finalprogram battelle sediments conf 2011
TRANSCRIPT
Final Program
Presented by
Sponsors
www.battelle.org/sedimentscon
February 7-10, 2011 • Sheraton Hotel • New Orleans, Louisiana
Sixth international ConferenCe on remediation oF Contaminated SedimentS
Employing approximately 52,000 employees around the world, AECOM is a global provider of professional technical and management support services to a broad range of markets, including transportation, facilities, environmental, energy, water, and government. AECOM scientists apply our services on a wide variety of development, cleanup, and restoration projects, including some of the nation’s most complex sediment management problems. Our expertise includes sediment site assessment under a variety of regulatory programs, strategic Superfund consulting, dredging and dredged material disposal programs, restoration of water bodies and watersheds, shoreline and site development, natural resource damage assessment support, risk analysis, and design and implementation of complex remediation projects. AECOM has been a key participant in several technical consortia involving private industry, utility companies, and government organizations. We are industry leaders in developing and evaluating the use of chemical measures of contaminant bioavailability for sediment management. www.aecom.com
BioGenesis Enterprises, Inc., is a technology development firm incorporated in Illinois in 1989. The company develops, manufactures, and provides products and services for environmental cleaning and remediation. Using the patented BioGenesisSM Sediment Washing Process, BioGenesis has solved the problem of cleaning pollutants, including heavy metals and chlorinated organic contaminants, from fine sediments. The process has been demonstrated in programs sponsored by Environment Canada, the U.S. EPA Region 2, the New Jersey Department of Transportation, and the Port Authority of Venice, Italy. The BioGenesisSM Sediment Washing Process is capable of decontaminating more than 40 cubic yards per hour continuously. BioGenesis’ competitive advantages over other remediation technologies include cost, range of treatable contaminants, and nontoxic and environmentally benign cleaning solutions. Using innovative processes and formulations, BioGenesis offers superior and compliant soil and sediment remediation at the lowest competitive cost. www.biogenesis.com
Cable Arm, Inc., manufactures clamshell buckets designed specifically for environmental dredging, as well as buckets for use in naviga-tional dredging and bulk-material handling. The Cable Arm® Environmental Clamshell provides a low center of mass in the bucket containment area and is designed to minimize removal of uncontaminated material from hard bottoms, reducing cleanup costs. The unique design utilizes a patented LEVEL-CUT®, large-footprint shell with OVERLAPPING SIDE PLATES™ and rubber flaps. These features reduce loss and windrowing of sediment material and limit water dilution and turbidity during bucket ascent. Cable Arm’s ClamVision® software is a fully integrated dredge-positioning system that displays a 3-D, color-coded surface derived from existing hydrographic survey data. It provides crane operators and off-site monitors a view of dredging activities, the position of the bucket, and the barge. The addition of acoustics
to INSTANT VERIFICATION™ provides real-time bottom conditions. When used together with approved environmental dredging procedures, the Cable Arm Environmental Clamshell and ClamVision Software provide safe, precise, and complete removal of contaminated sediment by minimizing the resuspension of contaminants, minimizing the amount of water removed, and reducing overdredging. www.cablearm.com
CETCO® is known for its world-class research and development throughout the environmental remediation industry. This is demonstrated through our unique and innovative product solutions. Our sediment treatment products have opened up new opportunities for engineers and have consequentially changed the way they think about sediment remediation projects. Reactive Core Mat® has enabled engineers to design subaqueous caps that are more effective. Our gas vapor mitigation systems reduce gas vapor intrusion and provide a high level of protection for structures built on former Brownfields and industrial sites, allowing for the beneficial reuse of formerly unusable land. Whether treating contaminated sediments, preventing gas vapor migration, or solidifying contaminated soil, CETCO makes use of its world class research and development group to provide support for these applications and to create new solutions for tough environmental remediation challenges worldwide. www.cetco.com/RTG
CDM is a full-service consulting, engineering, construction, and operations firm that delivers sustainable solutions to help clients solve environmental problems using innovative ideas and technology. With more than 4,000 staff in 100+ offices worldwide, our multidisciplinary staff of scientists, planners, and engineers are proven in key disciplines related to contaminated sediment, soil, and groundwater remediation, permitting and planning, environmental fate and exposure modeling, ecological and human-health risk assessment, environmental biology and restoration, and cutting-edge data collection and analysis techniques. In particular, CDM is an industry leader in evaluation, selection, and implementation of innovative remediation technologies. We have a proven history in developing and implementing effective strategies that not only gain streamlined regulatory consensus and approval but also fulfill the specific needs of our clients. www.cdm.com
CH2M HILL provides comprehensive, award-winning sediment management and remediation services that result in sound sediment solutions. As an employee-owned, $6.4 billion planning, engineering, construction, and operations firm providing integrated services in environment, water, energy, transportation, and industrial facilities, we can tailor a strategic approach to your unique situation. Our experienced, multidisciplinary teams deliver the full spectrum of services, from front-end strategic planning, conceptual model development, investigation, and risk assessment through feasibility analysis, design, construction management, habitat restoration, and long-term monitoring and operations. Augmenting our teams as needed, we have specialists in community involvement, decision science, Web-based communications, sustainability, and much more. Our current
sediments portfolio includes federal, municipal, and industrial projects at more than 200 sites worldwide, both large and small. With 23,500 employees in more than 176 program offices worldwide, CH2M HILL uses innovative, technology-driven solutions to deliver cost-effective solutions locally to our clients. A recent high-profile example is our innovative use of an air-bubble curtain in place of a traditional silt curtain to control turbidity during dredging on a Wisconsin project. www.ch2m.com
ENVIRON’s expertise in ecological risk assessment, contaminated sediment management, environmental restoration, and natural resource damage assessment has resulted in an outstanding reputation with clients, regulators, and the scientific community worldwide. Our staff of ecologists, engineers, risk assessors, and remediation specialists provides focused, cost-effective investigation, assessment, and remediation services to assist clients in field investigations, wildlife surveys, ecotoxicology studies, ecological and human-health risk assessments, remediation alternatives analysis, and remedial technology implementation. An international consultancy, ENVIRON has offices around the world to help clients resolve their most demanding environmental and human-health issues. We combine resources across geographic boundaries and technical and scientific disciplines to create the best, most responsive team—whether responding to existing challenges, evaluating opportunities to improve performance, or seeking to reduce future liabilities. Clients around the world benefit from our unique ability to bring clarity to issues at the intersection of science, business, and policy. www.environcorp.com
The Louis Berger Group, Inc., (Berger) provides comprehensive services in environmental sciences, natural resource restoration, solid/hazardous-waste management, water/wastewater, archaeology, waterfront/ports and other A/E planning, design, and construction-phase services. Berger possesses one of the nation’s strongest integrated teams for providing contaminated sediments science, engineering, and restoration services. In developing contaminated sediment restoration plans, we maintain three key values: the ecosystem’s natural potential, achievable goals, and sustainability. We use state-of-the-art forensic methods to build a sound understanding of each system and maximize benefit of the overall approach, while also paying special attention to the concerns of local communities and stakeholders to ensure long-term protection of restored areas. Berger’s experts have been entrusted with key roles on some of the highest-profile sediment sites, such as the Hudson, Passaic, and Fox Rivers. Their interpretations of highly complex systems have been tested by both independent peer reviewers and stakeholders. www.louisberger.com
The Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP) and the Environmental Security Technology Certification Program (ESTCP) are the Department of Defense’s environmental research programs, harnessing the latest science and technology to improve DoD’s environmental
performance, reduce costs, and enhance and sustain mission capabilities. SERDP and ESTCP respond to environmental technology requirements common to all of the military Services, complementing the Services’ research programs. SERDP and ESTCP promote partnerships and collaboration among academia, industry, the military Services, and other Federal agencies. Both manage investments in five program areas, each of which focuses on a specific component of DoD’s environmental responsibilities—Energy and Water, Environmental Restoration, Munitions Response, Resource Conservation and Climate Change, and Weapons Systems and Platforms. Achieving sustainable solutions in all five areas is essential to improve environmental performance, reduce costs, and enhance mission capabilities. They are independent programs managed from a joint office to coordinate the full spectrum of efforts, from basic and applied research to field demonstration and validation. SERDP is DoD’s environmental science and technology program, planned and executed in partnership with DOE and EPA, with participation by numerous other federal and non-federal organizations. The Program focuses on cross-service requirements and pursues solutions to the Department’s environmental challenges while enhancing and sustaining military readiness. ESTCP is DoD’s environmental technology demonstration and validation program. The Program’s goal is to identify and demonstrate the most promising innovative and cost-effective technologies and methods that address DoD’s high-priority environmental requirements. Projects conduct formal demonstrations at DoD facilities and sites in operational settings to document and validate improved performance and cost savings. Demonstration results are subject to rigorous technical reviews to ensure that the conclusions are accurate and well supported by data. www.serdp-estcp.org
Sevenson Environmental Services, Inc. is one of the only purely environmental remediation firms that has successfully transitioned from land-based remedial action projects into contaminated sediments remediation. This transition began in 1993, when Sevenson was awarded and successfully completed the first large-scale Superfund site sediment remediation project at the Marathon Battery Site, Cold Springs, New York. Since then, Sevenson has gained significant insight and operational knowledge in environmental dredging, dewatering and water treatment. Sevenson continues to work on some of the nation’s most visible contaminated sediment sites. Sevenson owns and operates a full complement of horizontal auger and cutterhead dredges, specialized pumping systems, piping, tanks, filter presses, centrifuges, and related water and filtrate treatment equipment to support its sediment dredging and dewatering projects. Today Sevenson partners with clients and consulting engineers to address difficult process design and field implementation issues at sediment sites throughout the United States. These partnerships have been tested and strengthened through the management, execution, and safe completion of our projects. www.sevenson.com
SPonSorSThe following organizations active in sediment investigation and remediation have contributed financial support. The descriptions they provided appear below.
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Sixth international ConFerenCe on remediation oF Contaminated SedimentS
Welcome to the Sixth International Conference on Remediation of Contaminated Sediments. We thank you for your attendance and believe you will find the program and the networking opportunities well worth your investment in coming to New Orleans. The Conference program endeavors to address the challenges of combining research, characterization and assessment methodologies, innovative engineering, and sound management practices to address the concerns of all contaminated sediment site stakeholders.
On Monday, seven short courses will be conducted, covering a range of important topics related to contaminated sediment site management. The exhibit area will open at 4:30 p.m., and a welcome reception will be served. The 58 exhibit booths are provided by organizations engaged in sediment remediation or related activities. The Plenary Session will begin at 6:30 p.m. We are honored to have Adm. Thad Allen, U.S. Coast Guard (Retired), as our featured speaker in the Plenary Session. He will give the address “Managing the Response to the Deepwater Horizon Incident in the Gulf of Mexico.”
The technical program will begin at 7:45 a.m. on Tuesday with the panel discussion “Integrating Stakeholder Perspectives,” led by Steven C. Nadeau, Coordinating Director of the Sediment Management Work Group (SMWG). Five concurrent technical tracks will begin after the panel and continue through Thursday; approximately 450 platform and poster presentations will be given in 48 specialized platform sessions and two poster sessions. Receptions and other meals offered throughout the Conference will afford attendees numerous opportunities to recharge and meet informally with one another.
All events of the Conference will be held at the Sheraton New Orleans Hotel, situated at the gateway to the world-famous French Quarter. Many renowned restaurants, historic buildings, jazz clubs, and unique shops lie within easy walking distance of the hotel. We hope you will take some time to enjoy the cuisine, architecture, music, and atmosphere of the Quarter and the other unique areas of the City that have made New Orleans a popular destination for centuries.
We deeply appreciate the efforts of the many people and organizations who helped plan this Conference. The Technical Steering Committee members, session chairs, and panel organizers provided substantial assistance in developing the technical program. The platform, panel, and poster presenters and the short course instructors devoted substantial effort to preparing their respective materials. Ten Conference sponsors—government and private organizations engaged in conducting research and providing services related to contaminated sediment assessment, remediation, and management—provided financial contributions.
Eric A. Foote and Andrew K. Bullard Conference Chairs
The Conference is organized and presented by Battelle.
Battelle offers specialized environmental exper tise to government and industrial clients throughout the U.S. and abroad. Combining science-based approaches with creative man-agement strategies, Battelle works with clients
to develop technically sound and cost-effective solutions for the challenges inherent in managing contaminated sediment sites. Battelle’s expertise includes the development and deployment of innovative characterization tools and methods, advanced analytical laboratory and environmental forensics capabili-ties, advanced geostatistical and geospatial data assessment, comprehensive human health and ecological risk assessment capabilities, focused sustainability evaluation strategies, and cradle-to-grave site remediation decision-making and implementation. Battelle is the world’s largest independent research and devel-opment organization, providing innovative solutions to the world’s most pressing needs through its four global businesses: Energy, Environment, and Materials Services; Laboratory Management; National Security; and Health and Life Sciences. Battelle advances scientific discovery and application, conducting $6.5 billion in global R&D annually through contract research, laboratory man-agement, and technology com mercialization. Battelle oversees 22,000 employ-ees in more than 130 cities worldwide, including seven national laboratories that Battelle manages or co-manages for the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and one international energy research laboratory. Battelle also is one of the nation’s leading charitable trusts focusing on societal and economic impact and actively supporting and promoting science and math education.
ContentsConference Floor Plan ......................................2
Exhibitors & Exhibit Floor Plan ..........................3
General Information .......................................4-5
Plenary Session ................................................5
Technical Sessions and Chairs …......................6
Conference Schedule Overview.........................7
Tuesday Platform Schedule...........................8-11
Tuesday Posters (Group 1).........................12-15
Wednesday Platform Schedule ..................16-19
Wednesday Posters (Group 2)....................20-23
Thursday Platform Schedule ......................24-27
Cover photos: Carriage in Front of Royal Café–Photographer: Carl Purcell; Audubon Park Fountain–Photographer: Richard Nowitz; St. Louis Cathedral–Photographer: Carl Purcell; Jazz Trumpeter & St. Charles Avenue Streetcar–Photographer: Jack Edward. All photos courtesy of New Orleans CVB.
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ConFerenCe Floor Plan
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D Sessions
Plenary Session (Mon Evening)Panel Discussion (Tue Morning)
Lunch (Tue/Wed/Thu)
B Sessions
E Sessions
A Sessions
Hotel Service Area
Platform SpeakerPrep Room
Napoleon Ballroom
Exhibit HallFood/Beverage Area
PostersInternet Café
ConferenceRegistration
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CH2M HILL
Louis Berger
SERDP ESTCP
Cable Arm
Battelle CETCO Sevenson
ENVIRON
BioGenesis CDM
AECOM
Napoleon Ballroom
POSTERS
POSTERS
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Exhibit HoursMon 4:30–6:30 p.m.Tue 7:00 a.m.–7:15 p.m.Wed 7:00 a.m.–7:15 p.m.Thu 7:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.
HOTEL SERVICE AREA
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exhibitorS and exhibit Floor Plan
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216 AECOM
320 ALLU Group
409 APTwater, Inc.
410 Aqua Survey, Inc.
318 AquaBlok, Ltd.
122 ARCADIS
206 Athena Technologies, Inc.
116 Battelle
310 BioGenesis Enterprises
111 Cable Arm Clamshell
316 CDM
118 CETCO
210 CH2M HILL
218 Columbia Analytical Services
415 D.A. Collins Environmental Services
106 DEL Tank & Filtration Systems
420 Dexsil Corporation
109 Directional Technologies Inc.
404 Durocher Marine
319 EarthSoft
204 Ecology and Environment
220 Envirocon, Inc.
215 ENVIRON International Corporation
407 EQ-The Environmental Quality Company
219 Foth Infrastructure & Environment
402 FRx, Inc.
315 Geosyntec Consultants
322 HUESKER
105 InnerSpace Services, Inc./ SpinPro, Inc.
208 In-Situ Inc.
222 Integral Consulting, Inc.
416 ISOTEC
309 J. F. Brennan Co., Inc.
209 The Louis Berger Group
221 MACTEC Engineering & Consulting
203 Magnus Pacific Corporation
419 Major Drilling Environmental
107 Marine Tech LLC
108 Maxxam Analytics
317 Mobile Dredging & Pumping Company
121 Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC)
421 Ocean Surveys, Inc.
217 PACE Analytical Services, Inc.
418 PacTec, Inc.
400 Parsons
205 RMT, Inc.
321 Rusmar Incorporated- Foam Technology
408 SDIX
303 Sequoia Scientific, Inc.
110 SERDP & ESTCP Program Office
120 Sevenson Environmental Services, Inc.
305 SGS Dioxin Group
104 Solinst Canada Ltd.
308 TenCate Geotubes
417 Terra Contracting
207 TestAmerica
307 Tetra Tech
123 Vista GeoScience
BOOTH ORGANIZATION BOOTH ORGANIZATION BOOTH ORGANIZATION
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loCationAll Conference events will be held at the Sheraton New Orleans Hotel. Floor plans on pages 2 and 3 provide the locations of each day’s events.
mondayShort courses will be conducted Monday morning and afternoon. The Conference Registration Desk will be open 2:00–8:30 p.m. and will remain open during all Conference activities. Exhibits, the Group 1 Poster Display, and the Welcome Reception will open at 4:30 p.m. in the Napoleon Ballroom (third floor). The Plenary Session will begin at 6:30 in the Grand Ballroom (fifth floor), and featured speaker Adm. Thad Allen, U.S.C.G. (retired) will present the keynote address, “Managing the Response to the Deepwater Horizon Incident in the Gulf of Mexico.”
teChniCal Program overviewThe panel “Integrating Stakeholder Perspectives” will begin at 7:45 a.m. on Tuesday. The discussion will focus on effective communication with stakeholders and means of integrating stakeholder perspectives on issues posed by complex contaminated sediment sites.
Platform sessions will begin after the panel on Tuesday and will be conducted in the following concurrent, thematic tracks through Thursday.A. Sediment Processes and ModelingB. Characterization, Assessment, and MonitoringC. Sediment Remediation and Remediation ProcessesD. Remedy Performance and ChallengesE. Management and Policy
See page 7 for an overview of the sessions in each track. The titles and presentation times for all platform presentations are listed in the grid that begins on page 8. Revisions that become necessary after January 17 will be marked on the overview sheets posted in the registration area and on the daily lists outside each breakout room. Each talk is to begin promptly at the time printed in the schedule, except as may be noted on the overview sheets and the daily lists. Talks are scheduled at 25-minute intervals, and the session chairs have been asked to adhere strictly to the schedule, making it possible for registrants to move between breakout rooms to hear the talks most pertinent to them. To minimize distraction to speakers and audience, we ask that such movement be confined to the short intervals between talks, when the room lights will be brightened for the question-and-answer period at the end of each presentation.
Posters will be displayed in two successive groups in the Exhibit Hall, Monday afternoon through Thursday. During light receptions Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, poster presenters will be at their posters to discuss their work. See the Conference Schedule on page 7 for a list of sessions included in each group; the titles, presenters, and display board numbers for Groups 1 and 2 are listed on pages 12–15 and 20–23, respectively.
Please do not take still photos or videos of any platform or poster presentation without securing the speaker’s permission and notifying the session chair beforehand.
Program CommitteeConference Chairs:Eric A. Foote and Andrew K. Bullard (Battelle)
Technical Steering Committee:Adam Ayers (General Electric Company)Deirdre Dahlen (Battelle)Bryon Griffith (U.S. EPA, Gulf of Mexico Program Office)Karl E. Gustavson (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research & Development Center)Jussi V. K. Kukkonen (University of Eastern Finland)Dwight E. Leisle (U.S. Navy, NAVFAC NW)Marc A. Mills (U.S. EPA, Office of Research & Development)Steven C. Nadeau, Coordinating Director, Sediment Management Work Group (Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP)Danny D. Reible (The University of Texas at Austin)Richard J. Wenning (ENVIRON)Patricia J. White (CH2M HILL)
Short CourSeSThe following short courses will be held Monday morning and afternoon. Check at the Conference Registration Desk at least one hour before the starting time to see if openings remain in any course.
Monday 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. v Evaluating Sediment Transport: Tools, Techniques, and Application to Site Managementv The Use of Spatially Explicit Methods in Site Investigations
Monday 8:00 a.m.–Noon v Building a Better Background Data Setv A Survey of the Sediment Evaluation Toolbox: The Use of Radionuclides and Chemical Markers in Understanding Sediment Contamination
Monday 1:00–5:00 p.m. v A Hands-On Introduction to Databases and Geographic Information Systems for Contaminated Sediment Remediation Projectsv Managing the 4 Rs of Environmental Dredgingv Geochemical Evaluations of Metals in Environmental Media: How to Distinguish Naturally Elevated Concentrations from Site-Related Contamination
mealS and reCePtionSContinental breakfast will be served 7:00–7:45 a.m. Tuesday and 7:00–8:00 a.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Exhibit Hall, where the morning and afternoon breaks and Monday–Wednesday evening receptions also will be served. Lunches will be provided Tuesday through Thursday on the fifth floor in the Grand Ballroom. These food functions are provided at no additional cost to program registrants and exhibit booth staff. Registrants may purchase guest meal tickets at the Conference Registration Desk; guest tickets will be priced equal to the cost incurred by the Conference for each meal.
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exhibitSExhibits are being displayed by organizations that conduct sediment-related activities or produce equipment used in such work. See page 3 for the names of the exhibiting organizations and where they are located in the Exhibit Hall.
literature tableSeveral publishers and other organizations have suppliedsample copies of their publications, which are displayed on the literature table.
internet aCCeSS/meeting SPaCeAn expanded work area is available to facilitate networking and business interactions in the Exhibit Hall. Several computers are provided in the Internet Café at no charge to registrants who wish to check e-mail during Conference hours Monday afternoon through Thursday. Additional complimentary Internet connections are available in the Laptop Lounge for use with participants’ laptops. Please be considerate when others are waiting.
The Sheraton provides free wireless Internet access to Hotel guests in the lobby and on the second floor. In addition, Conference participants who are staying in the Sheraton have complimentary wired and wireless access in their guest rooms.
A small meeting room also is available at no charge to participants; please check at the Conference Registration Desk for details.
meSSageS/emPloyment notiCeSA message board will be available near the Conference Registration Desk for the use of attendees wishing to contact one another. This board will be used also for telephone messages taken by the registration staff for attendees. Be sure to check this board frequently—we have no other means of contacting you to pass along telephone messages. Another board will be provided for participants to post employment-available/employment-wanted notices.
ConFerenCe ProCeedingSAll presentations given at the Conference will be represented on the proceedings CD. Each platform and poster presenter was invited to submit a short paper expanding upon his or her presentation. For presentations for which no paper was submitted, the one-page abstract used in the abstract CDs distributed at the Conference will be included in the proceedings. After the Conference, the papers, abstracts, and platform presentation files will be compiled, indexed, and published as a searchable CD, and copies will be mailed to all registrants who paid standard or student registration rates. Additional copies of the proceedings can be ordered from The Conference Group, Inc. (800-783-6338 or 614-488-2030; fax 614-488-5747; [email protected]); proceedings of previous Battelle-sponsored remediation conferences also may be available.
