Reclamation of Contaminated Land

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Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-06-07
Publisher(s): WILEY
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Summary

Land contamination is of global concern with many of the world's industries potentially harming the environment and human health. Along with rapidly changing policy and technological developments, this is an interdisciplinary area in which successful contaminated land management depends on the expertise of and interaction between a number of scientific and engineering disciplines. Reclamation of Contaminated Land takes into account the different groups involved in contaminated land management and offers a flexible learning approach based on practical experience and research. It presents an overview of the general skills and knowledge required, encompassing both general management and regulatory practice and specific land contamination issues. Divided into two parts, Part I discusses site characterisation and the design of site investigations, and the central role of conceptual models and risk assessment in decision making. Part II discusses how risks from contaminated land are managed and the role of different remediation approaches to achieving this. This book is of great value for 2nd/3rd/4th year undergraduates and MSc students in Environmental Science, Environmental Technology, Environmental Management, Geography, Geology, Estate and Land Management. It is also key reading for undergraduates and MSc students in Chemical Engineering, Civil & Environmental Engineering and Environmental Chemistry, as well as professional planners and developers, and local authorities.

Author Biography

Dr Nathanail combines a full academic research and teaching workload with a busy consultancy that ensures he is up to speed with both recent developments and current practice in the field of contaminated land management.? His research interests include the development of novel methods of site characterisation and risk assessment and in the innovative application of such methods on real sites.
He has contributed to many technical guidance documents published by the Environment Agency of England and Wales, Scottish Executive, CIRIA and SNIFFER and is the author of over 50 technical papers and books. He is a co author of the Contaminated Land Ready Reference - a key compilation of technical guidance for practitioners. He runs the EPSRC IGDS MSc in Contaminated Land Management at the University of Nottingham, is a member of the FIRST Faraday steering committee and runs a research group specialising in contaminated land and brownfield regeneration issues, and a co-editor of a forthcoming series of position papers on contaminated land management to be published by Thomas Telford.

Paul Bardos is managing director of r3 Environmental Technology Ltd. r3 offers a range of research, management and consultancy services in contaminated land and waste management.?He is also special Professor in Environmental Engineering at the University of Nottingham where he co-ordinates and lectures for the remediation modules for their MSc in Contaminated Land Management.
He has contributed to many technical guidance documents published by the Environment Agency of England and Wales, DEFRA (and its precursors), US EPA, NATO, CIRIA, NICOLE, Umweltbundesamt (Austria), EC and CIWM amongst others. He is the author of 150 technical papers and books. He is a co author of the Contaminated Land Ready Reference - a key compilation of technical guidance for practitioners and a co-editor of a forthcoming series of position papers on contaminated land management to be published by Thomas Telford.?r3 is a member of the FIRST Faraday steering committee and runs a research group specialising in contaminated land and brownfield regeneration issues.

Table of Contents

Preface ix
Acknowledgement xi
International policy
1(7)
References
7(1)
UK policy
8(8)
Case studies
9(1)
Part IIA of the Environmental Protection Act 1990
10(1)
The source--pathway--receptor pollutant linkage concept
11(2)
Town and Country Planning Act
13(1)
References
14(2)
Chemistry for contaminated land
16(18)
The periodic table
16(2)
Chemical names
18(2)
Chemical reactions
20(2)
The transition metals
22(1)
Organic chemistry
23(7)
Aromatic carbon chemistry
30(2)
Polyaromatic hydrocarbons
32(1)
References
33(1)
Geology for contaminated land
34(15)
Soils
34(6)
Outline of the environmental geology of Britain
40(7)
Geological and hydrogeological information required in a phase 1 risk assessment report
47(1)
References
48(1)
Site characterisation and the conceptual model
49(47)
The conceptual model
49(7)
Design of a site investigation
56(26)
Analytical strategy
82(7)
Reporting
89(2)
Presenting results
91(1)
Land condition record
91(1)
The brief -- procuring site investigation services
92(1)
References
93(3)
Risk-based approach to contaminated land management
96(13)
Tiered approach to risk assessment
97(1)
Significant pollutant linkages
97(1)
Link to conceptual model
98(1)
Determining if the definition of contaminated land has been met
99(5)
Using a risk assessment tool
104(1)
Reporting the risk assessment tool output
105(2)
References
107(2)
Risk management
109(16)
Risk-based land management
111(2)
Limitations of the risk management approach
113(1)
Applying risk management to remediation
114(6)
Risk management and site management
120(3)
Outcome of remediation
123(1)
Further reading
124(1)
Remediation approaches
125(25)
Excavation
126(4)
Containment
130(11)
Treatment-based remediation
141(3)
Dealing with existing buildings
144(3)
Further reading
147(3)
Treatment techniques
150(57)
Techniques exploiting physical processes
150(13)
Biological approaches
163(14)
Monitored natural attenuation
177(3)
Techniques exploiting chemical processes
180(5)
Permeable reactive barriers
185(3)
Techniques exploiting solidification/stabilisation processes
188(6)
Thermal processes
194(4)
Dealing with soil gas problems
198(3)
Dealing with asbestos
201(1)
Radionuclides
202(1)
Sites containing munitions and explosives
202(1)
Further reading
203(4)
Remediation application
207(19)
Selection of remedial approaches
207(11)
Implementation
218(6)
Further reading
224(2)
Index 226

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