAWING 78 0 7 7 0 7 6 0 7 5 0 7 4 0 720 7 2 0 750 760 770 740 79 0 7 9 0 i1 i3 BH-4 BH-3 BH-2 BH-1 EXISTING O V E R H E A D P O W E R L I N E S MAINTENANCEBUILDING SB-3 MW-5 737.15 734.05 730.04 MW-8 MW-7S MW-6 SCALEHOUSE MW-7D CREEK OP-3 PHASE I DISPOSAL AREA BH-4 CONSULTANT DESIGN PREPARED REVIEW APPROVED YYYY-MM-DD TITLE PROJECT No.Rev. PROJECTCLIENT Pa t h : - - - - | F i l e N a m e : 1 2 3 9 6 5 1 6 1 5 F 0 0 1 . d w g IF T H I S M E A S U R E M E N T D O E S N O T M A T C H W H A T I S S H O W N , T H E S H E E T S I Z E H A S B E E N M O D I F I E D F R O M : A N S I D 0 1 i n 1239651616 PHASE 101 DRAWING 10 2016-04-08 BSD DYR DYR RPK WASTE INDUSTRIES OF HIGH POINT CONSTRUCTION AND DEMOLITION DEBRIS LANDFILL AND RECLAMATION FACILITY GUILFORD COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA GROUNDWATER CONTOUR MAP FEBRUARY 17-18, 2016 0 FEET 200 400 SCALE LEGEND EXISTING 10' CONTOURS EXISTING 2' CONTOURS PROPERTY LINE STREAM TREELINE EXISTING ROAD PROPOSED OR EXISTING LIMITS OF WASTE MONITORING WELL LOCATION IDENTIFICATION AND GROUNDWATER ELEVATION SURFACE WATER MONITORING POINT PROPOSED SURFACE WATER MONITORING POINT PORE WATER SAMPLE LOCATION BENCH MARK SEDIMENT BASIN GROUNDWATER SURFACE CONTOURS GROUNDWATER FLOW SEGMENT USED TO CALCULATE GRADIENTi1 760 1. TOPOGRAPHIC CONTOUR INTERVAL = 2 FEET 2. GROUNDWATER SURFACE CONTOUR INTERVAL = 10 FEET 3. GROUNDWATER ELEVATIONS MEASURED ON FEBRUARY 17-18, 2016. 4. GROUNDWATER CONTOURS BASED ON LINEAR INTERPOLATION BETWEEN AND EXTRAPOLATION FROM KNOWN DATA, TOPOGRAPHIC CONTOURS AND KNOWN FIELD CONDITIONS. THEREFORE, GROUNDWATER CONTOURS MAY NOT REFLECT ACTUAL CONDITIONS. 5. GROUNDWATER CONTOURS LINES SHOW THE WATER TABLE SHAPE AND ELEVATION. THESE CONTOURS ARE INFERRED LINES FOLLOWING THE GROUNDWATER SURFACE AT A CONSTANT ELEVATION ABOVE SEA LEVEL. THE GROUNDWATER FLOW DIRECTION IS GENERALLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE GROUNDWATER SURFACE CONTOURS, SIMILAR TO THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SURFACE WATER FLOW AND TOPOGRAPHIC CONTOURS. 6. THE GROUNDWATER ELEVATIONS FOR MW-4D AND MW-7D WERE NOT USED IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF GROUNDWATER CONTOURS. 7. DRAWING BASED ON SITE PLAN PLAN PREPARED BY JOYCE ENGINEERING, INC DATED JULY 7, 2004. 8. UPDATED TOPOGRAPHY PROVIDED FROM AERIAL SURVEY PREPARED BY SURVEYING SOLUTIONS, P.C., PHOTOGRAPHY DATE JANUARY 13, 2015. SITE SITE LOCATION MAP NOTES GOLDER ASSOCIATES NC, INC. PG C-399 WASTE INDUSTRIES USA, INC. APPENDIX A GROUNDWATER AND SURFACE WATER SAMPLING LOGS Caption Text APPENDIX B FEBRUARY 2016 GROUNDWATER AND SURFACE WATER CERTIFICATE-OF-ANALYSIS, CHAIN-OF-CUSTODY FORM, AND LABORATORY DATA REVIEW Caption Text Page 1 of 119 Page 2 of 119 Page 3 of 119 Page 4 of 119 Page 5 of 119 Page 6 of 119 Page 7 of 119 Page 8 of 119 Page 9 of 119 Page 10 of 119 Page 11 of 119 Page 12 of 119 Page 13 of 119 Page 14 of 119 Page 15 of 119 Page 16 of 119 Page 17 of 119 Page 18 of 119 Page 19 of 119 Page 20 of 119 Page 21 of 119 Page 22 of 119 Page 23 of 119 Page 24 of 119 Page 25 of 119 Page 26 of 119 Page 27 of 119 Page 28 of 119 Page 29 of 119 Page 30 of 119 Page 31 of 119 Page 32 of 119 Page 33 of 119 Page 34 of 119 Page 35 of 119 Page 36 of 119 Page 37 of 119 Page 38 of 119 Page 39 of 119 Page 40 of 119 Page 41 of 119 Page 42 of 119 Page 43 of 119 Page 44 of 119 Page 45 of 119 Page 46 of 119 Page 47 of 119 Page 48 of 119 Page 49 of 119 Page 50 of 119 Page 51 of 119 Page 52 of 119 Page 53 of 119 Page 54 of 119 Page 55 of 119 Page 56 of 119 Page 57 of 119 Page 58 of 119 Page 59 of 119 Page 60 of 119 Page 61 of 119 Page 62 of 119 Page 63 of 119 Page 64 of 119 Page 65 of 119 Page 66 of 119 Page 67 of 119 Page 68 of 119 Page 69 of 119 Page 70 of 119 Page 71 of 119 Page 72 of 119 