Plenary SeSSion6:30 p.m. Opening Remarks Conference Chairs Eric A. Foote and Andrew K. Bullard
6:45 p.m. Managing the Response to the Deepwater Horizon Incident in the Gulf of Mexico Admiral Thad Allen
8:00 p.m. Plenary Session Adjourns
Admiral Thad AllenU.S. Coast Guard (Retired)Managing the Response to the Deepwater Horizon Incident in the Gulf of Mexico
As the 23rd Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, Admiral Allen led a massive civil and military organization responsible for the mission-critical protection of U.S. maritime interests—from homeland security and drug interdiction to environmental and marine safety. During his four-decade career with the U.S. Coast Guard, he became a recognized authority on exercising leadership by aligning
complex public and private interests when people and livelihoods are at stake. He is widely respected for his straightforward, no-nonsense leadership, and Presidents have turned to him to lead the national response to some of the most trying global disasters of our time, from strengthening U.S. port security in the wake of 9/11 to leading the national response to both natural and man-made catastrophes, such as Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the Indian Ocean tsunami, the Haitian earthquake, and the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. He was the director of the transition of the Coast Guard from the Department of Transportation to the Department of Homeland Security and led a service-wide social media initiative at the Coast Guard to activate, mobilize, and create collaboration among members of a very large and exceptionally diverse organization having a multiple-mission portfolio around the world.
Admiral Allen was appointed by President Obama as the National Incident Commander for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in May 2010, immediately after the spill occurred. After retiring from the Coast Guard in June 2010, he continued to serve in this capacity as a civilian through September 30. Adm. Allen will apply his experience leading the Coast Guard and his leadership role in responding to the Deepwater Horizon spill and other catastrophes to help audiences understand the essential skills necessary for bringing people together around common goals and values even when the technical, social, and economic problems at hand seem insurmountable.
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PANEL DISCUSSIONIntegrating Stakeholder PerspectivesSteven C. Nadeau, Sediment Management Work Group (Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP)
TRACK A: SEDIMENT PROCESSES AND MODELING
A1. Sediment Transport: Fundamentals and Novel Techniques for Measuring and ModelingCraig A. Jones (Sea Engineering, Inc.)Kevin S. Black (Partrac, Ltd.)
A2. Sediment Transport: Applications, Model Validations, and Peer ReviewsC. Kirk Ziegler (Anchor QEA, LLC)Earl J. Hayter (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
A3. Groundwater/Porewater/Surface Water InteractionsAndrew C. Barton (Battelle)
A4. Bioavailability of ContaminantsDanny Reible (University of Texas)Upal Ghosh (University of Maryland Baltimore County)
A5. Geomorphology-Guided Sediment Characterization and RemediationTimothy J. Dekker (LimnoTech, Inc.)Alex Brunton (W.F. Baird and Associates)
A6. Contaminant Partitioning and Transport in SedimentsAndrea Leeson (SERDP/ESTCP)
A7. Decision Analysis Modeling and ToolsPaul Dragos (Battelle)
A8. Contaminant Fate and TransportKevin J. Farley (Manhattan College)Kevin T. Russell (Anchor QEA, LLC)
A9. Geospatial Delineation of Remediation FootprintJohn W. Kern (Kern Statistical Services, Inc.)John R. Wolfe (LimnoTech, Inc.)
TRACK B: CHARACTERIZATION, ASSESSMENT, AND MODELING
B1. Ecological and Human-Health Risk AssessmentBetsy Henry (Exponent, Inc.)Steven S. Brown (The Dow Chemical Company)
B2. Chemical/Toxicological/Biological Measurements and CharacterizationJacob K. Stanley (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)Shane D. McDonald (The Louis Berger Group, Inc.)
B3. Contaminant ForensicsGregory Durell (Battelle)Allen D. Uhler (NewFields - Environmental Forensics Practice, LLC)
B4. Applications of Innovative Characterization and AssessmentDeirdre Dahlen (Battelle)Dwight E. Leisle (U.S. Navy)
B5. Assessment of Urban WaterwaysEric A. Stern (ERM)Stefano Della Sala (VERITAS SpA)
B6. Passive SamplersAmy M.P. Oen (Norwegian Geotechnical Institute)
B7. Tools for Innovative Field Sampling and In Situ MeasurementsD. Bart Chadwick (U.S. Navy)John L. Hardin (Battelle)
B8. Noncontaminant StressorsJack Q. Word (NewFields Northwest, LLC)Jussi V.K. Kukkonen (University of Eastern Finland)
B9. Contaminant Source ID and ControlJulia S. Spahn (CH2M HILL)Jeffrey H. Stern (King County Department of Natural Resources)
TRACK C: SEDIMENT REMEDIATION AND REMEDIATION PROCESSES
C1. Monitored Natural Recovery (MNR) and Enhanced MNRAnne G. Fitzpatrick (AECOM)
C2. In Situ TreatmentAnna Sophia Knox (Savannah River National Laboratory)Victoria J. Kirtay (U.S. Navy)
C3. Ex Situ TreatmentJohn L. Childs (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
C4. Cap DesignMichael J. Costello (Barr Engineering Co.)Victor S. Magar (ENVIRON)
C5. Capping: Bench-Scale StudiesRichard Beach (MACTEC Engineering & Consulting, Inc.)Kristine Carbonneau (AECOM)
C6. Capping: Pilot StudiesSusan Hill (Geosyntec Consultants)Stephen Warren (Parsons)
C7. Environmental Dredging: Experience and DesignMichael D. Crystal (Sevenson Environmental Services, Inc.)Edward A. Garvey (The Louis Berger Group, Inc.)
C8. Dredge Material DewateringRam Mohan (Anchor QEA, LLC)
C9. Dredge Material Disposal and ContainmentRuth Owens (U.S. Navy)Souhail R. Al-Abed (U.S. EPA)
C10. Beneficial Use of Contaminated SedimentsTrudy J. Estes (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
TRACK D: REMEDY PERFORMANCE AND CHALLENGES
D1. Successfully Combining RemediesEspen Eek (Norwegian Geotechnical Institute)James J. Hahnenberg (U.S. EPA)
D2. Monitoring Effects during Remedy ImplementationMarc S. Greenberg (U.S. EPA)Adam Ayers (General Electric Company)
D3. Using Biological Monitoring to Assess Remedy EffectivenessJames M. Lazorchak (U.S. EPA)Lawrence P. Burkhard (U.S. EPA)
D4. Habitat and Wetlands Mitigation and RestorationJohn P. Lortie (Stantec)Schaun M. Smith (Chevron Energy Technology Company)
D5. Shoreline Remediation ChallengesBryan M. Dick (AECOM)Todd W. King (CDM)
D6. Challenges of Ports and Harbors ManagementDouglas Hotchkiss (Port of Seattle)Amy M.P. Oen (Norwegian Geotechnical Institute)
D7. Resuspension and ResidualsClayton R. Patmont (Anchor QEA, LLC)Marc A. Mills (U.S. EPA)
D8. Hudson River Remediation ProgramDavid King (U.S. EPA)John G. Haggard (General Electric Company)
D9. Great Lakes Legacy Act and Great Lakes Restoration InitiativeMarc L. Tuchman (U.S. EPA)John Morris (Honeywell International, Inc.)
D10. Case Studies: Evaluations of Remedial EffectivenessPatricia J. White (CH2M HILL)Karl Gustavson (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
TRACK E: MANAGEMENT AND POLICYE1. Site Management Decision StrategiesRichard H. Weber (Natural Resource Technology, Inc.)Sara Ceccon (ENVIRON)
E2. Ecosystem and Watershed Assessment and ManagementSabine E. Apitz (SEA Environmental Decisions, Ltd.)
E3. Sustainable Sediment ManagementDavid W. Moore (Weston Solutions, Inc.)Todd S. Bridges (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
E4. Sediment Quality GuidelinesRichard J. Wenning (ENVIRON)Roger L. Olsen (CDM)
E5. Effective Communication and Facilitation with StakeholdersSteven C. Nadeau (Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP)Kathryn R. Huibregtse (ENVIRON)
E6. Risk-Based Management and Cleanup DecisionsStephen Ells (U.S. EPA)Tim Thompson (Science and Engineering for the Environment, LLC)
E7. Sediment TMDLsRobert K. Johnston (U.S. Navy)
E8. Defining Background and Establishing Remediation GoalsWilliam R. Gala (Chevron Energy Technology Company)Norman Richardson (Battelle)
E9. Frameworks for Integrating Restoration StrategiesJoseph P. Nicolette (ENVIRON)Kenneth E. Kolm (Integral Consulting Inc.)
E10. Adaptive ManagementLawrence J. McShea (ALCOA, Inc.)
Co
nFer
enC
e SCh
edu
le ov
erv
iew
7
ConFerenCe SChedule overview
monday, feBRuaRy 7, 2011
tueSday, feBRuaRy 8, 2011
WedneSday, feBRuaRy 9, 2011
tHuRSday, feBRuaRy 10, 2011
Short Courses 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.v Evaluating Sediment Transportv The Use of Spatially Explicit Methods in Site Investigations
8:00 a.m.–Noonv Building a Better Background Data Setv The Use of Radionuclides and Chemical Markers
1:00–5:00 p.m.v Hands-On Introduction to Databases and GISv Managing the 4 Rs of Environmental Dredgingv Geochemical Evaluations of Metals in Environmental Media
Short Course Registration 7:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
Conference Registration 2:00–8:00 p.m.
Exhibits/Welcome Reception/Group 1 Poster Display 4:30–6:30 p.m.
Plenary Session 6:30–8:00 p.m. Adm. Thad Allen, U.S.Coast Guard (Retired) “Managing the Response to the Deepwater Horizon Incident in the Gulf of Mexico”
Continental Breakfast 7:00–7:45 a.m. • Exhibits and Group 1 Poster Display 7:00 a.m.–7:15 p.m.
Platform Sessions 10:05 a.m.–5:35 p.m.; lunch and breaks scheduled in each track
Panel Discussion 7:45–9:30 a.m. “Integrating Stakeholder Perspectives”
Poster Sessions: Group 1 Presentations & Reception 5:45–7:15 p.m.
Poster Sessions: Group 2 Presentations & Reception 5:45–7:15 p.m.
Platform Sessions 8:00 a.m.–5:35 p.m.; lunch and breaks scheduled in each track
Platform Sessions 8:00 a.m.–5:35 p.m.; lunch and breaks scheduled in each track
Track AA1. Sediment Transport:
Fundamentals and Novel Techniques for Measur ing and Modeling
A2. Sediment Transport: Applications, Model Validations, and Peer Reviews
Track BB1. Ecological and Human-Health
Risk AssessmentB2. Chemical/Toxicological/
Biological Measurements and Characterization
B3. Contaminant Forensics
Track CC1. Monitored Natural Recovery
(MNR) and Enhanced MNRC2. In Situ TreatmentC3. Ex Situ Treatment
Track DD1. Successfully Combining
RemediesD2. Monitoring Effects during
Remedy ImplementationD3. Using Biological Monitoring
to Assess Remedy Effectiveness
Track EE1. Site Management Decision
StrategiesE2. Ecosystem and Watershed
Assessment and ManagementE3. Sustainable Sediment
Management
Continental Breakfast 7:00–8:00 a.m. • Exhibits and Group 2 Poster Display 7:00 a.m.–7:15 p.m.
Track AA3. Groundwater/Porewater/
Surface Water InteractionsA4. Bioavailability of
ContaminantsA5. Geomorphology-Guided
Sediment Characterization and Remediation
Track BB4. Applications of Innovative
Characterization and Assessment
B5. Assessment of Urban Waterways
B6. Passive Samplers
Track CC4. Cap DesignC5. Capping: Bench-Scale StudiesC6. Capping: Pilot Studies
Track DD4. Habitat and Wetlands
Mitigation and RestorationD5. Shoreline Remediation
ChallengesD6. Challenges of Ports and
Harbors ManagementD7. Resuspension and Residuals
Track EE4. Sediment Quality GuidelinesE5. Effective Communication and
Facilitation with StakeholdersE6. Risk-Based Management and
Cleanup Decisions
Continental Breakfast 7:00–8:00 a.m. • Exhibits 7:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. • Group 2 Poster Display 7:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.
Track AA6. Contaminant Partitioning and
Transport in SedimentsA7. Decision Analysis Modeling
and ToolsA8. Contaminant Fate and
TransportA9. Geospatial Delineation of
Remediation Footprint
Track BB7. Tools for Innovative Field
Sampling and In Situ Measurements
B8. Noncontaminant StressorsB9. Contaminant Source ID and
Control
Track CC7. Environmental Dredging:
Experience and DesignC8. Dredge Material DewateringC9. Dredge Material Disposal and
ContainmentC10. Beneficial Use of
Contaminated Sediments
Track DD8. Hudson River Remediation
ProgramD9. Great Lakes Legacy Act and
Great Lakes Restoration Initiative
D10. Case Studies: Evaluations of Remedial Effectiveness
Track EE7. Sediment TMDLsE8. Defining Background and
Establishing Remediation Goals
E9. Frameworks for Integrating Restoration Strategies
E10. Adaptive Management
Sessions included in Poster Group 2: A6–A9, B6–B9, C4–C10, D6–D10, E6–E10
Sessions included in Poster Group 1: A1–A5, B1–B5, C1–C3, D1–D5, E1–E5
8
tueSday morning PlatForm SeSSionSt
ueS
da
y
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
10:0
5In
tegr
atin
g Sc
ienc
e in
to a
Tie
red
Reg
ulat
ory
Fram
ewor
k at
PAH
-Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent S
ites.
S.
C. G
eige
r, D
.V. N
akle
s,
E.F.
Neu
haus
er, S
.B. H
awth
orne
, N
.A. A
zzol
ina,
and
J.A
. Ble
iler.
Step
hen
C. G
eige
r (AE
COM
/USA
)
A Co
meb
ack
Stor
y: R
esto
ring
To
wn
Bran
ch C
reek
in R
usse
llvill
e,
Kent
ucky
. D. W
eeks
, J.P
. Doo
dy, a
nd
A. E
spos
ito.
Dou
g W
eeks
(AR
CAD
IS U
.S.,
Inc.
/U
SA)
The
Dra
mm
ensf
jord
, Nor
way
: A
Case
Stu
dy in
Mon
itore
d N
atur
al
Rec
over
y (M
NR
) as
Rem
edia
l So
lutio
n. A
. Pet
ters
en, E
. Eek
, A.
Bje
llvag
Bjo
rnst
ad, T
. Mos
kela
nd,
and
A. N
ybak
k.Ar
ne P
ette
rsen
(Nor
weg
ian
Geo
tech
nica
l Ins
titut
e/N
orw
ay)
Envi
ronm
enta
l Mon
itori
ng a
nd
Ecol
ogic
al R
isk
Asse
ssm
ent–
The
TVA
King
ston
Ash
Rec
over
y Pr
ojec
t.
C. Z
elle
r.Cr
aig
Zelle
r (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Appl
icat
ion
of th
e Bu
ffer M
odel
for
Pred
ictin
g Co
hesi
ve S
edim
ent F
ate.
L.
Sitt
oni,
T. v
an K
esse
l,
H. W
inte
rwer
p, a
nd B
. van
Mar
en.
Luca
Sitt
oni (
Del
tare
s/Th
e N
ethe
rland
s)
Ove
rvie
w: T
his
pane
l of n
atio
nal e
xper
ts w
ill
disc
uss
the
key
cons
ider
atio
ns fo
r co
mm
unic
atin
g ef
fect
ivel
y w
ith s
take
hold
ers
and
inte
grat
ing
thei
r pe
rspe
ctiv
es o
n th
e is
sues
pos
ed b
y a
com
plex
co
ntam
inat
ed s
edim
ent s
ite. C
onta
min
ated
sed
i-m
ent s
ites
typi
cally
pre
sent
num
erou
s co
mpl
ex
tech
nica
l cha
lleng
es. T
heir
com
plex
ity is
com
poun
d-ed
by
regu
lato
ry a
nd p
olic
y ch
alle
nges
, whi
ch a
re
sign
ifica
nt in
par
t bec
ause
con
tam
inat
ed s
edim
ent
site
s im
pact
num
erou
s st
akeh
olde
rs, s
uch
as
recr
eatio
nal u
sers
of t
he w
ater
bod
y (e
.g.,
angl
ers,
w
ater
fow
l hun
ters
, boa
ters
); in
dust
rial u
sers
of t
he
wat
er b
ody
(e.g
., in
dust
rial d
isch
arge
rs a
nd w
ater
w
ithdr
awer
s); c
omm
erci
al u
sers
of t
he w
ater
bod
y (e
.g.,
ship
ping
com
pani
es, fi
sher
ies)
; sub
sist
ence
an
gler
s; r
esid
ents
alo
ng th
e w
ater
bod
y; m
unic
i-pa
litie
s an
d de
velo
pers
with
an
inte
rest
in w
ater
-fr
ont r
evita
lizat
ion
and
rede
velo
pmen
t; pu
blic
ly
owne
d tr
eatm
ent w
orks
; nat
ural
res
ourc
e tr
uste
es;
regu
lato
rs; a
nd p
oten
tially
res
pons
ible
par
ties.
Sta
keho
lder
s of
ten
hold
div
erse
opi
nion
s ab
out t
he
curr
ent a
nd fu
ture
use
s of
the
wat
er b
ody,
affe
ctin
g ho
w th
ey b
elie
ve c
onta
min
ated
sed
imen
t in
a pa
rtic
u-la
r w
ater
bod
y sh
ould
be
addr
esse
d. T
hey
also
tend
to
hav
e di
ffere
nt le
vels
of u
nder
stan
ding
of t
he
tech
nica
l cha
lleng
es p
rese
nted
by
com
plex
con
tam
-in
ated
sed
imen
t site
s, in
clud
ing
mis
perc
eptio
ns
abou
t the
pot
entia
l effe
ctiv
enes
s of
one
or
mor
e of
th
e lim
ited
rem
edia
l opt
ions
cur
rent
ly a
vaila
ble
to
addr
ess
cont
amin
ated
sed
imen
t. If
not a
ddre
ssed
up
fron
t or
early
in th
e lif
e of
a c
onta
min
ated
sed
i-m
ent s
ite, t
his
dive
rsity
of o
pini
on a
nd u
nder
stan
d-in
g ca
n pr
eclu
de m
eani
ngfu
l dia
logu
e am
ong
stak
ehol
ders
, cau
se p
olar
izat
ion
of v
iew
s, a
nd m
ake
inte
grat
ing
dive
rgen
t per
spec
tives
diffi
cult.
If c
om-
mun
icat
ion
is le
ft un
til a
pro
pose
d cl
eanu
p pl
an is
pr
esen
ted,
man
y st
akeh
olde
rs m
ay fe
el e
xclu
ded
from
the
proc
ess,
not
fully
und
erst
and
the
clea
nup
plan
, and
con
sequ
ently
voi
ce d
isag
reem
ent w
ith th
e pr
opos
ed c
lean
up p
lan,
whi
ch c
ould
slo
w p
rogr
ess
at a
site
.
PAN
EL
DIS
CU
SS
ION
: In
teg
rati
ng
Sta
keh
old
er P
ersp
ecti
ves
7:45
–9:3
0 a.m
. Gra
nd
Bal
lro
om
C
9:30
–10:
00 a
.m.
Ref
resh
men
t B
reak
– E
xhib
it H
all –
Nap
ole
on
Bal
lro
om
A1.
B1.
C1.
D1.
E1.
Mo
der
ato
r: S
teve
n C
. Nad
eau,
C
oord
inat
ing
Dire
ctor
, Sed
imen
t
Man
agem
ent W
ork
Gro
up
(H
onig
man
Mill
er S
chw
artz
and
C
ohn
LLP
)
Pan
elis
ts:
Ste
phen
Ells
(U
.S. E
PA
H
eadq
uart
ers)
Dav
id K
oubs
ky (
The
Eliz
abet
h R
iver
P
roje
ct)
Mar
y Lo
gan
(U.S
. EP
A R
egio
n 5)
Larr
y M
cShe
a (A
lcoa
, Inc
.)
Ran
dy S
turg
eon
(U.S
. EPA
Reg
ion
3)
John
Vin
cett,
Gra
sse
Riv
er F
acili
- t
ator
of t
he C
omm
unity
Adv
isor
y P
anel
(P
ublic
Dia
logu
e A
ltern
ativ
es)
Rob
ert W
yatt
(NW
Nat
ural
Gas
)
9
tu
eSda
y
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
10:3
0
10:5
5
11:2
0
11:4
5
12:1
0
12:3
5
Dre
dged
Mat
eria
l Man
agem
ent f
or
Long
Isla
nd S
ound
: App
licat
ion
of
Dec
isio
n An
alyt
ic a
nd O
ptim
izat
ion
Tool
s. I.
Lin
kov,
C. F
oran
, T. F
rede
tte,
M. K
eega
n, K
. Zan
, E. C
hu, N
. Jon
es,
and
J. K
eisl
er.
Igor
Lin
kov
(U.S
. Arm
y En
gine
er
Res
earc
h &
Dev
elop
men
t Cen
ter/
USA
)
Stam
sund
Har
bor–
A Ca
se S
tudy
on
Com
bini
ng R
emed
ies.
M. K
venn
as,
A. N
ybak
k, a
nd J
. Elia
ssen
.M
aria
nne
Kven
naas
(Nor
weg
ian
Geo
tech
nica
l Ins
titut
e/N
orw
ay)
Mar
ine
Mon
itori
ng a
nd N
atur
al
Rec
over
y of
PCB
s at
the
Brem
erto
n N
aval
Com
plex
. C. V
ita,
P. J
ohan
son,
and
D. L
eisl
e.Ch
uck
Vita
(UR
S Co
rpor
atio
n/U
SA)
A Ca
se S
tudy
: DD
T an
d M
ercu
ry
Sedi
men
t Con
tam
inat
ion
and
Ecol
ogic
al R
isk
Asse
ssm
ent f
or
Aqua
tic B
iota
in L
ake
Mag
gior
e (I
taly
). E
.C. B
izzo
tto, S
. Cec
con,
F.
Colo
mbo
, A. F
ogg,
M. H
enni
ng,
and
L. Z
anin
etta
.El
isa
C. B
izzo
tto (E
NVI
RO
N/It
aly)
Low
er P
assa
ic R
iver
Con
cept
ual
Site
Mod
el–I
nteg
ratio
n of
Mul
tiple
Li
nes
of E
vide
nce.
M. G
reen
blat
t,
M. B
arba
ra, J
. Con
nolly
, and
R. L
aw.
Mar
cia
Gre
enbl
att (
Inte
gral
Co
nsul
ting/
USA
)
Was
te, R
esou
rce
or L
iabi
lity?
Al
tern
ativ
e D
ecis
ion
Crite
ria
for S
usta
inab
le S
edim
ent
Man
agem
ent.
S.E
. Api
tz.
Sabi
ne E
. Api
tz (S
EA E
nviro
nmen
tal
Dec
isio
ns, L
td./U
K)
Com
plet
ion
of th
e St
. Law
renc
e R
iver
Rem
edia
tion
Proj
ect.
P.
LaR
osa,
L. M
cShe
a,
H. V
anD
ewal
ker,
and
S. H
ill.
Paul
LaR
osa
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/U
SA)
Dem
onst
ratio
n of
Mon
itore
d N
atur
al
Rec
over
y of
Est
uari
ne S
edim
ent a
t a
Petr
oleu
m-C
onta
min
ated
Site
in
Loui
sian
a. C
. Gul
de, W
. Gal
a, a
nd
C. G
reer
.Cy
nthi
a G
ulde
(Che
vron
/USA
)
Spat
ially
Exp
licit
Bioa
ccum
ulat
ion
Mod
el o
f Mer
cury
in B
enth
ic F
ish.
