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RECORD NUMBER: 932 OF 1079

Main Title Superfund record of decision : Bayou Sorrel, LA : first remedial action.
CORP Author United States. Environmental Protection Agency.
Publisher U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Emergency and Remedial Response ; Reproduced by National Technical Information Service,
Year Published 1986
Report Number EPA/ROD/R06-87/016
Stock Number PB88-106505
OCLC Number 28606288
Subjects Hazardous waste sites--Louisiana
Additional Subjects Waste disposal ; Chemical industry ; Decontamination ; Hazardous materials ; Hydrogen sulfide ; Pesticides ; Herbicides ; Organic compounds ; Volatile organic compounds ; Remedial action ; Superfund ; Record of decision ; Iberville Parish(Louisiana) ; Hydrogen sulfide ; Pesticides ; Herbicides
Internet Access
Description Access URL
https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=91000QZ1.PDF
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
ELBD ARCHIVE EPA ROD-R06-87-016 Received from HQ AWBERC Library/Cincinnati,OH 10/04/2023
NTIS  PB88-106505 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 58 p.
Abstract The Bayou Sorrel site is located in Iberville Parish, Louisiana approximately 20 miles southwest of Baton Rouge, LA. Fifty acres of the 265-acre site have been used for waste disposal. The waste disposal areas consist of four landfills: a spent lime cell, a crushed drum cell, four covered liquid waste ponds, and a land farm. The remaining acres are covered by dense brush and trees. The entire site has a marshy, bayou-type environment and is prone to flooding and poor drainage. Early in 1977, the Environmental Purification Advancement Corporation (EPAC) began operating the Bayou Sorrel site. A sister firm, Clean Land Air Water, Inc. (CLAW) operated an injection well approximately six miles south of the site. EPAC operations included landfarming, open liquid impoundments, drum burial and landfilling of chemically fixated wastes. The fixation process is unknown but may have included lime, cement, and native soils. EPAC and CLAW were two separate operations, however, it was suggested that wastes from the injection well were diverted to EPAC when process problems at the well caused a bottleneck. In the summer of 1978, a truck driver died at the site.
Notes "11/14/86." "PB88-106505." "EPA/ROD/R06-87/016." "Office of Emergency and Remedial Response."
Place Published Washington, D.C. Springfield, VA
Corporate Au Added Ent United States. Environmental Protection Agency. Office of Emergency and Remedial Response.
PUB Date Free Form 1986
NTIS Prices PC A04/MF A01
BIB Level m
Cataloging Source OCLC/T
OCLC Time Stamp 20091021144644
Language eng
Origin OCLC
Type MERGE
OCLC Rec Leader 01085cam 2200277Ka 45020