Page 73 of 119 Page 74 of 119 Page 75 of 119 Page 76 of 119 Page 77 of 119 Page 78 of 119 Page 79 of 119 Page 80 of 119 Page 81 of 119 Page 82 of 119 Page 83 of 119 Page 84 of 119 Page 85 of 119 Page 86 of 119 Page 87 of 119 Page 88 of 119 Page 89 of 119 Page 90 of 119 Page 91 of 119 Page 92 of 119 Page 93 of 119 Page 94 of 119 Page 95 of 119 Page 96 of 119 Page 97 of 119 Page 98 of 119 Page 99 of 119 Page 100 of 119 Page 101 of 119 Page 102 of 119 Page 103 of 119 Page 104 of 119 Page 105 of 119 Page 106 of 119 Page 107 of 119 Page 108 of 119 Page 109 of 119 Page 110 of 119 Page 111 of 119 Page 112 of 119 Page 113 of 119 Page 114 of 119 Page 115 of 119 Page 116 of 119 Page 117 of 119 Page 118 of 119 Page 119 of 119 Page 1 of 1 Page 1 of 16 Page 2 of 16 Page 3 of 16 Page 4 of 16 Page 5 of 16 Page 6 of 16 Page 7 of 16 Page 8 of 16 Page 9 of 16 Page 10 of 16 Page 11 of 16 Page 12 of 16 Page 13 of 16 Page 14 of 16 Page 15 of 16 Page 16 of 16 Page 1 of 1 GOLDER ASSOCIATES NC, INC. QUALITY ASSURANCE & QUALITY CONTROL LABORATORY DATA REVIEW Page 1 of 5 Project Name: WI of High Point C&D Landfill Project Reference Number: 1239651616.101 Sampling Event Date: February 17-18, 2016 Review Date: March 18, 2016 Initials: TM Report #: CZ01664, CZ01663 Person(s) performing the review are to initial each item on this form as acknowledgement of data acceptance, or as acknowledgement of a review issue. In the case of the latter, a brief explanation should follow the applicable item. Golder Associates Inc. has reviewed the laboratory certificates of analysis, chain-of-custody form, and laboratory provided sample group quality assurance and quality control data for the above referenced sample group to identify potential bias or inaccuracy, in general accordance with the following United States Environmental Protection Agency documents:  Region III Modifications to Functional Guidelines for Organic Data Review Multi-Media, Multi- Concentration, September 1994;  Region III Modifications to the Laboratory Data Validation Functional Guidelines for Evaluating Inorganic Analyses, April 1993; and  Laboratory Data Validation Functional Guidelines for Evaluating Inorganic Analyses, July 1998. COMPLIANCE ANALYTE LIST(S) (check all that apply) NC Closed Facility List (.500 Rules) X NC C & D List (New Rules) NC Appendix I NC Appendix I + Detects NC Appendix II NC Subtitle D Leachate List Other: 1.0 CHAIN OF CUSTODY (COC) REVIEW TM COC was properly signed by all parties. TM Correct project name and number are on the form. TM Sample receipt condition at laboratory was acceptable. TM Each sample and blank submitted for analysis appears in the report. GOLDER ASSOCIATES NC, INC. QUALITY ASSURANCE & QUALITY CONTROL LABORATORY DATA REVIEW Page 2 of 5 2.0 SAMPLE HOLDING TIMES TM Holding times for extraction and/or analysis were met for each analytical Method (see below for reference). Review Criteria Method Analytes Holding Time SW-846 Method 8260 and 8011 VOCs 14 days SW-846 Methods 8270, 8080, 8081, 8082, and 8151 SVOCs, PCBs, pesticides and herbicides 7 days for extraction, 40 days from extraction for analysis SW-846 Methods 6000 and 7000 Series Metals except mercury 6 months (no temperature requirements) SW-846 Method 7470 Mercury 28 days SW-846 Method 376.1 Sulfide 7 days SW-846 Method 9010 Cyanide 14 days EPA Method 300 Nitrate/Sulfate 48 hours/28 days EPA Method 405.1 BOD 48 hours EPA Method 410.4 COD 28 days EPA Method 365.4 Phosphorous 28 days 3.0 LABORATORY QUALITY CONTROL REVIEW TM Laboratory analyzed at least one internal blank for each method, where applicable. TM Laboratory blank is interference-free.  