J.
Con
der,
R. W
enni
ng, F
. Ach
our,
and
F. Co
lom
bo.
Jaso
n M
. Con
der (
ENVI
RO
N/U
SA)
Hyd
rody
nam
ic M
odel
Pre
dict
ions
R
egar
ding
Dow
nriv
er T
rans
port
of
Rad
ioac
tive
Sedi
men
t. D
.R. L
ee a
nd
C. J
ones
.D
avid
R. L
ee (A
tom
ic E
nerg
y of
Ca
nada
Ltd
/Can
ada)
Man
agem
ent S
trat
egie
s fo
r Se
dim
ent S
uper
fund
Site
s af
ter
BNSF
. K.R
. Hui
breg
tse
and
M
.W. S
chne
ider
.Ka
thry
n R
. Hui
breg
tse
(EN
VIR
ON
/U
SA)
LUN
CH
Envi
ronm
enta
l Qua
lity
Impr
ovem
ents
Fol
low
ing
Sedi
men
t R
emed
iatio
n an
d Em
issi
on
Red
uctio
ns in
Kri
stia
nsan
d H
arbo
ur, S
outh
Nor
way
. K. N
aes.
Kris
toffe
r Nae
s (N
orw
egia
n In
stitu
te
for W
ater
Res
earc
h/N
orw
ay)
Long
-Ter
m M
onito
ring
Fol
low
ing
Larg
e-Sc
ale
Thin
-Lay
er C
appi
ng
Ope
ratio
ns—
A D
esig
n Pl
an,
Mar
atho
n En
viro
nmen
tal
Rem
edia
tion,
Mar
atho
n, O
ntar
io.
K. C
arbo
nnea
u, D
.G. W
ilson
, K. K
im,
R. H
ewitt
, and
M. M
cChr
istie
.Kr
istin
e Ca
rbon
neau
(AEC
OM
/USA
)
Lim
its to
Pre
dict
ing
Bioa
ccum
ulat
ion
of P
olyc
hlor
inat
ed D
iben
zo-p
-di
oxin
s an
d D
iben
zofu
rans
in F
ish
and
Crab
Tis
sue.
J. S
amps
on,
M. A
ldea
, and
D. N
iels
en.
Jenn
ifer R
. Sam
pson
(Int
egra
l Co
nsul
ting,
Inc.
/USA
)
LUN
CHLU
NCH
A Fr
amew
ork
for A
sses
sing
Se
dim
ent B
ed S
tabi
lity
from
Bul
k So
il Pa
ram
eter
s. J
.C. W
inte
rwer
p,
W. v
an K
este
ren,
B. v
an M
aren
, and
B.
van
Pro
oije
n.Jo
han
C. W
inte
rwer
p (D
elta
res
- D
elft
Hyd
raul
ics/
The
Net
herla
nds)
Wav
elet
Ana
lysi
s fo
r Sed
imen
t Tr
ansp
ort I
nves
tigat
ions
. G. C
hang
, C.
Jon
es, a
nd E
. Gar
land
.G
race
Cha
ng (S
ea E
ngin
eerin
g,
Inc.
/USA
)
Dev
elop
ing
an In
-Lie
u Se
dim
ent
Rem
edia
tion
Fee
Sche
dule
for
Eliz
abet
h R
iver
. R. M
ohan
, M
. Pal
erm
o, M
. Cos
tello
, D. K
oubs
ky,
J. R
iege
r, an
d M
. May
field
Jac
kson
.R
am M
ohan
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/U
SA)
Solid
ifica
tion/
Stab
iliza
tion
of
Sydn
ey T
ar P
onds
–Str
ateg
ic
Cont
ract
Seq
uenc
ing.
B. N
oble
and
J.
Mac
Nei
l.Br
uce
Nob
le (A
ECO
M/C
anad
a)
LUN
CH
Mea
suri
ng H
uman
Act
ivity
in
an E
stua
ry U
sing
an
Inno
vativ
e Ca
mer
a Su
rvey
. J.L
. Dur
da,
S.K.
Hill
, and
P.P
. Bru
ssoc
k.Ju
di L
. Dur
da (I
nteg
ral C
onsu
lting
In
c./U
SA)
Num
eric
al S
imul
atio
n of
R
esus
pens
ion
Dyn
amic
s in
Lak
e Ap
opka
, Flo
rida
. E.J
. Hay
ter,
S. S
o,
and
A.J.
Meh
ta.
Earl
J. H
ayte
r (U
.S. A
rmy
Corp
s of
En
gine
ers/
USA
) LU
NCH
Dep
loym
ent o
f Sol
uble
Nitr
ate
to
Min
imiz
e M
ethy
lmer
cury
Rel
ease
fr
om A
noxi
c La
ke S
edim
ent.
D
. Bab
cock
, J. N
olan
, P. R
oth,
K.
Kuh
r, B.
Hen
ry, a
nd D
. Mat
thew
s.D
avid
B. B
abco
ck (P
arso
ns/U
SA)
E1. Site Management Decision Strategies
D1. Successfully Combining Remedies
C1. Monitored Natural Recovery (MNR) and Enhanced MNR C2. In Situ Treatment
B1. Ecological and Human-Health Risk Assessment
A1. Sediment Transport: Fundamentals and Novel Techniques for Measuring and Modeling
10
tueSday aFternoon PlatForm SeSSionSt
ueS
da
y
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
1:00
1:25
1:50
2:15
2:40
3:05
Beyo
nd H
abita
t: Co
ncep
tual
izin
g th
e R
ole
of S
edim
ent i
n Ec
osys
tem
Se
rvic
es F
ram
ewor
ks. S
.E. A
pitz
.Sa
bine
E. A
pitz
(SEA
Env
ironm
enta
l D
ecis
ions
, Ltd
./UK)
Eval
uatin
g Vo
latil
izat
ion
Pote
ntia
l fr
om D
redg
ed M
ater
ial U
sing
LVE
T.
S.M
. Dun
n, G
. Ste
phen
son,
R
. Par
mel
ee, B
. Kel
lem
s,
P.J.
Blu
este
in, a
nd P
. Brz
ozow
ski.
Shan
non
M. D
unn
(AR
CAD
IS U
.S.,
Inc.
/USA
)
Eval
uatio
n of
Rea
ctiv
e M
ats
Perf
orm
ance
by
In S
itu P
orew
ater
, Bi
oacc
umul
atio
n an
d Ec
olog
ical
M
easu
res.
K.H
. Gar
dner
, S.
Gre
enw
ood,
J. M
elto
n, W
.-J. L
ee,
R. D
ambu
rg-M
ause
r, an
d J.
Bye
rs.
Kevi
n H
. Gar
dner
(Uni
vers
ity o
f New
H
amps
hire
/USA
)
A R
evie
w o
f the
App
licab
ility
of
Var
ious
Elu
tria
te T
ests
an
d R
efine
men
ts o
f The
se
Met
hodo
logi
es. A
.F. V
icin
ie,
L. M
atko
, R. S
heet
s, T
. Mar
tz,
M. P
aler
mo,
and
P. M
cIsa
ac.
Albe
rt F.
Vic
inie
(Tes
tAm
eric
a La
bora
torie
s/U
SA)
LUN
CH
Usi
ng H
EA to
Eva
luat
e an
d Se
lect
O
ptio
ns fo
r Res
tori
ng E
cosy
stem
Se
rvic
es. N
. Mus
grov
e, T
. Des
hler
, R
. Gou
guet
, K. H
urle
y, P
. Fug
leva
nd,
and
M. Z
uker
berg
.N
ancy
A. M
usgr
ove
(Win
dwar
d En
viro
nmen
tal/U
SA)
Indi
ana
Har
bor a
nd C
anal
Con
fined
D
ispo
sal F
acili
ty A
ir M
onito
ring
. L.
T. T
hai,
J. M
iller
, L. V
ande
n Be
rg,
D. W
ethi
ngto
n, T
. Will
ough
by,
K.J.
Roc
kne,
and
K. G
ranb
erg.
Le T
. Tha
i (U
.S. A
rmy
Corp
s of
En
gine
ers/
USA
)
In S
itu T
reat
men
t of C
esiu
m-
Cont
amin
ated
Wet
land
Sed
imen
ts
thro
ugh
the
Addi
tion
of Il
lite
Clay
s.
D.I.
Kap
lan,
A.S
. Kno
x, a
nd
T.G
. Hin
ton.
Dan
iel I
. Kap
lan
(Sav
anna
h R
iver
N
atio
nal L
abor
ator
y/U
SA)
Dev
elop
men
t of a
Com
bine
d Bi
oass
ay fo
r Ass
essi
ng S
edim
ent
Bioa
vaila
bilit
y, T
oxic
ity,
and
Bioa
ccum
ulat
ion
Usi
ng
the
Amph
ipod
Lep
toch
eiru
s pl
umul
osus
. G. L
otuf
o, J
. Far
rar,
and
J. S
ims.
Gui
lher
me
R. L
otuf
o (U
.S. A
rmy
Corp
s of
Eng
inee
rs/U
SA)
Less
ons
Lear
ned
duri
ng 2
5 Ye
ars
of S
edim
ent T
rans
port
Mod
elin
g.
C.K.
Zie
gler
.C.
Kirk
Zie
gler
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/
USA
)
Mon
itori
ng th
e Su
cces
s of
a B
ank
Stab
iliza
tion
Pilo
t to
Red
uce
Mer
cury
Loa
ding
to a
Riv
er.
N. G
ross
o, R
. Lan
dis,
M. L
iber
ati,
W.R
. Ber
ti, T
. Mor
rison
, M. Z
eff,
J.
R. F
land
ers,
B. N
orris
, and
J.
Piz
zuto
.N
ancy
R. G
ross
o (D
uPon
t Com
pany
/U
SA)
Mon
itori
ng a
nd M
odel
ing
the
Effe
cts
of S
torm
wat
er S
ourc
e Co
ntro
ls o
n Se
dim
ent Q
ualit
y in
Ta
com
a, W
ashi
ngto
n.
T.M
. Tho
rnbu
rg, D
.B. d
e Le
on, a
nd
M.L
. Hen
ley.
Todd
M. T
horn
burg
(Anc
hor Q
EA,
LLC/
USA
)
Qua
ntify
ing
Cont
amin
ants
Tra
nspo
rt
with
On-
Line
Mon
itori
ng. A
. Nyb
akk,
G
. Bre
edve
ld, M
. Kve
nnas
, and
R
. Ski
rsta
d G
rini.
Anita
Nyb
akk
(Nor
weg
ian
Geo
tech
nica
l Ins
titut
e/N
orw
ay)
Test
ing
of a
Per
mea
ble
Rea
ctiv
e Ba
rrie
r to
Red
uce
Stro
ntiu
m-9
0 Co
ncen
trat
ions
in G
roun
dwat
er
Upw
ellin
g in
to th
e Co
lum
bia
Riv
er
at th
e H
anfo
rd S
ite, W
ashi
ngto
n.
K.M
. Tho
mps
on a
nd N
.A. B
owle
s.K.
Mic
hael
Tho
mps
on (U
.S.
Dep
artm
ent o
f Ene
rgy/
USA
)
Dis
solv
ed C
once
ntra
tions
and
Bi
oava
ilabi
lity
of P
AHs
and
PCBs
O
ften
Are
Ove
r-Pr
edic
ted
Usi
ng
Sedi
men
t Con
cent
ratio
ns a
nd
Lite
ratu
re K
oc V
alue
s.
S.B.
Haw
thor
ne, D
.J. M
iller
, C.
B. G
raba
nski
, L.P
. Bur
khar
d,...
St
even
B. H
awth
orne
(Uni
vers
ity o
f N
orth
Dak
ota/
USA
)
Det
erm
inat
ion
of E
xplo
sive
s in
M
arin
e M
atri
ces
by L
C-M
S/M
S an
d LC
-UV.
E. S
incl
air.
Ewan
Sin
clai
r (Co
lum
bia
Anal
ytic
al
Serv
ice/
USA
)BR
EAK
On
the
Sedi
men
t Dyn
amic
s of
the
Low
er P
assa
ic R
iver
. J.
C. W
inte
rwer
p, R
. Mat
hew
, R
. Can
izar
es, a
nd R
. Law
.Jo
han
C. W
inte
rwer
p (D
elta
res
- D
elft
Hyd
raul
ics/
The
Net
herla
nds)
Eval
uatio
n of
Sed
imen
t Tra
nspo
rt
Beha
vior
in th
e Pa
ssai
c R
iver
Es
tuar
y. E
.J. G
arla
nd, T
. Sin
gh,
C.A.
Jon
es, a
nd L
. San
ford
.Ed
war
d J.
Gar
land
(HD
R I
Hyd
roQ
ual,
Inc.
/USA
)
Dev
elop
men
t of a
n In
tegr
ated
Ca
pabi
lity
for D
esig
n of
ISCO
-EK
Clea
nup
Syst
ems.
A. F
ourie
, D
. Rey
nold
s, D
. Hod
ges,
and
M. W
u.An
dy F
ourie
(Uni
vers
ity o
f Wes
tern
Au
stra
lia/A
ustr
alia
)
Phys
ical
Inte
ract
ions
bet
wee
n Ph
ragm
ites
aust
ralis
Mar
shes
and
W
ater
way
s in
an
Estu
arin
e Sy
stem
. P.
J. d
e H
aven
, S.R
. Com
psto
n,
T.A.
Mar
tin, a
nd P
.P. B
russ
ock.
Pete
r J. d
e H
aven
(Geo
synt
ec
Cons
ulta
nts/
USA
)
BREA
K
Asse
ssin
g Ef
fect
iven
ess
of th
e Pl
ainw
ell I
mpo
undm
ent R
emov
al
Actio
n: K
alam
azoo
Riv
er, M
ichi
gan.
M
.J. E
ricks
on, S
.D. G
arba
ciak
, and
G
.T. G
riffit
h.M
icha
el J
. Eric
kson
(AR
CAD
IS U
.S.,
Inc.
/USA
)
In S
itu P
hyto
rem
edia
tion
of
Hyd
roca
rbon
-Con
tam
inat
ed L
agoo
n Se
dim
ents
. H.E
. Pin
chin
, C. M
ant,
E.
May
, J. W
illia
ms,
and
B.
Hod
kins
on.
Han
nah
E. P
inch
in (U
nive
rsity
of
Port
smou
th/U
K)
Appl
icat
ion
of a
n An
alyt
ical
Te
chni
que
for D
eter
min
ing
Alky
l PA
Hs,
Sat
urat
ed H
ydro
carb
ons,
and
G
eoch
emic
al B
iom
arke
rs, i
n W
ater
, So
il an
d Ti
ssue
. C. N
eslu
nd.
Char
les
J. N
eslu
nd (L
anca
ster
La
bora
torie
s, In
c./U
SA)
Sacr
amen
to A
rea
Sedi
men
ts S
urve
y fo
r Pha
rmac
eutic
als,
Per
sona
l Car
e Pr
oduc
ts, a
nd O
ther
End
ocri
ne
Dis
rupt
ors
Incl
udin
g D
ioxi
ns, a
nd
PCBs
. K.
Bue
chle
r, M
. Flo
urno
y,
D. H
erbe
rt, R
. Hra
bak,
D. A
llam
eh,
D. G
all,
S. V
alm
ores
, and
E. N
guye
n.D
ave
Her
bert
(Tes
tAm
eric
a/U
SA)
Fish
Tis
sue
Dat
a fo
r Mon
itori
ng
Rem
edy
Effe
ctiv
enes
s.
L.P.
Bur
khar
d.La
wre
nce
P. B
urkh
ard
(U.S
. EPA
/U
SA)
Sedi
men
t Tra
nspo
rt P
roce
sses
in
the
Low
er P
assa
ic R
iver
Stu
dy
Area
. R. M
athe
w, D
. Man
ian,
R
. Can
izar
es, M
. Gre
enbl
att,
K.
Cad
mus
, and
J. W
inte
rwer
p.R
ooni
Mat
hew
(Mof
fatt
& N
icho
l/U
SA)
Hyd
rody
nam
ic F
ield
Mea
sure
men
ts,
Mod
el D
evel
opm
ent,
and
Sed
imen
t Tr
ansp
ort E
valu
atio
n in
the
Buffa
lo
Riv
er, B
uffa
lo, N
Y. T
. Dek
ker,
P.
Kla
ver,
J. A
tkin
son,
W. I
ngra
m,
and
M. K
amilo
w.
Tim
othy
J. D
ekke
r (Li
mno
Tech
, Inc
./U
SA)
Wat
erje
t Pla
cem
ent o
f Sed
imen
t Am
endm
ents
: Gre
en, I
n Si
tu
Rem
edia
tion.
J.G
. Bur
ken,
A.
C. E
lmor
e, A
. Arc
her,
D. S
umm
ers,
G
. Gal
ecki
, G. R
isle
y, R
. Str
inge
r,
G. H
arpe
r, an
d D
. Rei
ble.
Joel
G. B
urke
n (M
isso
uri U
nive
rsity
of
Sci
ence
& T
echn
olog
y/U
SA)
E2. Ecosystem and Watershed Assessment and Management
D2. Monitoring Effects during Remedy Implementation D3.
C2. In Situ Treatment
B2. Chemical/Toxicological/Biological Measurements and Characterization
A2. Sediment Transport: Applications, Model Validations, and Peer Reviews
11
tu
eSda
y
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
3:30
3:55
4:20
4:45
5:10
Sust
aina
ble
Sedi
men
t M
anag
emen
t: R
esul
ts o
f a R
ecen
t In
tern
atio
nal W
orks
hop.
D
.W. M
oore
and
T.S
. Brid
ges.
Dav
id W
. Moo
re (W
esto
n So
lutio
ns,
Inc.
/USA
)
Bent
hic
Com
mun
ity A
sses
smen
t an
d Im
prov
emen
t in
the
Buffa
lo
Riv
er, N
Y. A
.C. D
anie
l, M
. Sor
ense
n,
J. L
ynda
ll, B
. Elz
inga
, J. M
orris
, and
V.
Mag
ar.
Mar
y So
rens
en (E
NVI
RO
N/U
SA)
BREA
KBR
EAK
BREA
K
Chal
leng
es a
nd Is
sues
in M
anag
ing
Sedi
men
t for
Coa
stal
Res
tora
tion
in
Loui
sian
a. S
.M. K
halil
.Sy
ed M
. Kha
lil (L
ouis
iana
Offi
ce o
f Co
asta
l Pro
tect
ion
and
Res
tora
tion/
USA
)
Dev
elop
men
t and
Impl
emen
tatio
n of
the
Fish
Tis
sue
Sam
plin
g Pr
ogra
m a
t the
Por
tland
Har
bor
Site
. E. B
lisch
ke.
Chip
Hum
phre
y (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Expe
rim
enta
l Inv
estig
atio
n on
Ch
emic
al O
xida
tion
Trea
tmen
ts:
Adva
ntag
es a
nd C
ritic
al Is
sues
. A.
Car
eghi
ni, S
. Sap
onar
o,
K. G
ardn
er, a
nd S
. Gre
enw
ood.
Ales
sand
ro C
areg
hini
(Pol
itecn
ico
di
Mila
no -
DIIA
R/It
aly)
Chem
ical
For
ensi
cs U
sing
U
nmix
ing
Met
hods
. M. A
ldea
and
D
. Nie
lsen
.M
ihai
Ald
ea (I
nteg
ral C
onsu
lting
In
c./U
SA)
Ever
ythi
ng G
oes
Som
ewhe
re:
Trac
king
the
Mov
emen
t of
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
ts in
an
Indu
stri
aliz
ed E
stua
ry U
sing
Dua
l-Si
gnat
ure
Sedi
men
t Tra
cers
. K.
Bla
ck, J
. Slo
an, a
nd T
. Grie
s.Ke
vin
S. B
lack
(Par
trac
, Ltd
./Sc
otla
nd)
Bior
eten
tion
Pond
Des
ign
for
Sedi
men
t Cap
ture
and
Wat
er
Qua
lity
Impr
ovem
ent.
B.
J. K
wia
tkow
ski.
Bria
n J.
Kw
iatk
owsk
i (M
ACTE
C En
gine
erin
g &
Con
sulti
ng In
c./U
SA)
Calc
ulat
ing
“Foo
tpri
nts”
and
Ap
plic
atio
n to
Rem
edia
tion
of
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
t Site
s.
R.J
. Wen
ning
, J. P
ekal
a, J
. Nic
olet
te,
L. G
rice,
and
G. R
eub.
Ric
hard
J. W
enni
ng (E
NVI
RO
N/U
SA)
Des
ign
and
Impl
emen
tatio
n of
a
Fish
-Mon
itori
ng P
rogr
am fo
r the
Lo
wer
Gra
sse
Riv
er. J
. Qua
drin
i,
H. V
anD
ewal
ker,
L. M
cShe
a, a
nd
J. C
onno
lly.
John
Con
nolly
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/
USA
)
Deg
radi
ng A
rocl
or 1
248
and
1260
in W
et a
nd D
ry S
oils
from
a
Cont
amin
ated
Site
. C.L
. Gei
ger,
C.
A. C
laus
en, S
. Nov
aes-
Card
, C.
Ace
vedo
-Par
ra, J
acqu
elin
e
W. Q
uinn
, and
G. B
ooth
.Ch
erie
L. G
eige
r (U
nive
rsity
of
Cent
ral F
lorid
a/U
SA)
Mul
tiple
Lin
ear R
egre
ssio
n of
PC
DD
/F P
atte
rns
in U
MD
ES S
erum
Sa
mpl
es. T
. Tow
ey, N
. Bar
abas
, P.
Adr
iaen
s, A
. Dem
ond,
X. J
iang
, A.
Fra
nzbl
au, D
. Gar
abra
nt,
B. G
illes
pie,
and
J. L
epko
wsk
i.Ti
mot
hy T
owey
(Lim
noTe
ch, I
nc./
USA
)
Det
erm
inat
ion
of th
e Pe
trol
eum
and
PA
H F
ootp
rint
in S
edim
ents
from
Fu
el T
erm
inal
Rel
ease
s.
P.D
. Boe
hm, J
.S. B
row
n, L
.L. C
ook,
K.
O’R
eilly
, and
J. P
ieta
ri.Ja
ana
Piet
ari (
Expo
nent
, Inc
./USA
)
Fish
Tal
es: L
ong-
Term
Mon
itori
ng
of W
ater
and
Fis
h on
the
Low
er F
ox
Riv
er. J
.B. M
anch
este
r,
D.M
. Roz
now
ski,
N.A
. Azz
olin
a, a
nd
W.A
. Har
tman
.Jo
n B.
Man
ches
ter (
Foth
In
fras
truc
ture
& E
nviro
nmen
t, LL
C/U
SA)
Sedi
men
t Tra
nspo
rt in
Pea
rl H
arbo
r. P.
-F. W
ang,
B. C
hadw
ick,
W. C
hoi,
C.
Jon
es, W
. Wen
, and
M. Y
oshi
oka.
Pei-F
ang
Wan
g (U
.S. N
avy/
USA
)
Num
eric
al S
imul
atio
n of
Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent T
rans
port
at
New
Bed
ford
Har
bor.
E. H
ayte
r,
J. S
mith
, J. G
aila
ni, a
nd
K. G
usta
vson
.Ea
rl J.
Hay
ter (
U.S
. Arm
y Co
rps
of
Engi
neer
s/U
SA)
Surf
acta
nt-E
nhan
ced
Ex S
itu
Soil
Was
hing
of O
il- a
nd G
as-
Cont
amin
ated
Sol
ids–
Pata
goni
a,
Arge
ntin
a Ca
se S
tudy
. G.A
. Ive
y.G
eorg
e A.
Ivey
(Ive
y In
tern
atio
nal,
Inc.
/Can
ada)
Inte
grat
ion
of G
reen
Eng
inee
ring
an
d H
abita
t Res
tora
tion
in th
e Ti
ttaba
was
see
and
Sagi
naw
Riv
ers.
T.
Kon
echn
e, V
. Mag
ar, C
. Lef
evre
, P.
Sim
on, a
nd C
. Pat
mon
t.Vi
ctor
S. M
agar
(EN
VIR
ON
/USA
)
Dec
reas
e in
Mer
cury
Con
cent
ratio
n in
Ono
ndag
a La
ke B
iota
in R
ecen
t Ye
ars.
B. H
enry
, M. M
urph
y,
D. R
eidy
, D. G
lase
r, S.
Tod
orov
a,
C. D
risco
ll, D
. Mat
thew
s, a
nd
S. E
ffler
.M
arga
ret H
. Mur
phy
(Anc
hor Q
EA,
LLC/
USA
)
Perf
orm
ance
and
Cos
t Eva
luat
ion
of
Ex S
itu T
reat
men
t of C
onta
min
ated
Se
dim
ents
Usi
ng B
ioge
nesi
s Pr
oces
s. S
. Cha
ttopa
dhya
y an
d
T. L
yons
.Sa
ndip
Cha
ttopa
dhya
y (T
etra
Tec
h,
Inc.
/USA
)
Appl
ying
Wei
ght o
f Evi
denc
e in
Py
roge
nic
PAH
For
ensi
cs. H
. Cos
ta
and
K. G
ross
.H
elde
r J. C
osta
(Hal
ey &
Ald
rich,
In
c./U
SA)
Influ
ence
of S
edim
ent P
rope
rtie
s on
Ev
olut
ion
of th
e Pa
los
Verd
es S
helf
Dep
osit.
P.J
. Dic
khud
t,
C.R
. She
rwoo
d, a
nd P
.L. W
iber
g.Pa
tric
k J.
Dic
khud
t (U
.S. G
eolo
gica
l Su
rvey
/USA
)
E3. Sustainable Sediment Management
D3. Using Biological Monitoring to Assess Remedy Effectiveness
C3. Ex Situ Treatment
B3. Contaminant Forensics
A2. Sediment Transport: Applications, Model Validations, and Peer Reviews
5:45
–7:1
5 p.
m. G
roup
1 P
oste
r Ses
sion
s an
d R
ecep
tion
Pres
ente
rs w
ill b
e at
thei
r dis
play
s to
dis
cuss
thei
r wor
k; s
essi
ons
and
pres
enta
tions
ar
e lis
ted
on p
ages
12–
15. A
rece
ptio
n w
ill b
e se
rved
dur
ing
the
pres
enta
tions
.
12
grouP 1 PoSterSt
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y
5. Supporting Sediment Management Decisions through Iterative Refinement of a CSM in Ackermans Creek. D. Herrema, T. Dekker, A. Hopton, A. Lord, and R. Galloway.Daniel A. Herrema (LimnoTech, Inc./USA)
6. An Advanced 3-D Hydrodynamic Model of the Lower Passaic River. G. van Banning, B. Grasmeijer, S. Dunn, J. Beaver, P.J. Bluestein, and P. Brzozowski.Jeffrey J. Barry (ARCADIS/USA)
a3. Groundwater/Porewater/Surface Water interactions
7. Groundwater Flow Model Parameterization and Calibration for Understanding Groundwater-Surface Water Interactions. J. Beaver, L. North, G. Leone, D. Lipson, P. Brzozowski, and P. Bluestein.James R. Beaver (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
8. Investigating Dioxin Impacts to the Woonasquatucket River via Groundwater Transport. D. Dahlen, C.J. Rosiu, C. Silver, and N. Richardson.Deirdre Dahlen (Battelle/USA)
9. Development of Groundwater Action Levels for Protection of Sediment Benthos. J. Hedgecock, H. Loso, and D. Stiffel.Jill Hedgecock (URS Corporation/USA)
a1. Sediment transport: fundamentals and novel techniques for measuring and modeling
1. Integrating Numerical Models with Data Analysis in Site Assessment. T.R. Keen and J.D. Dykes.Timothy R. Keen (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory/USA)
2. Characterizing Recent Sediment Deposition and Contaminant Load in Berry’s Creek—A Tidal Estuary. A. Accardi-Dey, T. Loor, C. Prabhu, L. Warner, E. Garvey, B. Fidler, and D. Tomchuk.AmyMarie Accardi-Dey (The Louis Berger Group, Inc./USA)
a2. Sediment transport: applications, model Validations, and Peer Reviews
3. Hydrological Analysis of Sediment Transport in a Turbulent Flow. O. Olaniyan, M. Chen, S. Wartel, S. Labiese, and F. De Smedt.Olatunji Olaniyan (Vrije Universiteit Brussels/Belgium)
4. Hydrodynamic Modeling to Support Site Understanding and Guide Decision-Making in Ackermans Creek. J. Grush, T. Dekker, A. Hopton, A. Lord, and R. Galloway.Jeremy Grush (LimnoTech, Inc./USA)
a4. Bioavailability of Contaminants
10. A Comparison of Bivalve Bioaccum-ulation Potential in Sediments from the West Coast of the United States. J. Holder, G. Weber, and B. Anthony.Jennifer L. Holder (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
11. Methylmercury in Sinclair Inlet, Washington, USA. P.W. Moran, A.J. Paulson, and D.E. Leisle.Dwight E. Leisle (U.S. Navy/USA)
a5. Geomorphology-Guided Sediment Characterization and Remediation
12. Geomorphology: A Practical Application for Contamination Assessment in River Systems. D. Richardson, J. Holmstadt, B. Schrotenboer, and P. McGuire.Dave Richardson (Tetra Tech/USA)
13. Bathymetry and Geomorphology Applications to Evaluate Contamination in River Systems. B. Schrotenboer, D. Richardson, and J. Holmstadt.Brad Schrotenboer (Tetra Tech/USA)
B1. ecological and Human-Health Risk assessment
14. Linking Bioavailability, Toxicity and Tissue Residue Level in a Sediment Toxicity Identification Evaluation. J.D. Farrar, G. Lotufo, and J. Sims.J. Daniel Farrar (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers/USA)
A1. Sediment Transport: Fundamentals and Novel Techniques for Measuring and Modeling
A2. Sediment Transport: Applications, Model Validations, and Peer Reviews
A3. Groundwater/Porewater/Surface Water InteractionsA4. Bioavailability of ContaminantsA5. Geomorphology-Guided Sediment Characterization and
RemediationB1. Ecological and Human-Health Risk AssessmentB2. Chemical/Toxicological/Biological Measurements and
CharacterizationB3. Contaminant ForensicsB4. Applications of Innovative Characterization and AssessmentB5. Assessment of Urban Waterways
C1. Monitored Natural Recovery (MNR) and Enhanced MNRC2. In Situ TreatmentC3. Ex Situ TreatmentD1. Successfully Combining RemediesD2. Monitoring Effects during Remedy ImplementationD3. Using Biological Monitoring to Assess Remedy EffectivenessD4. Habitat and Wetlands Mitigation and RestorationD5. Shoreline Remediation ChallengesE1. Site Management Decision StrategiesE2. Ecosystem and Watershed Assessment and ManagementE3. Sustainable Sediment ManagementE4. Sediment Quality GuidelinesE5. Effective Communication and Facilitation with Stakeholders
Display 4:30 p.m. Monday–7:15 p.m. Tuesday • Presentations/Reception Tuesday, 5:45–7:15 p.m.
The following posters will be on display from Monday evening through Tuesday evening. During the Poster Session/Reception period Tuesday evening, presenters will be present at their displays to discuss their work. Presentations and the poster board number assigned to each appear below.
13
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25. Assessing the Impact of Mercury Contamination to Lake Balkyldak in Kazakhstan. M. Ilyushchenko, P. Randall, T. Tanton, and G. Uskov.Paul M. Randall (U.S. EPA/USA)
26. Evaluation of the Quality of Contaminated Sediment Using Sulphite-Reducing Bacteria (Orbetello Lagoon, Italy). S. Marcheggiani, R. Scenati, C. Vendetti, M. Carere, L. Musmeci, M.R. Cicero, E. Beccaloni, and L. Mancini.Stefania Marcheggiani (Italian National Institute of Health/Italy)
B3. Contaminant forensics
27. PCB Forensics: Fingerprinting, Finger-Pointing, and a Case for Background Values. B. Hitchens and S. Williams.Brian R. Hitchens (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
28. Seeing Double: Evaluation of PCB Aroclor Interpretation in Sediment Split-Samples. S. Williams, B. Hitchens, and A. Tesfamichael.Sam Williams (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
29. Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether Sources in Sediments of Bubbly Creek and Calumet Pond, Chicago, Determined by Positive Matrix Factorization. Y. Zou, E.R. Christensen, A. Li, H. Wei, K. Rockne, and A.C. Aziz.Erik R. Christensen (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee/USA)
30. 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene Mineralization and Bacterial Production amongst Natural Microbial Assemblages in Coastal Sediments. M.T. Montgomery, R.B. Coffin, T.J. Boyd, J.P. Smith, S.E. Walker, and C.L. Osburn.Michael T. Montgomery (U.S. Navy/USA)
31. Guidance for GC/MS Analysis in Support of Oil Spill Forensics. D.I. Thal.David I. Thal (Environmental Standards Inc./USA)
32. Integrated Forensics Approach for Sediment PCBs. J. Leather, G. Durell, G. Johnson, and M. Mills.James M. Leather (U.S. Navy/USA)
33. Quantitative PCB Congener and Homologue Profile Comparisons. T. Saba and P.D. Boehm.Tarek Saba (Exponent, Inc./USA)
B4. applications of innovative Characterization and assessment
34. Rapid Prototyping of Hydrogeological Conceptual Models. T.D. Krom.Thomas D. Krom (Touch Water Ltd./New Zealand)
15. Importance of Sediment-Associated PFOS to Aquatic Food Web Biomagnification. J. Conder and G. Sower.Jason M. Conder (ENVIRON/USA)
16. California SQOs: Use of Stressor Identification to Determine the Influence of Potential Confounding Factors on Sediment Toxicity. D.W. Moore, A. Margolis, E. Batliner, and D. Renfrew.David W. Moore (Weston Solutions, Inc./USA)
17. Clostridium perfringens Vitality as an Ecotoxicity Test for Measuring the Lead Concentration in Sediment. L. Mancini, S. Rosermann, A.F. Aulicino, M. Carere, R. Miniero, and S. Marcheggiani.Laura Mancini (Italian National Institute of Health/Italy)
B2. Chemical/toxicological/Biological measurements and Characterization
18. Improving Mercury Species Analysis from Solid Matrices. M. Bruce, R. Shock, and D. Heakin.Mark Bruce (TestAmerica/USA)
19. Toxicity Profiling of Sediments: Monitoring Instruments for Sediment Quality. C. Schipper and T. Hamers.Cor Schipper (Deltares/The Netherlands)
20. L. sativa (Lettuce Seed) as an Initial Sediment and Pore-Water Toxicity Screening Tool. A. Ostaszewski.Arthur Ostaszewski (Michigan Dept of Natural Resources & Environment/USA)
21. Sediment Physical Characteristics as a Biological Indicator for Microbial Reductive Debromination of Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers (PBDEs). A. Che Aziz, K. Rockne, E.R. Christensen, A. Li, and H. Wei.Azivy Che Aziz (University of Illinois at Chicago/USA)
22. Absence of Predicted Toxicity from Creosote-Derived PAH in Sediments. P. Anderson, T. Iannuzzi, and J. Patarcity.Paul D. Anderson (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
23. Chemical and Toxicological Analyses of Shovelnose Sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) in the Lower Mississippi River. D.R. Johnson, B. Suedel, K. Boysen, J.J. Hoover, C. Godard-Codding, T. Anderson, G. Cobb, J. Canas, and C.Y. Ang.David R. Johnson (U.S. Army/USA)
24. Accreditation of Organizations Performing Field Sampling and Measurement. J. Boyd and J. Brown.JoAnn Boyd (Southwest Research Institute/USA)
35. Rapid 3-D Evaluation of Soil and Groundwater Contamination. T.D. Krom and R. Lane.Thomas D. Krom (Touch Water Ltd./New Zealand)
36. Sediment Characterization in Oregon’s Columbia Slough Using Targeted Sampling and Increment Sampling Techniques. R. Williams, S. Miller, J. Sutter, P. Seidel, K. Cameron, and S. Jett.Robert Williams (Oregon Department of Environmental Quality/USA)
37. Characterization of Enriched Organic Sediments Deposited in a Protected Harbor. R. Citterman and C. McMillen.Ron J. Citterman (AMEC Earth & Environmental/USA)
B5. assessment of urban Waterways
38. Changing Approaches for Worldwide Urban Rivers: A Report from the First WEF Conference on Urban River Restoration. T. Dekker, T. Slawecki, and M. Ries.Timothy J. Dekker (LimnoTech, Inc./USA)
C1. monitored natural Recovery (mnR) and enhanced mnR
39. Monitored Natural Recovery Following Implementation of Upland Source Control Measures: Results of a 3-Year Monitoring Program. T. Sauer, C. Barnes, M. Gravelding, S. Messur, and W. Jones.Ted Sauer (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
40. Natural Recovery: How Low Can We Go? A Review of Puget Sound Trends Compared to Lower Duwamish Waterway Model Predictions. A. Fitzpatrick, K. Takasaki, N. Ott, J. Stern, S. Fox, D. Schuchardt, and D. Hotchkiss.Kymberly Takasaki (Port of Seattle/USA)
C2. in Situ treatment
41. In Situ Bioremediation for Odorous Sediment of a Polluted Waterway in Hong Kong. L. Tsui and P. Lee.Yuk Ki (Chris) Choi (AECOM/Hong Kong)
42. Evaluation of Sorbent Amendments to Mitigate Methylmercury Production and Bioaccumulation in Berry’s Creek, New Jersey. B. Henry, C. Gilmour, G. Reidel, U. Ghosh, S. Kwon, C. Menzie, and S. Brown.Betsy Henry (Exponent, Inc./USA)
43. Use of Chemical Oxygenation of Contaminated Maritime Sediment for In Situ Bioremediation. A. Nykanen, S. Kostia, O.-P. Penttinen, and M. Romantschuk.Anne Nykanen (University of Helsinki/Finland)
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53. Developing the Dredge-Versus-Cap Cost Analysis for the Fox River Sediment Remediation Project. T.L. Blackmar, G. Berken, and J. Lawson.Terri L. Blackmar (Tetra Tech EC, Inc./USA)
d2. monitoring effects during Remedy implementation
54. Air Emissions Testing and Modeling for Sediment Remediation Alternatives Evaluation, Ashland, Wisconsin. H. Huls, W. Bosworth, S. Barnard, and J. Winslow.Hubert H. Huls (URS Corporation/USA)
55. Assessing the Effects of In Situ Remediation with Carbon Amendments. C. Menzie, B. Amos, U. Ghosh, C. Cardona, and S. Kwon.Susan B. Kane Driscoll (Exponent, Inc./USA)
d3. using Biological monitoring to assess Remedy effectiveness
56. Fish and Sediment Mercury Concentration Trends in the North Fork Holston River, Virginia. E. Curtis, N. Ruberti, C. Butcher, M. Bystedt, A. Shortelle, and K. Roberts.Emmet Curtis (MACTEC Engineering & Consulting, Inc./USA)
57. Recovery of a Northeastern Lake Fishery Following the Removal of Sediments Containing Lead Chromate. R. Schuck and S. Clough.Stephen R. Clough (Haley & Aldrich, Inc./USA)
58. Using Benthic Macroinvertebrates to Evaluate the Effects of Waterjet-Delivered Amendment. G. Harper, C. Redell, A.C. Elmore, G. Galecki, R. Stringer, A. Archer, and J. Burken.Grace Harper (Missouri University of Science & Technology/USA)
59. Comparison of 1996 and 2009 Data for Pearl Harbor Sediment and Fish Tissue. W.X. Wen, M. Yoshioka, S. Sahetapy-Engel, and T. Hanneman.Wendell Wen (AECOM/USA)
60. Assessment of Bioaccumulation Potential Following Dredging in Manistique, Michigan. A.P. Mucha, J. Bing-Canar, C. Roth, L.P. Burkhard, D. Mount, K. Gustavson, J. Larzorchak, and M.A. Mills.Amy P. Mucha (U.S. EPA/USA)
61. Monitoring Dredging Effectiveness Using Biological Indicators and Chemical Markers of Exposure in Brown Bullheads and Benthic Macroinvertebrates. J. Lazorchak, J.R. Meier, K. Fritz, P. Wernsing, M. Mills, and S. Cieniawski.James M. Lazorchak (U.S. EPA/USA)
44. Treatability Testing Evaluation and Implementation of Stabilization/Solidification of Sediment Impacted by Tar in Stormwater Lagoon. R. Singh and P. Lear.Rajesh Singh (Langan Engineering & Environmental Services/USA)
45. Degradation of Persistent Organic Pollutants in Sediments Using a Thermophilic Bacterium. S. Hoshina, M. Kubo, K. O’Driscoll, R. Sambrotto, B. Yan, Y. Usuki, and D. Figurski.Kevin O’Driscoll (Columbia University/USA)
46. Improvements in Subsurface Injection Technology for In Situ Biological and Chemical Remediation—It’s a Contact Sport. J.V. Fontana and V.E. Barlock.John V. Fontana (Vista GeoScience/USA)
47. In Situ Waterjet Placement of Powdered Activated Carbon in Contaminated Sediments. A. Archer, R. Stringer, C. Redell, G. Galecki, D. Summers, A.C. Elmore, J. Burken, and D. Reible.Aaron Archer (Missouri University of Science & Technology/USA)
C3. ex Situ treatment
48. Ex Situ Radiolytic Decomposition of Diesel-Contaminated Sediment. S. Yu, E. Kim, D. Choi, and S.-W. Chang.Seungho Yu (Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute/South Korea)
49. MgO-Based Solidification/Stabilization of Dredged Sediments Contaminated with Heavy Metals. K.-Y. Hwang, S.-H. Kang, and J.-Y. Seo.Kyung-Yup Hwang (Pusan National University/South Korea)
d1. Successfully Combining Remedies
50. Combining Near-Shore Dredging, Capping, and Wetland Restoration at Money Point, Elizabeth River, Virginia. D.J. Koubsky and J. Rieger.David J. Koubsky (The Elizabeth River Project/USA)
51. Focused Feasibility Study for Passaic River Sediments: Progress on Alternative Development for the Lower Eight Miles. S.E. Thompson, R.B. Fidler, T. Loor, E. Buckrucker, A. Yeh, and J. Fitzpatrick.Scott E. Thompson (The Louis Berger Group, Inc./USA)
52. Challenges of Sediment Removal and Residuals Cover at the Village Harbor Site in Michigan. S.D. Garbaciak, E.J. Hritsuk, M.J. Erickson, and M. Bowman.Stephen D. Garbaciak (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
d4. Habitat and Wetlands mitigation and Restoration
62. In Situ Wetland Remediation Demonstration. J.A. Bleiler, A. Hawkins, and K. Gardner.John A. Bleiler (AECOM/USA)
63. Remediation and Restoration Challenges in Pine Creek. C. Harvey and P. Danesh.Christopher Harvey (TRC Environmental Corporation/USA)
64. Restoring Submerged Aquatic Vegetation and Riverine Fringing Wetland Habitat Following Remediation. R. Davis and A. Ayers.Ryan Davis (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
65. Restoration of a Wetland Impacted by Fill Activities. L. Feldman, S. Rehan, and J. Honniball.Lester Feldman (AMEC Geomatrix, Inc./USA)
66. Use of Natural Channel Design to Restore Impaired Streams. J.G. Athanasakes and R. Davis.J. George Athanasakes (Stantec Consulting Services, Inc./USA)
d5. Shoreline Remediation Challenges
67. Trondheim Harbour, Norway— Remediation of Contaminated Sediments in Landslide-Sensitive Areas. M. Moseid, R. Skirstad Grini, G. Breedveld, and J. Laugesen.Mari Moseid (NGI/Norway)
68. Sediment and Shoreline Remediation Requires Unique Geotechnical Solutions. D.R. Siebert, B.P. Sweeney, and W.C. Hardison.Damian R. Siebert (Haley & Aldrich, Inc./USA)
e1. Site management decision Strategies
69. Alternative Sediment Remediation Authorities to CERCLA: Elizabeth River Demonstration. R. Engler and E. Smith.Robert Engler (Moffatt & Nichol/USA)
70. Toward the Integrated Management of Dredging and Sediment on the St. Lawrence River. S. Lepage.Mario Cormier (Environment Canada/Canada)
71. Systematic Planning to Ensure and Improve Data Quality at a Sediment Superfund Site in New Jersey. J. Klens Caprio, M. Tyler, and S. Hill.Julia Klens Caprio (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
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78. Effective Remediation Decision-Making for PCB-Contaminated Floodplain Soil. M. Henning, A. Glessner, D. Pelletier, and J. Johnson.Miranda Henning (ENVIRON/USA)
79. Berry’s Creek Study Area Superfund Site: Overview and Status. D. Tomchuk and P.P. Brussock.Douglas Tomchuk (U.S. EPA/USA)
80. Choccolocco Creek Conservation Corridor: Institutional Controls for Proactive and Permanent Watershed Protection. E.G. Macolly, A.S. Fowler, and M.J. Shivell.E. Gayle Pittman Macolly (Solutia/USA)
81. Impact of Agroforestry in Punjab, Pakistan. S.M. Akmal Rahim and S. Hasnain.Syed Muhammad Akmal Rahim (Punjab Forest Department/Pakistan)
e3. Sustainable Sediment management
82. Sediment Regional Risk Assessment: Supporting Sustainable Management at the River-Basin Scale. S.E. Apitz, S. Casper, and S. White.Sabine E. Apitz (SEA Environmental Decisions, Ltd./UK)
83. Sustainability in Sourcing Sediment Cap Materials for Onondaga Lake. D.A. Smith, S.A. Warren, and J. McAuliffe.David A. Smith (Parsons/USA)
84. A Survey of the Current Approaches to Contaminated Sediment Remediation in Various Countries. P.A. Spadaro.Philip A. Spadaro (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
72. Feasibility Study of Contaminated Sediment in Thunder Bay North Harbour. S.-J. An, K. Kim, and R. Santiago.Sue-Jin An (Environment Canada/Canada)
73. A Business Approach to Sediment “Management.” N.C. Weber.Nathan C. Weber (ENVIRON/USA)
74. Remediation and Restoration of Contaminated Sediments: Who is Going to Pay? J. Pietari and K. O’Reilly.Jaana Pietari (Exponent, Inc./USA)
75. Decision Strategies for Site Management of Pesticide-Impacted Sediments. G. Floyd, R. Franklin, J. Edmondson, M. Horrigan, G. Eaton, T. Whitehead, and Y. Parry.Tom Whitehead (Tetra Tech/USA)
76. To Dump or Not to Dump: How to Build an Effective Dredged Material Decision Framework. S.E. Apitz.Sabine E. Apitz (SEA Environmental Decisions, Ltd./UK)
e2. ecosystem and Watershed assessment and management
77. Quantifying Ecosystem Services for More Effective Contaminated Sediment Management. K. von Stackelberg.Katherine von Stackelberg (Environmental Risk Sciences, LLP/USA)
85. Strategies and Technologies for Sustainable Sediment Remediation. R.J. Wenning, J. Pekala, M. Travers, B. Kennington, and S. Hayter.Richard J. Wenning (ENVIRON/USA)
86. Sediment Ecosystems Services: The Value of Quantification for Remediation, Restoration, and Management. J. Weier.Jonathon A. Weier (CH2M HILL/USA)
87. Sustainable Construction Practices Incorporated into Award-Winning Sediment Cleanup. S. Kretschman.Stephen Kretschman (WSP Environment & Energy/USA)
88. Management of Contaminated Sediments: Sustainable Alternatives. B. Mastin.Brian Mastin (Weston Solutions, Inc./USA)
89. Calculating the Environmental Footprint of Remediation Alternatives for the Lower Duwamish Waterway. A. Fitzpatrick, M. Coover, E. Germiniani, J. Stern, S. Fox, D. Schuchardt, D. Hotchkiss, and K. Takasaki.Anne G. Fitzpatrick (AECOM/USA)
e4. Sediment Quality Guidelines
90. Application of Bioassays in Hazard, Risk, and Impact Assessments of Dredged Sediments. C. Schipper, I.M.C.M. Rietjens, R.M. Burgess, and A.J. Murk.Cor Schipper (Deltares/The Netherlands)
91. Modeling Bioaccumulation for Prediction of Tissue and Sediment Concentrations. J. Toll, N. Judd, S. Replinger, and L. Tear.John Toll (Windward Environmental, LLC/USA)
92. Site-Specific Evaluation of the Sediment Quality Guidelines Developed for the Portland Harbor Superfund Site. S. Becker, L. Williams, and M. Aldea.Scott Becker (Integral Consulting Inc./USA)
e5. effective Communication and facilitation with Stakeholders
93. Agencies Working Together to Develop a Remedial Investigation Addendum Sampling Plan. M. Yoshioka, F. Grange, and L. Tan.Michelle Yoshioka (U.S. Navy/USA)
Carriage in Front of Royal Café Photographer: Carl Purcell15
16
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Refi
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Are
as o
f Pot
entia
l Con
cern
U
sing
Equ
ilibr
ium
Par
titio
ning
: A
Case
Stu
dy. D
. Bar
sotti
, G. B
ondy
, K.