The 8270D continuing calibration verification sample (CCV) exhibited a high bias for Isodrin; however this analyte was not detected in the associated samples, reducing the impact of the deviation. The CCV showed a low bias for 1,4-Phenylenediamine, 1-Napthylamine, and 4-Aminobiphenyl; the reported results should be considered minimum estimates. TM Surrogate recoveries are provided for each analytical method, where applicable. TM Surrogate recoveries for each method are within the acceptable limits (i.e., at least 50% of the surrogates were within range).  The 8151 Surrogate spike recovery of 2,4-DECAA was outside of control limits for the MS and MSD samples. TM MS/MSD/LCS data results are provided for each analytical method. TM MS/MSD/LCS recoveries for each method are within the acceptable limits (i.e., at least 1 of the 3 were within range).  The spike recoveries of Iron, Manganese, and Mercury were outside of control limits for the 6010C MS, MSD, and or Post Spike samples (method 7470A for Mercury). The QC batches were approved based on acceptable LCS recovery of these elements. GOLDER ASSOCIATES NC, INC. QUALITY ASSURANCE & QUALITY CONTROL LABORATORY DATA REVIEW Page 3 of 5  The spike recoveries of Alkalinity and Sulfide were outside of control limits for the MS and or MSD samples. The QC batches were approved based on acceptable LCS recovery of these analytes.  The spike recovery of 1,1Dichloroethene was outside of control limits for the 8260B MS and MSD samples. The qc batch was approved based on acceptable LCS recovery. 4.0 ANALYTE LISTS/METHODS TM The proper number of constituents are present for each analyte list as identified above (including detects where applicable). TM Proper EPA SW-846 analytical methods were used for analysis. 5.0 DATA REPORTING TM All analytical reporting associated with the event was performed by the contracted lab. TM Trip, field and/or equipment, and laboratory blank results have all been reported. All detects for blanks are listed below by constituent. All laboratory method blanks, if any, have been ‘flagged’ with a ‘B’ where detected in other samples as appropriate and a laboratory narrative was provided. If the sample was flagged by the laboratory and is not within 5X of the concentration in the blank (or 10X for commonly detected laboratory contaminants-acetone, methylene chloride and phthalates), list below with explanation if flags should be removed. If flags need to be added for samples, also list below.  Field Blank o Copper @ 3.66 ug/L (J) -Add B flags MW-8, SW-1, SW-2, SW-3 o Manganese @ 1.19 ug/L (J) -Add B flags to MW-7s @ 2.26 ug/L (J) TM It is clear from the laboratory report that samples have or have not been diluted during analysis, and if the samples have been diluted, the result is reported as a multiple of the dilution (e.g., a sample diluted 10x resulting in an analytical detection of 1.0 should be reported as 10). Those that have been diluted are listed below with the dilution factor.  Sulfate as SO4 o MW-1 DF = 2x o MW-6 DF = 2x  Chloride o MW-2 DF= 2x o MW-6 DF= 2x  Total Alkalinity as CaCO3 o MW-2 DF = 6x o MW-6 DF = 3x o MW-8 DF = 2x SW-4- Antimony x10, Arsenic x5, Barium x5, Beryllium x5, Cadmium x5, Chromium x5, Cobalt x5, GOLDER ASSOCIATES NC, INC. QUALITY ASSURANCE & QUALITY CONTROL LABORATORY DATA REVIEW Page 4 of 5 Copper x5, Lead x5, Nickel x5, Selenium x10, Silver x5, Thallium x10, Vanadium x5, Zinc x5 TM The report provides the reporting limit for each constituent. TM The results were reported at or below their proper reporting limits (i.e., MDLs with SWSLs reported). Those that are not reported correctly are listed below (by constituent) with the proper reporting limit listed beside them. State if the reporting limit error is due to dilutions. TM No organic or organic constituents were reported above their respective NC 2L Drinking Water Standards/GWPS in wells, or field/equipment/trip blanks, or above applicable