McR
owe,
M. M
iller
, L. S
tirba
n,
R. E
lliso
n, a
nd S
. Goe
hl.
Deb
orah
Bar
sotti
(MAC
TEC
Engi
neer
ing
& C
onsu
lting
, Inc
./USA
)
Res
tora
tion
of L
each
ate-
Impa
cted
W
etla
nds
and
Asso
ciat
ed M
itiga
tion
at th
e U
nive
rsity
of C
onne
ctic
ut
Land
fill.
J.R.
Kas
trino
s, R
.P. S
tand
ish,
C.
O. M
ason
, S. M
arks
, and
J.
Pie
trza
k.Ch
risto
pher
O. M
ason
(Mas
on &
As
soci
ates
, Inc
./USA
)
Emer
ging
Tec
hnol
ogy
for P
laci
ng
Spec
ializ
ed C
aps.
M. C
oste
llo,
D. R
icha
rd, E
. Hed
blom
, G. P
artc
h,
W. V
an K
este
ren,
and
L. S
itton
i.M
icha
el J
. Cos
tello
(Bar
r Eng
inee
ring
Co./U
SA)
Incr
emen
tal S
ampl
ing
Met
hod–
Ret
rosp
ectiv
e St
udy
of th
e Po
tent
ial
Util
ity fo
r Dec
isio
n-M
akin
g.
P.E.
Goo
drum
.Ph
ilip
Goo
drum
(ER
M/U
SA)
Tech
nica
l Con
side
ratio
ns in
Ev
alua
ting
Seep
age
Alon
g a
Shor
elin
e. J
.A. J
ohns
on, M
. Lin
g,
D.A
. Edw
ards
, and
A.E
. Chi
n.Je
ffrey
A. J
ohns
on (A
cton
-Mic
kels
on
Envi
ronm
enta
l, In
c./U
SA)
Site
-Spe
cific
Cle
anup
Goa
ls fo
r Se
dim
ent i
n a
Fres
hwat
er W
etla
nd
at N
SB–N
ew L
ondo
n. A
. Ber
nhar
dt,
L. G
anse
r, J.
Gra
vette
, V. J
urka
, J.
Wrig
ht, a
nd C
. Con
ant.
Aaro
n Be
rnha
rdt (
Tetr
a Te
ch, N
US,
In
c./U
SA)
Hab
itat R
esto
ratio
n on
the
St.
Loui
s R
iver
Est
uary
Fol
low
ing
Rem
edia
tion
of C
onta
min
ated
Se
dim
ents
. S.H
. Rus
sell,
M
.W. L
oero
p, T
.D. M
cGan
n, a
nd
J. L
indg
ren.
Stua
rt H
. Rus
sell
(aet
her d
bs/U
SA)
Adap
tatio
ns o
f a S
edim
ent C
ap
Mod
el fo
r the
Ono
ndag
a La
ke
Des
ign.
J. N
olan
, C. K
iehl
-Sim
pson
, K.
Rus
sell,
D. R
eibl
e, a
nd
D. L
ampe
rt.
John
G. N
olan
(Par
sons
/USA
)
Cost
-Effe
ctiv
e Cl
osur
e of
a P
AH-
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
t Site
Usi
ng
Dir
ect P
orew
ater
Ana
lysi
s.
S.C.
Gei
ger,
J.A.
Ble
iler,
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. Nak
les,
an
d M
. McC
abe.
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C. G
eige
r (AE
COM
/USA
)
Geo
chem
ical
Con
trol
s on
Ars
enic
, Ba
rium
, and
Man
gane
se in
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undw
ater
-Sur
face
Wat
er
Tran
sitio
n Zo
ne. T
. Mar
tin,
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aspe
r, W
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ke, a
nd
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lass
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los.
Todd
Mar
tin (I
nteg
ral C
onsu
lting
, In
c./U
SA)
Incr
easi
ng C
erta
inty
in R
isk-
Base
d Se
dim
ent R
emed
iatio
n D
ecis
ions
: Pe
nins
ula
Har
bour
Cas
e St
udy
on
Ris
k to
Fis
h fr
om M
ercu
ry.
M. H
enni
ng, R
. Osb
orn,
M. B
ock,
an
d S.
Bha
vsar
.M
irand
a H
enni
ng (E
NVI
RO
N/U
SA)
Appr
oach
es fo
r the
Der
ivat
ion
of
Sedi
men
t Qua
lity
Crite
ria
for t
he
Prot
ectio
n of
Hum
an H
ealth
in
Italia
n W
ater
Bod
ies.
E. B
ecca
loni
, M
.R. C
icer
o, L
. Man
cini
, S.
Mar
cheg
gian
i, R
. Min
iero
, R
. Sce
nati,
C. V
ende
tti, G
. Zie
mac
ki.
Mar
io C
arer
e (I
talia
n In
stitu
te o
f H
ealth
/Ital
y)
Inte
grat
ing
Hab
itat R
esto
ratio
n an
d Se
dim
ent R
emed
iatio
n fo
r the
Bu
ffalo
Riv
er, N
ew Y
ork.
J. L
ynda
ll,
W. H
igh,
A. D
anie
l, K.
Bel
l,
M. K
amilo
w, a
nd V
. Mag
ar.
Jenn
ifer L
ynda
ll (E
NVI
RO
N/U
SA)
Inte
grat
ion
of M
ultip
le D
esig
n El
emen
ts fo
r a M
ultic
ompo
nent
Se
dim
ent C
ap. E
. Bak
kom
, A. C
lary
, an
d J.
Mau
l.Er
ik B
akko
m (M
aul F
oste
r & A
long
i, In
c./U
SA)
Gra
vity
Cor
ing
to S
ampl
e So
ft Se
dim
ent o
n St
eep
Slop
es in
Dee
p W
ater
, Lag
o M
aggi
ore,
Ital
y.
J.M
. Pek
ala,
F. C
olom
bo, S
. Cec
con,
an
d M
. Tra
vers
.Jo
hn M
. Pek
ala
(EN
VIR
ON
/USA
)
BREA
K
Fox
Riv
er R
ipar
ian
Res
tora
tion
at
a PC
B Se
dim
ent R
emed
iatio
n Si
te,
Men
asha
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cons
in. J
. Gum
tow
an
d S.
Ban
ovet
z.Jo
n G
umto
w (S
tant
ec/U
SA)
Eval
uatin
g th
e G
roun
dwat
er-S
urfa
ce
Wat
er In
terf
ace
(GSI
) Dow
ngra
dien
t of
a C
oal A
sh Im
poun
dmen
t.
E.P.
Kov
atch
and
B.R
. Hen
sel.
Eric
P. K
ovat
ch (N
atur
al R
esou
rce
Tech
nolo
gy, I
nc./U
SA)
BREA
K
BREA
K
Inte
grat
ing
Line
s of
Evi
denc
e–Ec
olog
ical
Ris
k As
sess
men
t fo
r the
Por
tland
Har
bor B
enth
ic
Com
mun
ity. J
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l, H
. And
erse
n,
N. M
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ove,
L. T
ear,
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aban
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Rea
d, J
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enna
, and
B. W
yatt.
John
Tol
l (W
indw
ard
Envi
ronm
enta
l, LL
C/U
SA)
Dev
elop
men
t of S
edim
ent Q
ualit
y O
bjec
tives
for H
uman
Hea
lth in
Ca
lifor
nia.
B.K
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enfie
ld, S
.M. B
ay,
and
C. B
eega
n.St
even
M. B
ay (S
outh
ern
Calif
orni
a Co
asta
l Wat
er R
esea
rch
Proj
ect/U
SA)
Hab
itat R
emed
iatio
n at
Gre
at L
akes
Le
gacy
Act
Site
s. B
.R. J
ones
and
M
. Tuc
hman
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enda
R. J
ones
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. EPA
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)
Rea
ctiv
e Ca
p D
esig
n fo
r the
Pin
e St
reet
Can
al S
uper
fund
Site
. B.
Orc
hard
, B. K
elle
ms,
R. P
arm
elee
, S.
Dun
n, P
. Spa
daro
, and
J. B
eave
r.Ba
rbar
a O
rcha
rd (A
RCA
DIS
U.S
., In
c./U
SA)
Asse
ssm
ent o
f Cur
rent
and
Fut
ure
Mer
cury
and
Fur
ans
in a
Riv
er.
B.B.
Joh
nson
and
D.M
. Cod
y.Br
ian
B. J
ohns
on (S
evee
& M
aher
En
gine
ers,
Inc.
/USA
)
Dat
a Ev
alua
tion
Tech
niqu
es fo
r Id
entif
ying
Are
al E
xten
t of S
edim
ent
Cont
amin
atio
n in
Pea
rl H
arbo
r.
S. S
ahet
apy-
Enge
l, W
.X. W
en,
T. H
anne
man
, and
M. Y
oshi
oka.
Stev
e Sa
heta
py-E
ngel
(AEC
OM
/USA
)BR
EAK
Qua
ntifi
catio
n of
Gro
undw
ater
TZW
Se
epag
e Co
ntro
l for
Sed
imen
t Cl
eanu
p D
esig
n. J
.E. E
dwar
ds,
M. R
iley,
and
B. W
yatt.
John
E. E
dwar
ds (A
ncho
r QEA
, LLC
/U
SA)
Auto
mat
ed M
onito
ring
and
Vi
sual
izat
ion
of G
roun
dwat
er a
nd
Surf
ace
Wat
er In
tera
ctio
ns.
M.L
. Kra
m, S
. Airh
art,
and
D.T
yler
.M
ark
L. K
ram
(Gro
unds
wel
l Te
chno
logi
es, I
nc./U
SA)
Cons
olid
atio
n of
Cap
Are
as in
Lo
wer
Fox
Riv
er O
U1.
D
.M. R
ozno
wsk
i, G
.R. E
ykho
lt, a
nd
W.A
. Har
tman
.D
enis
Roz
now
ski (
Foth
Infr
astr
uctu
re
& E
nviro
nmen
t LLC
/USA
)
E4. Sediment Quality Guidelines
D4. Habitat and Wetlands Mitigation and Restoration
C4. Cap Design
A3. Groundwater/Porewater/Surface Water Interactions
B4. Applications of Innovative Characterization and Assessment
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. Gen
sky,
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cron
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d A.
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mis
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nce
S. K
etch
am (A
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., In
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SA)
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abita
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ndag
a La
ke. B
. Qui
nn, T
. Joh
nson
, E.
Gla
za, R
. Dav
is, M
. Mur
phy,
and
M
. Hen
ders
on.
Buffy
Qui
nn (P
arso
ns/U
SA)
Prel
imin
ary
Sedi
men
t Qua
lity
Benc
hmar
ks fo
r Mun
ition
Co
nstit
uent
s. G
.A. P
asco
e,
K. K
roeg
er, D
. Lei
sle,
and
R
.J. F
eldp
ausc
h.G
ary
A. P
asco
e (P
asco
e En
viro
nmen
tal C
onsu
lting
/USA
)
A Ca
se S
tudy
and
Ana
lysi
s of
the
Spat
ial V
aria
bilit
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Gro
undw
ater
D
isch
arge
thro
ugh
Estu
arin
e Se
dim
ents
. R.D
. Mut
ch.
Rob
ert D
. Mut
ch (M
utch
Ass
ocia
tes,
LL
C/U
SA)
Ris
k Pe
rcep
tion
in C
ompl
ex
Rem
edia
tion
Proj
ects
: R
econ
stru
ctin
g D
ecis
ion-
Mak
ing.
M
. Dui
jn, G
.J. E
llen,
M. S
parr
evik
, A.
Oen
, and
A. S
lob.
Mic
hael
Dui
jn (T
NO
/The
Net
herla
nds)
Pier
s 24
and
25
Mar
ine
Sedi
men
t R
emed
iatio
n Ch
alle
nges
and
So
lutio
ns, T
acom
a, W
ashi
ngto
n.
B. E
vans
and
R. M
oore
.R
ick
Moo
re (H
art C
row
ser,
Inc.
/USA
)
Appl
icat
ion
of a
Chi
tin-A
men
ded
Sedi
men
t Cov
er in
a S
hallo
w P
ond
at A
berd
een
Prov
ing
Gro
und.
M
.C. C
iarlo
, C. P
owel
s, a
nd
J. A
ichr
oth.
Mic
hael
C. C
iarlo
(EA
Engi
neer
ing,
Sc
ienc
e, a
nd T
echn
olog
y, In
c./U
SA)
Appl
icat
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of P
hyto
scre
enin
g an
d D
endr
oche
mic
al M
etho
ds to
Po
llute
d Se
dim
ents
. G
.A. P
asco
e,
C. B
alou
et, J
. Bur
ken,
and
D
. Vro
bles
ky.
Joel
C. B
urke
n (M
isso
uri U
nive
rsity
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Sci
ence
& T
echn
olog
y/U
SA)
Inte
ract
ing
with
Sta
keho
lder
s:
Less
ons
from
the
“Oth
er S
ide.
” K.
R. H
uibr
egts
e.Ka
thry
n R
. Hui
breg
tse
(EN
VIR
ON
/U
SA)
How
to E
ffect
ivel
y In
volv
e St
akeh
olde
rs in
Sed
imen
t M
anag
emen
t. M
. Dui
jn, A
. Oen
, A.
Slo
b, a
nd M
. Spa
rrev
ik.
Adria
an S
lob
(TN
O B
uilt
Envi
ronm
ent
and
Geo
scie
nces
/The
Net
herla
nds)
Chal
leng
es in
Ban
k St
abili
zatio
n fo
r R
emed
iatio
n Pr
ojec
ts: B
alan
cing
En
gine
erin
g an
d N
atur
al R
esou
rces
Co
nsid
erat
ions
in D
esig
n–A
Case
St
udy
on th
e Ka
lam
azoo
Riv
er in
Pl
ainw
ell,
Mic
higa
n. S
. Gar
baci
ak,
T. K
ing,
and
S. H
ansh
ue.
Step
hen
D. G
arba
ciak
(AR
CAD
IS
U.S
., In
c./U
SA)
A Lo
w-P
erm
eabi
lity
Cap
to C
ontr
ol
the
Mig
ratio
n of
Non
aque
ous-
Phas
e Li
quid
s fr
om S
edim
ent t
o Su
rfac
e W
ater
. E. M
cLin
n, M
. Pal
erm
o,
J. R
ice,
and
H. H
inke
.Eu
gene
L. M
cLin
n (R
MT,
Inc.
/USA
)
LUN
CH
Urb
an W
ater
way
s: S
trat
egic
Co
nsid
erat
ions
for A
sses
smen
t,
Rem
edia
tion
and
Res
tora
tion.
A.
S. F
owle
r and
W. G
ala.
Alan
S. F
owle
r (AR
CAD
IS/U
SA)
LUN
CH
LUN
CH
Prel
imin
ary
Eval
uatio
n of
Mer
cury
Bi
oava
ilabi
lity
in B
erry
’s C
reek
, NJ.
D
. Gla
ser,
B. H
enry
, N. K
elsa
ll,
M. M
urph
y, a
nd S
. Bro
wn.
Dav
id G
lase
r (An
chor
QEA
, LLC
/USA
)
Effe
ctiv
e Co
mm
unic
atio
n w
ith
Stak
ehol
ders
Con
cern
ing
Rem
edia
tion
Opt
ions
for S
edim
ent
Site
s. S
.C. N
adea
u.St
even
C. N
adea
u (H
onig
man
Mill
er
Schw
artz
and
Coh
n LL
P/U
SA)
LUN
CH
Red
ucin
g R
iver
Ban
k Er
osio
n R
ates
by
For
est C
anop
y M
anag
emen
t.
B. D
ick,
I. J
ewel
l, an
d P.
Sim
on.
Brya
n M
. Dic
k (A
ECO
M/U
SA)
LUN
CH
The
Kinn
icki
nnic
Riv
er G
reat
Lak
es
Lega
cy A
ct S
edim
ent R
emed
iatio
n Pr
ojec
t: D
esig
n Co
nsid
erat
ions
and
In
nova
tive
Feat
ures
of a
n U
rban
R
iver
Sed
imen
t Cle
anup
. A. V
aidy
a an
d D
. Mal
ly.
Ajit
Vaid
ya (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
An In
tegr
ated
Eva
luat
ion
of
Met
hods
and
App
roac
hes
for
Asse
ssin
g Bi
oava
ilabi
lity
of
Cont
amin
ants
in S
edim
ents
. T.
Iann
uzzi
, D. L
udw
ig, N
. Bon
nevi
e,
J.P.
Doo
dy, S
. Gar
baci
ak, a
nd
P. A
nder
son.
Tim
othy
J. I
annu
zzi (
ARCA
DIS
U.S
., In
c./U
SA)
Opt
imiz
atio
n of
Thi
n-Ca
p D
esig
n fo
r D
ioxi
n R
eten
tion
in S
edim
ents
. M
. Sch
aann
ing
and
S. J
osef
sson
.M
orte
n T.
Sch
aann
ing
(Nor
weg
ian
Inst
itute
for W
ater
Res
earc
h/N
orw
ay)
E5. Effective Communication and Facilitation with Stakeholders
D5. Shoreline Remediation Challenges
C5.C4. Cap Design
B4. Applications of Innovative Characterization B5. Assessment of Urban Waterways
A3. A4. Bioavailability of Contaminants
18
wedneSday aFternoon PlatForm SeSSionSW
edn
eSd
ay
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
1:00
1:25
1:50
2:15
2:40
3:05
LUN
CH
Sedi
men
t Man
agem
ent a
nd
Und
erw
ater
Cul
tura
l Her
itage
. J.
Lau
gese
n, T
. Mos
kela
nd,
J. G
unde
rsen
, and
A. H
auge
.Je
ns L
auge
sen
(Det
Nor
ske
Verit
as
(DN
V)/N
orw
ay)
Trea
tabi
lity
Test
ing
to S
uppo
rt
Biod
egra
datio
n of
Chl
orin
ated
Be
nzen
es a
nd H
ydro
carb
ons
in a
n En
gine
ered
Sed
imen
t Cap
. T.
A. K
rug,
P. N
icho
lson
, D. M
ajor
, J.
Rob
erts
, D. H
imm
elhe
ber,
E.
Gla
za, a
nd C
. Kie
hl-S
imps
on.
Thom
as A
. Kru
g (G
eosy
ntec
Co
nsul
tant
s/Ca
nada
)
Min
imiz
ing
the
Pote
ntia
l for
Se
dim
ent R
econ
tam
inat
ion
and
Asso
ciat
ed L
iabi
lity
from
St
orm
wat
er S
yste
m S
ourc
es.
E.W
. Str
ecke
r, M
. Lei
senr
ing,
B.
Ste
ets,
and
M. Q
uiql
ey.
Eric
W. S
trec
ker (
Geo
synt
ec
Cons
ulta
nts/
USA
)
Addi
tion
of A
ctiv
ated
Car
bon
to S
edim
ents
Red
uces
Bi
oacc
umul
atio
n of
Chl
orda
ne
and
DD
T an
d Its
Met
abol
ites
to
Nea
nthe
s ar
enac
eode
ntat
a.
J.M
. Tho
mps
on, C
.-H. H
sieh
, E.
M.-L
. Jan
ssen
, R.G
. Lut
hy,
A.M
.P. O
en, a
nd T
.P. H
oele
n.Ja
y M
. Tho
mps
on (S
tanf
ord
Uni
vers
ity/U
SA)
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
ts a
t a N
aval
Ba
se in
Nor
way
–Ris
k As
sess
men
t an
d R
emed
iatio
n Ac
tion
Plan
. H
. Bjo
rnst
ad, E
. Sm
ette
, and
V.
Elle
fsen
.H
aral
d Bj
orns
tad
(Nor
weg
ian
Def
ense
Est
ates
Age
ncy/
Nor
way
)
Sust
aina
ble
Man
agem
ent o
f Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ents
: Am
oras
Ca
se S
tudy
in th
e Po
rt o
f Ant
wer
p.
A. R
apis
ardi
, A. P
engo
, S.E
. Api
tz,
and
J. V
ande
keyb
us.
Anto
nino
Rap
isar
di (M
WH
SpA
/Ital
y)
Inve
stig
atin
g th
e Pe
rfor
man
ce
of A
ctiv
e M
ater
ials
Am
ende
d to
Cl
ay M
iner
als
for S
eque
ster
ing
Sedi
men
t Con
tam
inan
ts.
C. M
essn
er a
nd C
. Gru
den.
Cynd
ee L
. Gru
den
(Uni
vers
ity o
f To
ledo
/USA
)
Dev
elop
men
t of a
Rea
listic
Ris
k As
sess
men
t Con
cept
ual S
ite M
odel
fo
r an
Urb
an R
iver
Sed
imen
t Site
. B.
Ruf
fle, L
. Bra
dley
, K. D
uroc
her,
and
L. F
rais
er.
Bets
y R
uffle
(AEC
OM
/USA
)
ITR
C’s
Inco
rpor
atin
g Bi
oava
ilabi
lity
Cons
ider
atio
ns in
to th
e Ev
alua
tion
of C
onta
min
ated
Sed
imen
t Site
s.
J. S
utte
r, K.
McE
voy,
J. C
argi
ll,
and
S. H
ill.
Jenn
ifer S
utte
r (O
rego
n D
epar
tmen
t of
Env
ironm
enta
l Qua
lity/
USA
)
Eval
uatio
n of
Pot
entia
l Lon
g-Te
rm
Ris
ks F
ollo
win
g D
redg
ing
of B
uffa
lo
Riv
er. C
.E. R
uiz,
P.R
. Sch
roed
er, a
nd
J.P.
Kre
iting
er.
Carlo
s E.
Rui
z (U
.S. A
rmy
Corp
s of
En
gine
ers/
USA
)
Use
of C
hem
ical
Mas
s-to
-Sed
imen
t Vo
lum
e R
elat
ions
hips
as
an
Effe
ctiv
e To
ol to
Bui
ld S
take
hold
er
Cons
ensu
s fo
r Defi
ning
a S
edim
ent
Rem
oval
Are
a. D
. Liv
erm
ore
and
T. S
late
r.D
avid
G. L
iver
mor
e (I
nteg
ral
Cons
ultin
g, In
c./U
SA)
Envi
ronm
enta
l Enh
ance
men
ts a
nd
Nav
igat
ion
Infr
astr
uctu
re.
T. F
rede
tte, C
. For
an, B
. Sue
del,
S.
Bra
sfiel
d, C
. Ban
ks, a
nd
J. L
inds
ay.
Thom
as J
. Fre
dette
(U.S
. Arm
y Co
rps
of E
ngin
eers
/USA
)
Sorp
tion
of P
AHs
to H
ydro
phob
ic
Biop
olym
ers
and
Sand
Pro
duct
s Am
ende
d w
ith S
ame.
L. Z
. Sitz
es
and
D. R
eibl
e.Li
bert
y Z.
Sitz
es (U
nive
rsity
of T
exas
at
Aus
tin/U
SA)
Asse
ssm
ent a
nd A
pplic
abili
ty o
f Be
nton
ite-B
ased
Cap
ping
and
In
Situ
Tre
atm
ent o
f Con
tam
inat
ed
Sedi
men
ts in
the
Gow
anus
Can
al.
J.A.
Col
lins
and
J.H
. Hul
l.Jo
hn H
. Hul
l (Aq
uaBl
ok, L
td./U
SA)
BREA
KBR
EAK
Effe
ctiv
enes
s of
Act
ivat
ed C
arbo
n an
d Bi
ocha
r in
Red
ucin
g th
e Ph
ysic
oche
mic
al a
nd B
iolo
gica
l Av
aila
bilit
y of
PCD
D/F
s in
Soi
ls/
Sedi
men
ts. Y
. Cha
i, R
.J. C
urrie
, J.
W. D
avis
, G. M
artin
, and
M. W
ilken
.Yu
nzho
u (J
oe) C
hai (
The
Dow
Ch
emic
al C
ompa
ny/U
SA)
Impr
ovin
g Ch
arac
teri
zatio
n an
d R
emed
iatio
n of
Con
tam
inat
ed
Riv
er S
edim
ents
with
Les
sons
fr
om th
e Fi
eld
of R
iver
Res
tora
tion:
Ex
ampl
es fr
om D
eer C
reek
, Ca
lifor
nia,
and
the
Trin
ity R
iver
, Te
xas.
M.R
. Tom
pkin
s.M
ark
Tom
pkin
s (N
ewFi
elds
Riv
er
Basi
n Se
rvic
es, L
LC/U
SA)
Lab-
Scal
e D
emon
stra
tion
of a
N
ovel
Sed
imen
t Cap
Des
igne
d to
Enc
oura
ge H
ydro
carb
on
Deg
rada
tion.
F. Y
an, D
. Rei
ble,
M
. Sun
, G. L
owry
, and
K. G
rego
ry.
Fei Y
an (U
nive
rsity
of T
exas
at
Aust
in/U
SA)
Del
inea
ting
Site
-Spe
cific
Ris
k-Ba
sed
Sedi
men
t Ris
k Zo
nes
at a
n M
GP
Site
. R.H
. Web
er, R
.G. F
ox,
J.M
. Kah
ler,
M.W
. Kie
rski
, and
C.
A. M
enzi
e.R
icha
rd W
eber
(Nat
ural
Res
ourc
e Te
chno
logy
, Inc
./USA
)
BREA
K
Chal
leng
es o
f Con
duct
ing
an E
arly
R
emov
al A
ctio
n w
ithin
the
Low
er
Duw
amis
h W
ater
way
Sup
erfu
nd
Site
. W. H
anse
n, J
. Flo
rer,
and
R
. Kur
oiw
a.W
arre
n H
anse
n (W
indw
ard
Envi
ronm
enta
l, LL
C/U
SA)
Eval
uatio
n of
Act
ive
and
Pass
ive
Caps
for C
onta
min
ated
Est
uari
ne
Sedi
men
ts R
emed
iatio
n.
B. S
harm
a, D
.J. L
ane,
P. F
avar
a,
K.H
. Gar
dner
, and
J.S
. Mel
ton.
Bhaw
ana
Shar
ma
(CH
2M H
ILL/
USA
)
Rem
edia
ting
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
ts
Cont
aini
ng A
rche
olog
ical
Res
ourc
es
from
the
Med
ieva
l Age
s: A
Cas
e fr
om
the
Port
of B
erge
n, N
orw
ay. H
. Kry
vi,
O. S
olda
l, A.
Moe
Gje
sdal
, O. M
agne
N
ottv
eit,
T. L
undh
, H. H
jelle
, and
P.
Vik
se.
Haa
kon
Kryv
i (H
orda
land
Cou
nty/
Nor
way
)
Asse
ssin
g In
Situ
Bio
avai
labi
lity
via
Pass
ive
Sam
plin
g: O
verc
omin
g th
e Pi
tfalls
. D. R
eibl
e, X
. Lu,
and
D
. Lam
pert
.D
anny
Rei
ble
(Uni
vers
ity o
f Tex
as/
USA
)
Dre
dged
Mat
eria
l Sus
pend
ed
Sedi
men
t Plu
me
Mon
itori
ng U
sing
AD
CP. P
. Dra
gos,
R. L
eitc
h,
J. M
acka
y, a
nd C
. Rog
ers.
Paul
Dra
gos
(Bat
telle
/USA
)
BREA
K
Geo
mor
phol
ogic
Cha
ract
eriz
atio
n:
Com
pari
son
of th
e Lo
wer
Fox
and
Ti
ttaba
was
see
Riv
er.
P. S
imon
, P.
Sim
on, D
. Ric
hard
son,
B. D
ick,
B.
Bak
er, a
nd R
. Hey
.Pe
ter M
. Sim
on (A
nn A
rbor
Tec
hnic
al
Serv
ices
, Inc
./USA
)
BREA
K
E6. Risk-Based Management and Cleanup Decisions
D6. Challenges of Ports and Harbors Management D7.
C5. Capping: Bench-Scale Studies
B5. Assesssment of Urban Waterways B6. Passive Samplers
A4. Bioavailability of Contaminants A5. Geomorphology-Guided Sediment
19
Wed
neSd
ay
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
3:30
3:55
4:20
4:45
5:10
The
Ris
k-Ba
sed
Sele
ctio
n of
Co
ntam
inat
ed D
redg
ed M
ater
ial
Man
agem
ent S
trat
egie
s in
Eur
ope.
J.
Van
deke
ybus
, L. H
orck
man
s,
L. D
uerin
ckx,
S.E
. Api
tz, A
. Rap
isar
di,
and
A. P
engo
.An
toni
no R
apis
ardi
(MW
H S
pA/It
aly)
Eval
uatio
n an
d M
odifi
catio
n of
the
Dre
dgin
g El
utri
ate
Test
. D.F.
Hay
es,
K.K.
Sal
kuti,
and
G.B
. Gum
mad
i.Ki
ran
Kum
ar S
alku
ti (U
nive
rsity
of
Loui
sian
a at
Laf
ayet
te/U
SA)
Rea
ctiv
e Ca
ppin
g M
at D
evel
opm
ent
and
Eval
uatio
n fo
r Seq
uest
erin
g Co
ntam
inan
ts in
Sed
imen
t.
G.A
.Tra
cey,
J.J
. Sw
anko
, K.
H. G
ardn
er, J
.S. M
elto
n,
S. G
reen
woo
d, a
nd A
.L. H
awki
ns.
Gre
gory
A. T
race
y (S
AIC/
USA
)
Pass
ive
Sam
plin
g w
ith P
OM
to
Det
erm
ine
Free
ly D
isso
lved
PCB
, PA
H, a
nd O
ther
HO
C Co
ncen
trat
ions
at
pg/
L (p
art-
per-
quad
rilli
on)
Conc
entr
atio
ns. S
.B. H
awth
orne
, C.
B. G
raba
nski
, and
D.J
. Mill
er.
Stev
en B
. Haw
thor
ne (U
nive
rsity
of
Nor
th D
akot
a/U
SA)
Proc
ess
Geo
mor
phol
ogy:
Ap
plic
atio
ns in
Sed
imen
t Sam
plin
g St
rate
gy D
evel
opm
ent.
A. B
runt
on
and
R. N
airn
.Al
ex B
runt
on (W
.F. B
aird
and
As
soci
ates
/Can
ada)
Sedi
men
t Rem
edy
Dec
isio
ns O
ver
the
Past
Dec
ade–
How
Hav
e Th
ings
Ch
ange
d? J
.P. D
oody
, D. P
enni
man
, K.
Geh
l, an
d E.
Gon
deck
.J.
Pau
l Doo
dy (A
RCA
DIS
U.S
., In
c./
USA
)
Res
idua
l Sed
imen
ts fr
om B
ucke
t D
redg
ing
Ope
ratio
ns. D
.F. H
ayes
.D
onal
d F.
Hay
es (U
nive
rsity
of
Loui
sian
a at
Laf
ayet
te/U
SA)
Res
ults
of a
Fie
ld-S
cale
Pilo
t Tes
t of
a R
eact
ive
Core
Mat
to A
ddre
ss
Coal
Tar
See
page
. S.M
. Car
roll,
M
. Oki
n, W
. Has
wel
l, an
d W
. Fis
her.
Sean
M. C
arro
ll (H
aley
& A
ldric
h,
Inc.
/USA
)
Pass
ive
Sam
plin
g M
etho
ds fo
r the
M
easu
rem
ent o
f Org
anic
Che
mic
al
Cont
amin
atio
n fr
om th
e O
ffsho
re
Oil
Indu
stry
. C. H
arm
an, S
. Bro
oks,
I.
Alla
n, K
. Tho
mas
, K.E
. Tol
lefs
en,
and
M. G
rung
.Ch
risto
pher
Har
man
(Nor
weg
ian
Inst
itute
for W
ater
Res
earc
h (N
IVA)
/N
orw
ay)
Geo
phys
ical
Tec
hniq
ues
for
Sedi
men
t Inv
ento
ries
, Map
ping
In
-Riv
er G
eom
orph
olog
y an
d Se
dim
ent T
rans
port
. R
.J. F
eldp
ausc
h, K
. Enr
ight
, and
P.
M. S
imon
.R
ober
t J. F
eldp
ausc
h (T
etra
Tec
h EC
, In
c./U
SA)
Dev
elop
ing
Sedi
men
t Cle
anup
Le
vels
and
Oth
er M
easu
res
to
Eval
uate
Rem
edia
l Alte
rnat
ives
at
Supe
rfun
d Si
tes.
S.J
. Ells
.St
ephe
n El
ls (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Defi
ning
Env
iron
men
tal E
ndpo
ints
an
d En
d-St
ate
Visi
on a
t Sed
imen
t Si
tes:
Acc
ompl
ishi
ng W
hat i
s Ac
hiev
able
. W. G
ala,
J. H
all,
and
J.
Nic
olet
te.
Will
iam
R. G
ala
(Che
vron
Ene
rgy
Tech
nolo
gy C
ompa
ny/U
SA)
Char
acte
rizi
ng C
onta
min
ant
Res
idua
ls F
ollo
win
g En
viro
nmen
tal
Dre
dgin
g. M
.A. M
ills,
R. B
renn
er,
J. L
azor
chak
, J. M
eier
, and
S.
Cie
niaw
ski.
Mar
c A.
Mill
s (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Effe
ctiv
enes
s of
Rea
ctiv
e Ca
ppin
g fo
r NAP
L-Im
pact
ed S
edim
ent–
A R
evie
w o
f Pilo
t Stu
dy R
esul
ts.
J. C
lock
, D. B
essi
ngpa
s,
M. G
rave
ldin
g, a
nd W
. Man
cron
i.Je
ffrey
A. C
lock
(Ele
ctric
Pow
er
Res
earc
h In
stitu
te/U
SA)
Use
of P
olye
thyl
ene
Pass
ive
Sam
pler
s to
Est
imat
e W
ater
Co
lum
n PC
B Co
ncen
trat
ions
at t
he
Palo
s Ve
rdes
Sup
erfu
nd P
rior
to
Rem
edia
tion.
R.M
. Bur
gess
, R
. Loh
man
n, P
. Lue
y, M
. Cha
rpen
tier,
M. N
oble
, K.J
. Ros
enbe
rger
, C.
R. S
herw
ood,
and
C. W
hite
.R
ober
t M. B
urge
ss (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Poly
oxym
ethy
lene
Pas
sive
Sa
mpl
ers
to A
sses
s Ch
ange
s in
Bi
oava
ilabi
lity
in th
e Fi
eld
afte
r Ac
tivat
ed C
arbo
n Am
endm
ent.
B.
Bec
king
ham
, P. P
aul,
and
U
. Gho
sh.
Barb
ara
Beck
ingh
am (U
nive
rsity
of
Mar
ylan
d Ba
ltim
ore
Coun
ty/U
SA)
Eval
uatio
n of
Sed
imen
t Res
idua
ls
in O
U3
of th
e Fo
x R
iver
Sed
imen
t R
emed
iatio
n Pr
ojec
t. S
. McG
ee,
G. B
raun
, C. P
atm
ont,
G. B
erke
n, a
nd
J. L
awso
n.St
ephe
n W
. McG
ee (T
etra
Tec
h EC
, In
c./U
SA)
Eval
uatio
n of
Ban
k St
abili
ty a
nd
Entr
ainm
ent R
ate
Usi
ng M
ultip
le
Asse
ssm
ent T
ools
. R. M
cCul
loch
, D
. Lau
tenb
ach,
T. D
ekke
r, B.
Dic
k,
I. Je
wel
l, I.
Pesz
len,
and
P. S
imon
.D
anie
l Lau
tenb
ach
(Lim
noTe
ch, I
nc./
USA
) & B
ryan
Dic
k (A
ECO
M/U
SA)
Eval
uatin
g Se
dim
ent C
ap
Perf
orm
ance
with
PD
MS
Profi
lers
: Fi
eld
Stud
y of
McC
orm
ick
and
Baxt
er S
uper
fund
Site
. D. R
eibl
e,
L. K
uria
kose
, H. B
lisch
ke, a
nd
S. M
anza
no.
Dan
ny R
eibl
e (U
nive
rsity
of T
exas
/U
SA)
Effe
ctiv
e R
isk
Man
agem
ent a
t Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent S
ites
and
the
Plag
ue o
f Wis
hful
Thi
nkin
g.
T.S.
Brid
ges
and
C. P
atm
ont.
Todd
S. B
ridge
s (U
.S. A
rmy
Corp
s of
En
gine
ers/
USA
)
Sedi
men
t Qua
lity
in th
e U
pper
St.
Cl
air R
iver
: Evi
denc
e of
Effe
ctiv
e R
emed
iatio
n. L
.A. R
ichm
an,
C. M
arvi
n, a
nd D
. Mila
ni.
Lisa
A. R
ichm
an (O
ntar
io M
inis
try
of
Envi
ronm
ent/C
anad
a)
A La
rge-
Scal
e Pi
lot S
tudy
: Ac
tivat
ed C
arbo
n Th
in C
appi
ng in
th
e G
renl
andf
jord
s, N
orw
ay. E
. Eek
, K.
Am
stae
tter,
G. C
orne
lisse
n,
M.T
. Sch
aann
ing,
B.A
. Bey
lich,
and
J.
S. G
unna
rsso
n.Es
pen
Eek
(Nor
weg
ian
Geo
tech
nica
l In
stitu
te/N
orw
ay
Inno
vativ
e In
Situ
Mea
sure
men
t of
Vert
ical
PCB
Con
cent
ratio
n Pr
ofile
s U
sing
Pas
sive
Sam
pler
s.
A.M
.P. O
en, E
.M.L
. Jan
ssen
, and
R
.G. L
uthy
.Am
y M
.P. O
en (N
orw
egia
n G
eote
chni
cal I
nstit
ute/
Nor
way
)
Inte
grat
ing
Nat
ural
Cha
nnel
Des
ign
Prin
cipl
es in
to Y
our R
emed
iatio
n Pl
an. B
. Dic
k, I.
Jew
ell,
P. S
imon
, an
d R
. Hey
.Br
yan
M. D
ick
(AEC
OM
/USA
)
E6. Risk-Based Management and Cleanup Decisions
D7. Resuspension and Residuals
C6. Capping: Pilot Studies
B6. Passive Samplers
A5. Geomorphology-Guided Sediment Characterization and Remediation
5:45
–7:1
5 p.
m. G
roup
2 P
oste
r Ses
sion
s an
d R
ecep
tion
Pres
ente
rs w
ill b
e at
thei
r dis
play
s to
dis
cuss
thei
r wor
k; G
roup
2 S
essi
ons
and
pres
enta
tions
ar
e lis
ted
on p
ages
20–
23. A
rece
ptio
n w
ill b
e se
rved
dur
ing
the
pres
enta
tions
.
20
a6. Contaminant Partitioning and transport in Sediments
1. Numerical Modeling of Coupled Contaminant Transport through Reactive Core Mats. D. Meric, A. Alshawabkeh, T.C. Sheahan, and J.P. Shine.Dogus Meric (Northeastern University/USA)
2. Consolidation Water Flow Rate from Sediments for Cap Performance Modeling. R. Kulasingam, F. Zhu, J.F. Beech, P. de Haven, and L.K. Brussel.Ramachandran Kulasingam (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
3. The Effect of Ebullition-Facilitated Transport on the Migration of Nonaqueous-Phase Liquids through an Amended Sand Cap at Laboratory Scale. E.L. McLinn, T.R. Stolzenburg, and K. McCord.Eugene L. McLinn (RMT, Inc./USA)
4. Long-Term Consistency of PCBs in Sequential Batch Leaching Tests for Capping Design. C.R. Barnes, L. Putnam, and T.L. Cridge.Charles R. Barnes (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
a7. decision analysis modeling and tools
5. Use of a Spatial Decision-Support System to Integrate GIS, Environmental Models, Decision-Analysis Tools, and Stakeholder Preferences. K. von Stackelberg, S. Zemba, R. Lester, B. Yatsalo, and V. Didenko.Katherine von Stackelberg (Environmental Risk Sciences, LLP/USA)
a9. Geospatial delineation of Remediation footprint
6. Using Multiple Lines of Evidence to Define the Boundary of a Cap. M. Novak and J. Maul.Madi Novak (Maul Foster & Alongi, Inc./USA)
7. Case Study—Accelerated Sediment Removal Action Using Civil 3-D Modeling. R. Kenyon and M. Singer.Ronald Kenyon (Shaw E&I, Inc./USA)
8. 3-Dimensional Interpolation of TarGOST Surveys to Delineate Tar Lenses in Connecticut River Sediments. C. Abate, R. Johnson, R. Cleary, and P. LaGoy.Christopher Abate (AMEC Earth & Environmental, Inc./USA)
9. Geostatistics and GIS: Decision-Support Tools for Contaminated Sediment Site Assessments and Remedial Planning. J. Schofield, P. Goovaerts, J. Telech, M. Middlebrook Amos, and L. Blume.Judith Schofield (CSC/USA)
B6. Passive Samplers
10. A Comparison of Bioaccumulation from Field and Laboratory-Inoculated Sediments and Predictions from Porewater Measurements. X. Lu, A. Skwarski, B. Drake, D.D. Reible, and G. Lotufo.Xiaoxia Lu (University of Texas/USA)
11. Deep-Water Disposal of Polluted Sediments Measuring the Spread of Contaminants by Comprehensive Passive Sampling. C. Harman and M. Schaanning.Christopher Harman (Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA)/Norway)
B7. tools for innovative field Sampling and in Situ measurements
12. Assessment of Ecological Water Quality in Polluted Harbours. C. Schipper and A. Gittenberger.Cor Schipper (Deltares/The Netherlands)
13. Innovative Sediment Sampling and Handling Methods for AVS and SEM Analysis. E.P. Kovatch and J.T. Barbeau.Eric P. Kovatch (Natural Resource Technology, Inc./USA)
14. Method Optimization for Sampling of Very Soft Noncohesive, Surficial Sediments in the Profundal Zone of Onondaga Lake. M. Hennessey and D. Babcock.Martin Hennessey (Parsons/USA)
15. Core Sampling: Influence on Sediment Profile Interpretation. P. McGuire, D. Richardson, and C. McGuire.Patrick McGuire (Tetra Tech/USA)
16. Customized Sampling Methods and Devices for Challenging Estuary Sampling Programs. S.R. Compston, S.K. Hill, P.J. de Haven, and P.P. Brussock.Scott R. Compston (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
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Display 7:00 a.m. Wednesday–1:00 p.m. Thursday • Presentations/Reception Wednesday, 5:45–7:15 p.m.
The following posters will be on display from Wednesday morning through 1:00 p.m. Thursday midday. During the Poster Session/Reception period Wednesday evening, presenters will be present at their displays to discuss their work. Presentations and the poster board number assigned to each appear below.