surface water standards in surface water points  Cobalt (SWS GPS = 1 ug/L) o MW-1 @ 1.14 ug/L (J) o MW-2 @ 14.9 ug/L o MW-4S @ 1.59 ug/L (J) o MW-5 @ 1.70 ug/L (J) o MW-6 @ 14.3 ug/L o MW-8 @ 2.88 ug/L (J)  Copper (SW Standard = 7 ug/L) o SW-3 @ 14.4 ug/L o SW-4 @ 357 ug/L (D)  Vanadium (SWS GPS = 0.3 ug/L) o MW-4S @ 11.2 ug/L (J) o MW-7S @ 9.15 ug/L (J)  Iron (NC 2L = 300 ug/L) o MW-2 @ 21200 ug/L o MW-4S @ 2440 ug/L o MW-5 @ 39400 ug/L o MW-6 @ 5840 ug/L o MW-8 @ 1020 ug/L  Manganese (NC 2L = 50 ug/L) o MW-2 @ 16800 ug/L o MW-4s @ 53.1 ug/L o MW-5 @ 2240 ug/L o MW-6 @ 3530 ug/L o MW-8 @ 2040 ug/L  Chromium (SW Standard = 50ug/L) o SW-4 @ 343 ug/L (D)  Lead (SW Standard = 25 ug/L) o SW-4 @ 32.5 ug/L (JD)  Nickel (SW Standard = 88 ug/L) o SW-4 @ 230 ug/L (D)  Zinc (SW Standard = 50 ug/L) o SW-4 @ 306 ug/L (D)  Total Dissolved Solids (NC 2L = 1000 mg/L) o MW-6 @ 1100 mg/L TM No inorganic or organic constituents were detected in a well or surface water point at quantified concentrations outside of their historical range (more than 5X previous concentrations or first-time detections). SW-4 > Chromium, Copper, Nickel, Zinc, Vanadium TM Other report issues/Communications with laboratory/etc.:  The detection of Toluene in sample MW-8 was confirmed by reanalysis. Only the original result is indicated in this report; however, the reanalysis result is available upon request. GOLDER ASSOCIATES NC, INC. QUALITY ASSURANCE & QUALITY CONTROL LABORATORY DATA REVIEW Page 5 of 5  Due to high levels of non-target analytes, sample SW-4 was processed at a dilution for the 6010C and 6020 A metals, resulting in elevated reporting limits. Selenium is reported by both 6010C and 6020 to confirm compliance with the NC Solid Waste Section Limit for this element. Sediment (a layer approximately 3-5 mm thick) was observed in the Metals container. APPENDIX C STATISTICAL EVALUATION WORKSHEETS AND STATS SUMMARY TABLE April 2016 1 of 1 1239651616.101 G:\Projects\Waste Industries\High Point\Groundwater\WQMR\February 2016\Stats\Stats Summary Dec 2016.xlsx MW-2 MW-3 MW-4S MW-5 MW-6 MW-7S MW-8 Interwell Nonparametric Prediction Limit 5.00 Intrawell MW-2 Upper Tolerance Limit 34.6 Intrawell MW-6 Upper Tolerance Limit 40.2 Interwell Nonparametric Prediction Limit 2530 Intrawell MW-2 Upper Tolerance Limit 73802 Intrawell MW-5 Upper Tolerance Limit 96306 Intrawell MW-6 Upper Tolerance Limit 10384 Interwell Nonparametric Prediction Limit 50.6 Intrawell MW-2 Upper Tolerance Limit 33998 Intrawell MW-4S Nonparametric Prediction Limit 92.2 Intrawell MW-5 Upper Tolerance Limit 5086 Intrawell MW-6 Upper Tolerance Limit 5715 Intrawell MW-8 Upper Tolerance Limit 3519 Interwell Upper Prediction Limit 480 Intrawell MW-2 Upper Tolerance Limit 1258 Intrawell MW-6 Upper Tolerance Limit 1158 Notes:1. Shaded values represent apparent statistical significant increases (SSIs) over background concentrations. 2. Statistical worksheets are provided as Appendix C. 3. ug/L = micrograms per liter; J = estimated concentration below the Solid Waste Section Limit 4. ND = Not Detected 450 39400 5840 38.4 J 1020 2240 1.70 JND 150 1100 240 53.1 21200Ironug/L 47.7 J 2440 Total Dissolved Solids mg/L 810 110 100 Cobalt 14.31.59 J Summary of Statistical Analysis Waste Industries of High Point Construction and Demolition Landfill, Permit No. 41-16 Guilford County, North Carolina Statistical Evaluation Method Detected Monitoring Constituent/Analytes February 2016 Downgradient Monitoring Wells and Concentrations 14.9ug/L Reporting Units Prediction Interval 2.83 JND 3530 2040Manganeseug/L 15.8 J 2.26 J16800 Golder, Golder Associates and the GA globe design are trademarks of Golder Associates Corporation Golder Associates NC, Inc. 5B Oak Branch Drive Greensboro, NC 27407 USA Tel: (336) 852-4903 Fax: (336) 852-4904