A6. Contaminant Partitioning and Transport in SedimentsA7. Decision Analysis Modeling and ToolsA9. Geospatial Delineation of Remediation FootprintB6. Passive SamplersB7. Tools for Innovative Field Sampling and In Situ MeasurementsB8. Noncontaminant StressorsB9. Contaminant Source ID and ControlC4. Cap DesignC5. Capping: Bench-Scale StudiesC6. Capping: Pilot StudiesC7. Environmental Dredging: Experience and Design
C8. Dredge Material DewateringC9. Dredge Material Disposal and ContainmentC10. Beneficial Use of Contaminated SedimentsD6. Challenges of Ports and Harbors ManagementD7. Resuspension and ResidualsD8. Hudson River Remediation ProgramD9. Great Lakes Legacy Act and Great Lakes Restoration InitiativeD10. Case Studies: Evaluations of Remedial EffectivenessE6. Risk-Based Management and Cleanup DecisionsE8. Defining Background and Establishing Remediation GoalsE10. Adaptive Management
21
17. Development of a Laboratory Test to Evaluate NAPL Mobility in Sediments. M. Erten, M. Goff, D. Reible, B. Gilbert, and C. El-Mohtar.Mustafa Erten (University of Texas/USA)
18. Lessons from the Field: Practical Aspects of Sediment Sampling and Implementation of Integrated Sediment Quality Assessments. J. Barkach, D. McCauley, E. Schneider, and M. Garton.John H. Barkach (Great Lakes Environmental Center/USA)
B8. noncontaminant Stressors
19. Development of Odor-Oriented Sediment Remediation Strategy for a Polluted Waterway in Hong Kong. L. Tsui and P. Lee.Yuk Ki (Chris) Choi (AECOM/Hong Kong)
20. The Role of Sediment Acclimation in Toxicity Testing and Contaminant Availability. W.W. Gardiner, J.Q. Word, and M.R. Pinza.William W. Gardiner (NewFields Northwest LLC/USA)
21. Sediment Holding Time Issues Relative to the Microtox(sup)R Test. M. Pinza, J. Word, T. Schuh, and S. Watts.Jack Q. Word (NewFields Northwest, LLC/USA)
B9. Contaminant Source id and Control
22. Evaluations of the Sources of Contamination in Sediment Cores from Tenkiller Reservoir (Oklahoma, USA). R.L. Olsen, J.B. Fisher, F.M. Soster, and M. Smith.Roger L. Olsen (CDM/USA)
23. Metals as a Proxy to Identify Sediment Origins Adjacent to a San Francisco Serpentine Outcrop. S. Clough and H. Costa.Stephen R. Clough (Haley & Aldrich, Inc./USA)
24. Multisite Ambient Investigation for MGPs on the Chicago River. C. Menzie, M. Kierski, T. Saba, S. Meyer, E. Kovatch, J. Kahler, R. Fox, and J.Kern.Sarah Meyer (Natural Resource Technology, Inc./USA)
25. Environmental Forensics for PAH Source Management: Pavement Sealants and Sediments. J. Pietari, K. O’Reilly, and P. Boehm.Jaana Pietari (Exponent, Inc./USA)
26. PAHs and Parking Lots: A Field Study on PAHs Exported from Sealed and Unsealed Parking Lots. A. Watts, R. Roseen, T. Ballestero, J. Houle, and T. Puls.Kevin H. Gardner (University of New Hampshire/USA)
C4. Cap design
27. Isolation Cap Modeling for Republic Site Sediments, Elizabeth River, Virginia. M.S. Dortch.Mark S. Dortch (Moffatt & Nichol/USA)
28. Evaluation of pH-Buffering Amendments for In Situ Capping of Hyperalkaline Contaminated Sediments. D. Vlassopoulos, J. Goin, B. Bessinger, C. Kiehl-Simpson, and E. Glaza.Dimitri Vlassopoulos (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
29. Development and Implementation of a Subaqueous Capping Technology for Precision Placement of Various Aggregates and Media. D. MacDougall.David MacDougall (D.A. Collins Environmental Services, LLC/USA)
30. Cap Design Life for Physical Stability and Chemical Isolation. P. LaRosa, M. Palermo, D. Reible, J. Verduin, and K. Russell.Paul LaRosa (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
31. Modular Prefabricated Sediment Treatment Layers. J. Fiske and C. Hornaday.Chuck Hornaday (CETCO/USA)
32. Selenium and PAH Removal Media and Methods of Deployment. Z. Wang, J. Olsta, and J. Darlington.James T. Olsta (CETCO/USA)
33. Amended Cap Design for Control of VOCs, SVOCs, Mercury, and pH for Onondaga Lake. C. Kiehl-Simpson, E. Glaza, D. Reible, G.V. Lowry, and D. Vlassopoulos.Caryn Kiehl-Simpson (Parsons/USA)
34. Organophilic Clay Amendment to Sediment Caps as a Method of In Situ Treatment for Organic Compounds in Groundwater. E.J. Schwarz and B. Hung.Ben Hung (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
35. Minimizing Contaminated Flow to Surface Water: Model Evaluation of Active Cap Designs. J. Hull, J. Collins, J. Mueller, and J. Moreno.John H. Hull (AquaBlok, Ltd./USA)
C5. Capping: Bench-Scale Studies
36. PCB-Impacted Sediment Stabilization/Alkaline Dehalogenation vs. In Situ Capping. A.V. Zapp and D. Biehle.Anthony V. Zapp (Stantec Consulting Ltd./USA)
37. Dynamic Redox Environments within In Situ Sediment Caps Subject to Advective Flows. D.W. Himmelheber, M. Taillefert, K.D. Pennell, and J.B. Hughes.David W. Himmelheber (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
38. Evaluation of a Laboratory-Scale Bioreactive In Situ Sediment Cap for the Treatment of Organic Contaminants. D.W. Himmelheber, K.D. Pennell, and J.B. Hughes.David W. Himmelheber (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
39. Verification of Aromatic and Heavy Metal Sediment Contaminant Transport in Amended Caps via Isotherm Adsorption and Column Studies. K. Yin, P. Viana, and K. Rockne.Karl J. Rockne (University of Illinois/USA)
40. Evaluation of Sorption Materials for Use in Remediation of Mercury-Contaminated Freshwater Sediments. P. Randall, R. Fimmen, and V. Lal.Paul M. Randall (U.S. EPA/USA)
41. Predicting Long-Term Performance of Active Cap Materials. K.L. Dixon and A.S. Knox.Anna Sophia Knox (Savannah River National Laboratory/USA)
C6. Capping: Pilot Studies
42. In Situ Remediation of Contaminated Sediments—New Approaches for Monitoring Active Caps. A.S. Knox, M. Paller, K. Dixon, and D. Reible.Anna Sophia Knox (Savannah River National Laboratory/USA)
43. The Impact of Capping on Biogas Production in Contaminated Freshwater Sediments. Q. Wang and C. Gruden.Cyndee L. Gruden (University of Toledo/USA)
44. Amendments for the In Situ Remediation of Contaminated Sediments: Evaluation of Potential Environmental Impacts. M. Paller and A. Knox.Michael Paller (Savannah River National Laboratory/USA)
45. Pilot Test for Using Dolomite in Engineered Caps for the Fox River Sediment Remediation Project. R.J. Feeney, K. McCaslin, J. Grosskopf, R.H. Weber, and G. Kincaid.Richard J. Feeney (Tetra Tech EC, Inc./USA)
46. The Use of Organoclay Mats to Address MGP Residuals in a Tidal Estuarine Environment. R. McCarthy, M. McCabe, K. Gardner, and S. Greenwood.Ryan McCarthy (AECOM/USA)
47. Assessing the Feasibility of Using Navigation-Dredged Material for Mega-Scale Capping Projects. T.J. Fredette, M.L. Habel, S. Wolf, A. Hopkins, D. Lewis, S. Wilson, C. Wright, J. Ryther, J. Germano, and D. Carey.Steven Wolf (USACE/USA)
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C7. environmental dredging: experience and design
48. Fish Passage Accommodated during Sediment Removal within the Lower Saranac River. M. Biondolillo, M. Gravelding, T. Steiner, and G. Rose.Matthew Biondolillo (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
49. Sediment Excavation Enclosure: Achieving Practical Design in Response to Technical Challenges. J.R. Beaver, A. Hunt, C. Becker, A. Chwalibog, P.J. Bluestein, and P. Brzozowski.James R. Beaver (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
50. New Sediment Remediation and Zebra Mussel Removal Technology Results from a Confined Space Project at Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory (KAPL). T.J. Kryzak.Thomas J. Kryzak (Environmental Lunch Box Technology/USA)
51. Freeze-Dredging and Coking—Thermal Treatment for Reuse of Tar-Contaminated Material. S. Knutsson and S.C. Rostmark.Susanne C. Rostmark (Lulea University of Technology/Sweden)
52. Sand Recovery for Beach Renourishment during Waterway Cleansing: Holmes Beach Canals. L.A. Prieto-Portar.Luis A. Prieto-Portar (Florida International University/USA)
C8. dredge material dewatering
53. Innovative Bench Testing for the Design of a Sediment Processing and Geotextile Tube Dewatering System. T. Drachenberg, X. Huang, J. Meagher, and N. O’Sullivan.Thomas C. Drachenberg (Parsons/USA)
54. Sediment Dewatering and Disposal Considerations in an Urban Setting. J. Woon, O. Pekin, and F. Bernardeau.Michael L. Bachand (CDM/USA)
55. Storage Capacity Optimisation of Tailing Ponds by Means of Mechanical Dewatering. S. Pensaert and K. Van de Velde.Stany Pensaert (DEC NV/Belgium)
C9. dredge material disposal and Containment
56. Comprehensive Dredging Management Solutions for an LNG Facility on Savannah Harbor, Georgia, USA. K. Badu-Tweneboah, J.D. Quiroz, and V.M. Damasceno.Kwasi Badu-Tweneboah (Geosyntec Consultants/USA)
57. Sediment Processing for the Passaic River Phase I Removal Project. B. Kellems, B. Orchard, S. Dunn, P. Spadaro, R. Dielhof, H. van Dam, P.J. Bluestein, and P. Brzozowski.Barry L. Kellems (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
58. Rail Transportation of Radioactive, Hazardous, and Non-RCRA Sediments. P. Alcorn, W. Dawson, and W.L. Follett.William Dawson (MHF Services/USA)
C10. Beneficial use of Contaminated Sediments
59. Use of Dredged Sediments from the Duluth/Superior Harbor for Mining and Marginal Land Restoration. L.M. Zanko, M.M. Patelke, D.W. Bowman, M.H. Mahoney, and R.A. Price.Lawrence M. Zanko (University of Minnesota/USA)
d6. Challenges of Ports and Harbors management
60. Action Plan for Managing Contaminated Sediments in Norway: Sandefjord Harbor Case Study. J. Laugesen, T. Moskeland, A. Pettersen, F.B. Aasen, and B. Aschjem.Jens Laugesen (Det Norske Veritas (DNV)/Norway)
61. A PIANC Standard of Practice for Conducting Initial Assessment of Environmental Effects of Navigation and Infrastructure Projects. B.C. Suedel.Burton C. Suedel (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers/USA)
d7. Resuspension and Residuals
62. Spring Creek Hydraulic Dredging: Residual Management, Resuspension Management, and Dredge Completion Criteria. J.L. Childs, G. Hicks, K. Galloway, and D. Mills.John L. Childs (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers/USA)
63. Investigation of Residuals and Implications at Priority 1 Areas for the Randle Reef Sediment Remediation. M. Graham, R. Joyner, and R. Santiago.Matthew Graham (Environment Canada/Canada)
64. Modeling as Information Support for Dredge Residuals on the Lower Fox River OU1 Project. S.G. Lehrke, G.R. Eykholt, D.M. Roznowski, and W.A. Hartman.Stephen G. Lehrke (Foth Infrastructure & Environment, LLC/USA)
65. Stokes’ Law Application to Assess Sediment Residuals. D. Richardson and P. McGuire.Dave Richardson (Tetra Tech/USA)
66. Invalidating Previous Assumptions Concerning Hydrophobic Pollutant Desorption Kinetics from Resuspended Sediments. F.M. Dunnivant.Frank Dunnivant (Whitman College/USA)
67. Real-Time Measurement of Turbidity at United Heckathorn: Implications to the Remedial Design and Post Remediation Controls. J. Spah, T. Frank, P.M. Gschwend, and J. MacFarlane.Julia S. Spahn (CH2M HILL/USA)
68. Reducing Environmental Dredging Uncertainty through Laboratory Studies. D. Hayes and R. Randall.Donald F. Hayes (University of Louisiana at Lafayette/USA)
69. Field Survey of Turbidity during Environmental Dredging. M. Sato, Y. Kurumada, N. Moriya, and T. Uehara.Masahiro Satou (Penta-Ocean Construction Co., Ltd./Japan)
d8. Hudson River Remediation Program
70. Advancements in PCB Fate and Transport Modeling for the Upper Hudson River Superfund Site. P. Israelsson, P. Oates, J. Connolly, A. Bergoffen, K. Ziegler, R. Petroni, L. Zheng, F. Chen, J. Benaman, C. Forrest, and E. Chen.Peter Israelsson (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
71. Hudson River Sediment Processing Facility—Phase 1 Results Summary. J. Corrado and C. Guest.Joseph J. Corrado (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
72. Preserving Majestic Views of the Palisades: Urban Waterfront Revitalization of the Lower Hudson River. T. Loor, S.E. Thompson, P. Adler, D. Rothberg, C. Langewisch, S. Leong, S. Bailey, and W. Davies.Thalia Loor (The Louis Berger Group, Inc./USA)
73. Scow Unavailability Impact on Dredging Productivity in the Hudson River: An Assessment of Scow Queuing. S. McDonald, S. Gbondo-Tugbawa, E. Garvey, J. Atmadja, and B. Conetta.Shane D. McDonald (The Louis Berger Group, Inc./USA)
74. Modeling PCB Bioaccumulation in Hudson River Fish before, during, and after Dredging. E.M. Lamoureux, D. Chiavelli, D. Glaser, and J. Connolly.Elizabeth M. Lamoureux (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
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75. Post-Dredge Sampling and the Depth of Contamination during Phase 1 of the Hudson River Dredging Project. J. Atmadja, E.A. Garvey, C. Prabhu, and B. Conetta.Juliana Atmadja (The Louis Berger Group, Inc./USA)
76. Fish Tissue Concentrations Prediction in the Lower Hudson due to Dredging of the Upper Hudson. J. Atmadja, E.A. Garvey, X. Wang, and B. Conetta.Juliana Atmadja (The Louis Berger Group, Inc./USA)
77. Baseline Fish Monitoring Program for the Hudson River Superfund Site. M.H. Murphy, A. Ayers, J.P. Connolly, and B. Lamoureux.Margaret H. Murphy (Anchor QEA, LLC/USA)
78. A Case Study in Environmental Dredging Coal-Tar Impacted Sediment, Hudson River, Newburgh, New York. L. Gorton, G. Cross, D. MacDougall, M. Gravelding, and W. Mancroni.Lisa A. Gorton (Parsons/USA)
79. Hudson River Remedy: Unremediated PCBs and the Implications for Restoration. J. Field, L. Rosman, T. Brosnan, and B. Foley.Lisa B. Rosman (National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration/USA)
d9. Great Lakes Legacy act and Great Lakes Restoration initiative
80. GLLA Assessment of the Migration of Contaminants from Upstream Sources in the Eighteen Mile Creek AOC. M.B.G. Ross, M.M. Galloway, and J.I. Keiser.Marcia M. Galloway (Ecology and Environment, Inc./USA)
81. The Great Lakes Legacy Act: Capping Research and Field Implementation. H. Williams, A.P. Mucha, S. Cieniawski, M. Tuchman, D. Petrovski, K. Gustavson, M. Mills, E. Barth, R. Ford, P. Schroeder, T. Estes, and C. Ruiz.Heather Williams (U.S. EPA/USA)
d10. Case Studies: evaluations of Remedial effectiveness
82. Application of Site-Specific Sediment Exposure/Risk-Reduction Data for Remediation in an Industrial Lagoon. A. Nicholson, B. Cornaby, G. Tiedemann, S. Krul, J. Hall, and J. Leech.Andrew Nicholson (Integral Consulting/USA)
e6. Risk-Based management and Cleanup decisions
83. Moving Beyond Sediment Screening Guidance Values When Setting Remedial Goals in a Feasibility Study. S. Messur, M. Gravelding, W. Jones, E. Neuhauser, and N. Azzolina.Stuart D. Messur (ARCADIS U.S., Inc./USA)
e8. defining Background and establishing Remediation Goals
84. Acceptance Criteria for a Sunken WWII Submarine with 67 Tonnes of Mercury. J. Laugesen, T. Moskeland, C.E. Hoy-Petersen, and H.P. Mortensholm.Jens Laugesen (Det Norske Veritas (DNV)/Norway)
85. Development of Preliminary Remediation Goals and Areas of Potential Concern at the Portland Harbor Site. E. Blischke.Chip Humphrey (U.S. EPA/USA)
86. Sampling, Ecological Risk-Based Goals, and Remedial Strategy for PCB- and Metal-Contaminated Sediments. K. Gerber, K. Dikeman, T. Donn, K. Johnson, K. Torres, P. LeCheminant, and D. Springer.David Springer (Tetra Tech, Inc./USA)
87. A Proposed Approach to Develop Cleanup Goals Protective of Human and Ecological Health at Great Lakes Legacy Sites with TSCA Material. A.P. Mucha, B. Jones, F. Dillon, D. Shelton, J. Dodds, T. Von Wallmenich, and S. Cieniawski.Amy P. Mucha (U.S. EPA/USA)
88. Characterization of Background and Reference Conditions in the Anacostia River, Washington, DC. P. White, S. MacEwen, J. Burgess, and A. Berry-Washington.Patricia J. White (CH2M HILL/USA)
89. Establishing SMART Sediment Cleanup Goals. R. Darlington, A. Bullard, J. Hardin, and H. Rectanus.Ramona Darlington (Battelle/USA)
e10. adaptive management
90. Alternate Approach for Translating RI Data into a Feasible Remedy. R.J. Scott, L.M. Telesca, and W.C. Hardison.Ryan J. Scott (Haley & Aldrich, Inc./USA)
grouP 2 PoSterS
Wed
neSd
ay
Photographer: Carl PurcellSt. Charles Avenue Streetcar
French Quarter Alley Photographer: Richard Nowitz
24
thurSday morning PlatForm SeSSionSt
Hu
RSd
ay
A Se
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AB
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Sedi
men
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lux,
an
d TM
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Dev
elop
men
t for
the
Nor
th F
ork
Hol
ston
Riv
er. M
. Tan
ner,
V. O
nwue
me,
E. C
urtis
, A. S
hort
elle
, K.
Rob
erts
, and
C. H
unt.
Mar
gare
t Tan
ner (
MAC
TEC
Engi
neer
ing
& C
onsu
lting
, Inc
./USA
)
Peer
Rev
iew
of E
ngin
eeri
ng
Perf
orm
ance
Sta
ndar
ds P
hase
1
Hud
son
Riv
er P
CBs
Dre
dgin
g.
P. F
ugle
vand
, S. G
aron
, T. B
ridge
s,
R. F
ox, G
. Har
tman
, V. M
agar
, P.
Sch
roed
er, a
nd T
. Tho
mps
on.
Paul
F. F
ugle
vand
(Dal
ton,
Olm
sted
&
Fug
leva
nd, I
nc./U
SA)
Envi
ronm
enta
l Dre
dgin
g in
th
e G
reat
Lak
es–T
echn
ique
s,
Tech
nolo
gies
, and
Per
form
ance
. S.
E. C
ieni
awsk
i, A.
Vai
dya,
and
R
. Rul
e.Sc
ott E
. Cie
niaw
ski (
U.S
. EPA
/USA
)
Usi
ng F
iber
Opt
ics
to F
ind
Gro
undw
ater
See
ps in
to S
urfa
ce
Wat
ers.
J. S
elke
r, F.
Selk
er,
A.E.
Chi
n, a
nd D
.A. E
dwar
ds.
Fran
k Se
lker
(Sel
kerM
etric
s, L
LC./
USA
)
PAH
Sed
imen
t/Wat
er P
artit
ioni
ng
for P
itch,
Coa
l/Cok
e, W
ood,
an
d Sa
nd P
artic
les
from
MG
P Se
dim
ents
. S.B
. Haw
thor
ne a
nd
U. G
hosh
.St
even
B. H
awth
orne
(Uni
vers
ity o
f N
orth
Dak
ota/
USA
)
Inco
rpor
atin
g R
ate
of R
ecov
ery
Stud
ies
in T
MD
L Im
plem
enta
tion
and
Com
plia
nce.
E. D
arby
, C.
For
rest
, S. A
nghe
ra,
B. L
amou
reux
, D. G
lase
r, K.
Cur
tis,
A. J
irik,
and
M. A
rms.
Elai
ne D
arby
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/U
SA)
Fact
ors
Dri
ving
Res
uspe
nsio
n du
ring
Hud
son
Riv
er P
hase
1
Dre
dgin
g. J
.P. C
onno
lly, W
. Ku,
and
S.
Hoo
d.Jo
hn P
. Con
nolly
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/
USA
)
Tar a
nd S
edim
ents
Rem
oval
Act
ion
in th
e W
illam
ette
Riv
er, P
ortla
nd,
Ore
gon.
R. W
yatt
and
C. S
tiver
s.R
ober
t J. W
yatt
(NW
Nat
ural
/USA
)
Det
ectin
g G
roun
dwat
er-S
urfa
ce
Wat
er In
tera
ctio
ns U
sing
Fib
er
Opt
ic C
able
s an
d Ch
arac
teri
zing
w
ith th
e Tr
iden
t Pro
be. R
.A. S
hort
, D
.A. E
dwar
ds, A
.E. C
hin,
J.
A. J
ohns
on, J
. Sel
ker,
and
E. T
rail.
Rus
sell
A. S
hort
(Geo
synt
ec
Cons
ulta
nts/
USA
)
PAH
Tra
nspo
rt in
Am
ende
d Se
dim
ent C
aps.
P. G
idle
y, S
. Kw
on,
and
U. G
hosh
.Ph
ilip
Gid
ley
(Uni
vers
ity o
f Mar
ylan
d Ba
ltim
ore
Coun
ty/U
SA)
The
Dec
isio
n to
Rem
edia
te
Sedi
men
ts to
Mee
t TM
DLs
: Pr
iori
tizin
g Im
pact
s, B
enefi
ts, a
nd
Fisc
al R
espo
nsib
ilite
s. S
. Ang
hera
, S.
Cap
pelli
no, E
. Dar
by, K
. Cur
tis,
A. J
irik,
and
M. A
rms.
Shel
ly A
nghe
ra (A
ncho
r QEA
, LLC
/U
SA)
BREA
K
Eval
uatio
n of
PCB
Res
uspe
nsio
n an
d Tr
ansp
ort d
urin
g Ph
ase
1 D
redg
ing
in th
e U
pper
Hud
son
Riv
er. S
.S. G
bond
o-Tu
gbaw
a,
X. W
ang,
E.A
. Gar
vey,
J. A
tmad
ja,
C. A
mat
o, J
. Ofu
ngw
o, A
. Fof
anah
, J.
Ker
n, a
nd B
. Con
etta
.So
lom
on S
. Gbo
ndo-
Tugb
awa
(The
Lo
uis
Berg
er G
roup
Inc.
/USA
)
Site
Con
stra
ints
: The
Key
Fac
tors
In
fluen
cing
Env
iron
men
tal D
redg
ing
Proj
ects
. M.L
. Bac
hand
, D
.E. H
earn
en, a
nd M
. Pop
per.
Mic
hael
L. B
acha
nd (C
DM
/USA
)
Dep
th-P
rofil
ing
of P
AHs
in
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
t Tre
ated
w
ith W
ater
jet T
echn
olog
y U
sing
In
Situ
SPM
E. R
. Str
inge
r, A.
Arc
her,
A.C.
Elm
ore,
H. S
hi, J
. Bur
ken,
and
D
. Rei
ble.
Rya
n St
ringe
r (M
isso
uri U
nive
rsity
of
Sci
ence
& T
echn
olog
y/U
SA)
BREA
KBR
EAK
Curr
ent a
nd P
oten
tial R
elea
se o
f PC
B Co
ngen
ers
from
Sed
imen
t and
W
ater
of I
ndia
na H
arbo
r and
Shi
p Ca
nal.
A. M
artin
ez a
nd
K.C.
Hor
nbuc
kle.
Keri
C. H
ornb
uckl
e (T
he U
nive
rsity
of
Iow
a/U
SA)
Biou
ptak
e St
udy
of a
PCB
-Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent C
appe
d w
ith a
Rea
ctiv
e Co
re M
at. D
. Mer
ic,
M.N
. Rad
, S. B
arbu
to, T
.C. S
heah
an,
A. A
lsha
wab
keh,
and
J.P
. Shi
ne.
Dog
us M
eric
(Nor
thea
ster
n U
nive
rsity
/USA
)
Otta
wa
Riv
er S
edim
ent
Rem
edia
tion:
Dre
dgin
g Ch
alle
nges
an
d So
lutio
ns. S
. Cie
niaw
ski,
J.
Bru
nner
, K. R
oot,
A. S
tant
on, a
nd
T. L
ee.
Jack
Bru
nner
(Tet
ra T
ech/
USA
)
Tech
niqu
es to
Mea
sure
G
roun
dwat
er N
utri
ent I
mpa
cts
on
Surf
ace
Wat
er T
MD
Ls. J
. Lea
ther
, J.
Gue
rrer
o, B
. Cha
dwic
k, a
nd
G. S
kipp
er.
Jam
es M
. Lea
ther
(U.S
. Nav
y/U
SA)
The
Rol
e of
Bac
kgro
und
Conc
entr
atio
ns a
t Urb
an S
edim
ent
Clea
nup
Site
s. T
. Sch
adt a
nd
R. B
ucha
nan.
Tom
Sch
adt (
Anch
or Q
EA, L
LC/U
SA)
Initi
al In
sigh
ts a
bout
Rem
edy
Effe
ctiv
enes
s G
aine
d fr
om H
udso
n R
iver
Pha
se 1
Dre
dgin
g.
J.P.
Con
nolly
, J. B
enam
an, a
nd
W. K
u.Jo
hn P
. Con
nolly
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/
USA
)
Engi
neer
ing
Solu
tions
dur
ing
a Su
cces
sful
Acc
eler
ated
Sed
imen
t R
emov
al in
a T
idal
Cha
nnel
, Ber
ry’s
Cr
eek,
New
Jer
sey.
C. G
reen
e,
M. O
tten,
and
E. T
okar
ski.
Mar
k T.
Otte
n (P
arso
ns/U
SA)
In S
itu M
easu
rem
ents
of P
orew
ater
H
g an
d M
eHg
via
DG
T. D
. Rei
ble,
Y.
S. H
ong,
T. C
hess
, R. L
andi
s, a
nd
G. G
ill.
Dan
ny R
eibl
e (U
nive
rsity
of T
exas
/U
SA)
An In
Situ
Fri
ctio
n-So
und
Prob
e fo
r Map
ping
Par
ticle
Siz
e at
Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent S
ites.
D
.B. C
hadw
ick,
E. A
rias,
and
J.
Rad
ford
.D
. Bar
t Cha
dwic
k (U
.S. N
avy/
USA
)
PCBs
in F
ish
Tiss
ues
at th
e H
udso
n R
iver
PCB
s Su
perf
und
Site
: Rem
edia
l Act
ion
Mon
itori
ng
Res
ults
in P
ersp
ectiv
e.
M. G
reen
berg
, B. C
onet
ta, J
. Fie
ld,
and
J. K
ern.
Mar
c S.
Gre
enbe
rg (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Sedi
men
t Gas
Ebu
llitio
n an
d Fl
ux
Stud
ies
in B
ubbl
y Cr
eek,
Sou
th F
ork
Sout
h Br
anch
, Chi
cago
Riv
er.
P. V
iana
, K. R
ockn
e, a
nd L
. Tha
i.Pr
isci
lla Z
. Via
na (U
nive
rsity
of
Illin
ois/
USA
)
BREA
KBR
EAK
E8.E7. Sediment TMDLs
D8. Hudson River Remediation Program
C7. Environmental Dredging: Experience and Design
B7. Tools for Innovative Field Sampling and In Situ Measurements
A6. Contaminant Partitioning and Transport in Sediments
25
tH
uR
Sda
y
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
10:3
0
10:5
5
11:2
0
11:4
5
12:1
0
12:3
5
Urb
an E
stua
ry R
efer
ence
Are
as–
Sele
ctio
n an
d U
ses.
P.P
. Bru
ssoc
k,
J. D
urda
, and
J.L
. Wol
lenb
erg.
Pete
r P. B
russ
ock
(The
ELM
Gro
up/
USA
)
Mea
suri
ng S
hort
-Ter
m S
ucce
ss:
Phas
e 1
Envi
ronm
enta
l Dre
dgin
g in
th
e H
udso
n R
iver
. B. C
onet
ta,
G. K
law
insk
i, D
. Kin
g, E
.A. G
arve
y,
S. G
bond
o-Tu
gbaw
a, J
. Atm
adja
, R
.B. F
idle
r, C.
Pra
bhu,
X. W
ang,
S.
McD
onal
d, a
nd J
. Ker
n.Be
n Co
netta
and
Gar
y Kl
awin
sky
(U.S
. EPA
/USA
)
Com
plex
Wat
er M
anag
emen
t Co
nsid
erat
ions
dur
ing
Larg
e-Sc
ale
Sedi
men
t Dew
ater
ing.
D. S
teel
e,
T. D
rach
enbe
rg, a
nd P
. Blu
e.D
avid
Ste
ele
(Par
sons
/USA
)
The
Bene
fits
of S
onic
-Ass
iste
d Sa
mpl
ing
Tech
niqu
es fo
r Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent S
ites.
D
. Bar
eham
, M. D
eLon
g, a
nd
H. S
cott.
Pete
r Sim
on (A
nn A
rbor
Tec
hnic
al
Serv
ices
, Inc
.USA
)
Nea
r Rea
l-Ti
me
Perf
orm
ance
St
anda
rd C
ompl
ianc
e An
alys
is
Syst
em Im
plem
enta
tion:
The
H
udso
n R
iver
Sto
ry. J
. Rhe
a,
S. H
affe
y, M
. Mey
ers,
R. G
ibso
n, a
nd
J. S
mith
.Ja
mes
R. R
hea
(Anc
hor Q
EA, L
LC/
USA
)
Det
erm
inin
g Ba
ckgr
ound
Sur
face
W
ater
Con
cent
ratio
ns fo
r the
Po
rtla
nd H
arbo
r Rem
edia
l In
vest
igat
ion.
C. H
awle
y, A
. Woo
d Co
novi
tz, W
. Loc
ke, a
nd L
. Jon
es.
Laur
a Jo
nes
(Int
egra
l Con
sulti
ng/
USA
)
Mon
itori
ng Q
ualit
y of
Life
Pa
ram
eter
s du
ring
Hud
son
Riv
er
Dre
dgin
g. J
.P. D
oody
, T. M
erre
ll, a
nd
R. G
ibso
n.J.
Pau
l Doo
dy (A
RCA
DIS
U.S
., In
c./
USA
)
Vacu
um-B
ag D
ewat
erin
g of
D
redg
ed S
edim
ent.
R.G
. Mill
er.
Rog
er G
. Mill
er (M
iller
Eng
inee
rs &
Sc
ient
ists
/USA
)
No
Gut
s, N
o St
ory:
Map
ping
Se
afoo
d W
aste
Dis
char
ges
with
Se
dim
ent P
rofil
e Im
agin
g.
J. G
erm
ano
and
D. B
row
ning
.Jo
seph
D. G
erm
ano
(Ger
man
o &
As
soci
ates
, Inc
./USA
)
Use
of a
Spa
tial D
ecis
ion
Supp
ort S
yste
m to
Inte
grat
e G
IS,
Envi
ronm
enta
l Mod
els,
Dec
isio
n An
alys
is T
ools
, and
Sta
keho
lder
Pr
efer
ence
s. K
. von
Sta
ckel
berg
, S.
Zem
ba, R
. Les
ter,
B. Y
atsa
lo, a
nd
V. D
iden
ko.
Kath
erin
e vo
n St
acke
lber
g (E
nviro
nmen
tal R
isk
Scie
nces
/USA
)
Det
erm
inat
ion
of S
ite-S
peci
fic
Back
grou
nd B
ased
on
Sedi
men
t Co
re C
hem
ical
Dis
trib
utio
n Tr
ends
. K.
Cra
igie
, G. B
raun
, and
J. H
erzo
g.Ke
ir Cr
aigi
e (T
etra
Tec
h EC
Inc.
/USA
)
A Co
ncep
tual
App
roac
h fo
r Ev
alua
ting
the
Sign
ifica
nce
of
Rem
edia
tion
Goa
l Bas
is a
nd O
ther
Fa
ctor
s on
Rem
edia
l Out
com
es.
A. B
ulla
rd, E
. Foo
te, A
. Max
emch
uk,
and
N. R
icha
rdso
n.N
orm
an R
icha
rdso
n (B
atte
lle/U
SA)
Mul
tivar
iabl
e An
alys
is o
f Wat
er-
Colu
mn
PCB
and
Dre
dgin
g O
pera
tions
Dat
a, H
udso
n R
iver
. J.
W. K
ern,
S. G
bond
o-Tu
gbaw
a,
S. M
cDon
ald,
E.A
. Gar
vey,
and
J.
Atm
adja
.Jo
hn W
. Ker
n (K
ern
Stat
istic
al
Serv
ices
, Inc
./USA
)
Rem
edia
tion
of C
onta
min
ated
Se
dim
ent b
y Co
ncur
rent
Dis
posa
l an
d Co
nsol
idat
ion.
D. H
wan
g.D
aeky
oo H
wan
g (U
RS
Corp
orat
ion/
USA
)
LUN
CH
The
Effe
cts
of S
uspe
nded
Sed
imen
t on
Wal
leye
(San
der v
itreu
s) E
ggs
and
Fry.
B.C
. Sue
del,
C.H
. Lut
z,
J.U
. Cla
rke,
and
D.G
. Cla
rke.
Burt
on C
. Sue
del (
U.S
. Arm
y Co
rps
of E
ngin
eers
/USA
)
Dat
a M
anag
emen
t in
Supp
ort o
f a
Perf
orm
ance
-Bas
ed S
/S C
ontr
act–
Sydn
ey T
ar P
onds
. B. N
oble
, R
. Poi
ntko
ski,
and
J. M
acN
eil.
Bruc
e N
oble
(AEC
OM
/Can
ada)
LUN
CHLU
NCH
The
Use
of P
ore-
Wat
er
Mea
sure
men
ts to
Det
erm
ine
Site
-Sp
ecifi
c R
emed
ial G
oals
. K. S
earc
y Be
ll, J
. Lyn
dall,
M. S
oren
sen,
V.
Mag
ar, a
nd J
. Mor
ris.
Kris
tin S
earc
y Be
ll (E
NVI
RO
N/U
SA)
LUN
CH
LUN
CH
Trea
tabi
lity
Test
ing
to E
nhan
ce
the
Des
ign
of F
ull-
Scal
e Se
dim
ent
Rem
edia
tion
Proj
ects
. B. L
amm
ers,
N
. Gee
vers
, and
H. v
an D
am.
Bast
iaan
Lam
mer
s (S
tuyv
esan
t En
viro
nmen
tal C
ontr
actin
g In
c./U
SA)
Dev
elop
men
t of M
olec
ular
Too
ls
for I
dent
ifyin
g Co
ntam
inan
t and
N
onco
ntam
inan
t Str
esso
rs in
Se
dim
ent T
oxic
ity T
ests
. S. B
ay,
C. V
ulpe
, J. R
yan,
and
F. V
an D
olah
.St
even
M. B
ay (S
outh
ern
Calif
orni
a Co
asta
l Wat
er R
esea
rch
Proj
ect/U
SA)
The
Gre
at L
akes
Leg
acy
Act:
How
th
e Pa
rtne
rshi
p Ap
proa
ch W
orks
in
Addr
essi
ng C
onta
min
ated
Sed
imen
t Si
tes.
M.L
. Tuc
hman
.M
arc
L. T
uchm
an (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Rem
ote
Dat
a M
anag
emen
t fo
r Effe
ctiv
e Ch
arac
teri
zatio
n,
Asse
ssm
ent,
and
Man
agem
ent
Prog
ram
s. P
. Dra
gos.
Paul
Dra
gos
(Bat
telle
/USA
)
E8. Defining Background and Establishing Remediation Goals
D9.D8. Hudson River Remediation Program
C8. Dredge Material Dewatering
B7. Tools for Innovative Field Sampling B8. Noncontaminant Stressors
A7. Decision Analysis Modeling and Tools
26
thurSday aFternoon PlatForm SeSSionSt
Hu
RSd
ay
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
1:00
1:25
1:50
2:15
2:40
3:05
LUN
CH
The
Botto
m L
ine
on S
edim
ent
Clea
nups
: An
Eval
uatio
n of
Ec
onom
ic R
evita
lizat
ion
Impa
cts
of G
reat
Lak
es L
egac
y Ac
t R
emed
iatio
n Pr
ojec
ts. A
. Vai
dya.
Ajit
Vaid
ya (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Inte
grat
ion
of D
redg
ed M
ater
ial,
R
emed
iatio
n an
d R
esto
ratio
n Pr
ogra
ms
by R
egio
nal S
edim
ent
Man
agem
ent.
E.A
. Ste
rn, E
. Pec
k,
and
B.M
. San
ders
.Er
ic A
. Ste
rn (E
RM
/USA
)
The
Influ
ence
of T
est C
ondi
tions
on
Org
anis
m P
erfo
rman
ce in
Fr
eshw
ater
Sed
imen
t Tox
icity
Te
sts.
D.R
. Mou
nt, T
.L. H
ighl
and,
J.
R. H
ocke
tt, D
.J. H
off,
C.T.
Jen
son,
an
d T.
J. N
orbe
rg-K
ing.
Dav
id R
. Mou
nt (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Cont
amin
ant F
ate
and
Tran
spor
t Pr
oces
ses:
The
For
gotte
n U
ncer
tain
ties
in A
sses
smen
t M
odel
ing.
K.J
. Far
ley,
C. F
anel
li,
G. G
utie
rrez
, J.R
. Wan
ds, a
nd
R.L
. Mill
er.
Kevi
n J.
Far
ley
(Man
hatta
n Co
llege
/U
SA)
Conc
eptu
al S
ite M
odel
s fo
r Co
ntam
inat
ed S
edim
ent
Rem
edia
tion
and
Res
tora
tion
Stra
tegi
es. K
.E. K
olm
and
S.
M. S
mith
.Ke
nnet
h E.
Kol
m (I
nteg
ral C
onsu
lting
In
c./U
SA)
Forg
ing
a Pu
blic
-Pri
vate
Pa
rtne
rshi
p un
der t
he G
reat
Lak
es
Lega
cy A
ct to
Dev
elop
App
roac
hes
for R
emed
iatin
g th
e Bu
ffalo
Riv
er,
NY.
J. M
orris
, M. T
uchm
an,
J. J
edlic
ka, M
.B. G
ianc
arlo
Ros
s,
P. P
onto
riero
, and
V.S
. Mag
ar.
John
Mor
ris (H
oney
wel
l In
tern
atio
nal,
Inc.
/USA
)
Asse
ssm
ent o
f Con
tam
inan
t Los
s fr
om P
ropo
sed
Low
er N
ew B
edfo
rd
Har
bor C
AD C
ell.
P.R
. Sch
roed
er,
C.E.
Rui
z, T
.J. F
rede
tte, a
nd E
. Hay
ter.
Paul
R. S
chro
eder
(U.S
. Arm
y Co
rps
of E
ngin
eers
/USA
)
Asse
ssm
ent F
ram
ewor
k to
D
emon
stra
te C
ause
and
Effe
cts
of
Cont
amin
ants
and
Non
cont
amin
ant
Stre
ssor
s. J
. Wor
d, L
. Wor
d,
S. W
atts
, M. P
inza
, and
T. S
chuh
.Ja
ck Q
. Wor
d (N
ewFi
elds
Nor
thw
est,
LLC/
USA
)
The
Rol
e of
Por
ewat
er
Mea
sure
men
ts in
PCB
Em
issi
ons
from
the
Sedi
men
ts o
f Ind
iana
H
arbo
r and
Shi
p Ca
nal.
A. M
artin
ez,
K.C.
Hor
nbuc
kle,
and
D. R
eibl
e.An
dres
Mar
tinez
(The
Uni
vers
ity o
f Io
wa/
USA
)
Com
pari
son
of E
urop
ean
Uni
on
Envi
ronm
enta
l Lia
bilit
y D
irec
tive
(ELD
) and
the
Uni
ted
Stat
es
Nat
ural
Res
ourc
e D
amag
e (N
RD
) As
sess
men
ts. G
. Reu
b, F.
Col
ombo
, R
. Dun
ford
, and
G. Q
uadr
i.G
reg
Reu
b (E
NVI
RO
N/U
SA)
Cons
erva
tion
Tool
s fo
r Pro
tect
ing
Land
and
Enh
anci
ng E
cosy
stem
Se
rvic
es: C
ultiv
atin
g Co
mm
on
Gro
und
at C
onta
min
ated
Sed
imen
t Si
tes.
S. B
row
n, M
. Baz
any,
and
V.
Mag
ar.
Stev
en S
. Bro
wn
(The
Dow
Che
mic
al
Com
pany
/USA
)
St. M
ary’
s R
iver
, Mic
higa
n,
Sedi
men
t MG
P Si
te: A
Pub
lic-
Priv
ate
Part
ners
hip
unde
r the
Gre
at
Lake
s Le
gacy
Act
. E.J
. Slo
an,
S. G
oetz
, and
D.A
. Ols
en.
Edw
ard
Sloa
n (A
ECO
M/U
SA)
Spri
ng C
reek
Hyd
raul
ic D
redg
ing:
In
-Lin
e Ch
emic
al T
reat
men
t and
Co
nfine
d D
ispo
sal F
acili
ty.
J. S
pitz
ley
and
C. W
etm
ore.
John
Spi
tzle
y (C
H2M
Hill
/USA
)
Mat
chin
g Ph
ysic
al In
tert
idal
Co
nditi
ons
to A
ddre
ss N
onch
emic
al
Stre
ssor
s in
Ear
ly L
ife H
isto
ry
Asse
ssm
ents
of F
ish
Dev
elop
men
t.
W. P
ears
on, J
. Wor
d, a
nd
G. M
ause
th.
Wal
ter P
ears
on (P
eapo
d R
esea
rch/
USA
)
CSO
s an
d SS
Os–
The
Maj
or S
ourc
e Co
ntro
l Im
pedi
men
t to
Sens
ible
U
rban
Wat
erw
ay S
edim
ent
Rem
edia
tion.
S.C
. Nad
eau
and
M
.C. M
cCul
loch
.St
even
C. N
adea
u (H
onig
man
Mill
er
Schw
artz
and
Coh
n LL
P/U
SA)
Base
line
Mon
itori
ng a
t Fiv
e G
reat
La
kes
Sedi
men
t Rem
edia
tion
Site
s to
Det
erm
ine
Effe
ctiv
enes
s of
the
Impl
emen
ted
Rem
edia
l Act
ion.
B.
R. J
ones
, D.S
. Ire
land
, E. F
oote
, an
d S.
Will
iam
s.Br
enda
R. J
ones
(U.S
. EPA
/USA
)
Wei
ght-
of-E
vide
nce
Appr
oach
to
Char
acte
rize
In S
itu H
ydro
carb
on
Biod
egra
datio
n Pr
oces
ses
and
Rat
es in
Aqu
atic
Sed
imen
ts.
C. P
atm
ont,
K. R
usse
ll, B
. How
ard,
an
d D
. Hen
ness
y.Cl
ayto
n R
. Pat
mon
t (An
chor
QEA
, LL
C/U
SA) Wra
p-U
p D
iscu
ssio
n
Led
by S
essi
on C
hair
sBR
EAK
Succ
essf
ul In
tegr
atio
n of
R
emed
iatio
n w
ith H
abita
t R
esto
ratio
n an
d En
hanc
emen
t for
a
Rec
reat
iona
l Cre
ek C
hann
el a
nd
Floo
dpla
ins.
S. B
lauv
elt,
P. R
oth,
J.
O’L
ough
lin, M
. Otte
n, a
nd
R. D
avis
.Sh
ane
Blau
velt
(Par
sons
/USA
)
BREA
K
Gre
at L
akes
Leg
acy
Act:
Sedi
men
t R
emed
iatio
n an
d Ca
ppin
g at
the
Wes
t Bra
nch
of th
e G
rand
Cal
umet
R
iver
in N
W In
dian
a.
D.S
. Ire
land
, D. M
ally
, J.R
. Sm
ith,
and
S. C
ieni
awsk
i.Sc
ott E
. Cie
niaw
ski (
U.S
. EPA
/USA
)
Indi
ana
Har
bor a
nd C
anal
Dre
dgin
g Pr
ojec
t and
CD
F O
pera
tion
Star
t-U
p. J
. Mill
er, D
. Wet
hing
ton,
R
. Sai
chek
, L. T
hai,
and
J. S
emm
ler.
Jenn
ifer M
iller
(U.S
. Arm
y Co
rps
of
Engi
neer
s/U
SA)
BREA
K
Chal
leng
es to
Eva
luat
ing
and
Cont
rolli
ng S
torm
wat
er C
ontr
ibut
ion
to C
onta
min
ated
Sed
imen
t in
Port
land
, Ore
gon.
L. M
cWill
iam
s.La
ura
McW
illia
ms
(UR
S Co
rpor
atio
n/U
SA)
BREA
K
Pred
ictin
g th
e Fa
te a
nd E
ffect
s of
R
esus
pend
ed M
etal
-Con
tam
inat
ed
Sedi
men
ts: S
peci
atio
n M
odel
ing.
K.
Rad
er, P
.M. M
cMah
on, C
.J. F
anel
li,
R.F.
Car
bona
ro, a
nd K
.J. F
arle
y.Ke
vin
J. R
ader
(Mut
ch A
ssoc
iate
s,
LLC/
USA
)
BREA
K
Bene
ficia
l Use
of C
onta
min
ated
Se
dim
ents
in P
ort D
evel
opm
ent
Proj
ects
. M. A
rms,
T. B
aldw
in,
J. W
atan
abe,
and
S. A
nghe
ra.
Mat
thew
Arm
s (P
ort o
f Lon
g Be
ach/
USA
)
E9. Frameworks for Integrating Restoration Strategies
D9. Great Lakes Legacy Act and Great Lakes Restoration Initiative
C10.C9. Dredge Material Disposal and Containment
B9. Contaminant Source ID and ControlB8. Noncontaminant Stressors
A8. Contaminant Fate and Transport
27
tH
uR
Sda
y
A Se
ssio
nsN
apol
eon
AB
Sess
ions
Gra
nd B
C Se
ssio
nsG
rand
AD
Ses
sion
sG
rand
DE
Sess
ions
Gra
nd E
3:30
3:55
4:20
4:45
5:10
Adap
tive
Man
agem
ent t
o Im
prov
e Se
dim
ent C
lean
up o
n th
e Lo
wer
Fox
R
iver
. G. B
erke
n, R
. Rox
, J.
Hah
nenb
erg,
P. L
aRos
a, a
nd
T. B
lack
mar
.G
eorg
e Be
rken
(The
Bol
dt C
ompa
ny/
USA
)
Char
acte
rist
ics
and
Effe
ctiv
enes
s of
Su
perf
und
Sedi
men
t Rem
edia
tion
Proj
ects
in th
e U
.S. K
.E. G
usta
vson
an
d S.
J. E
lls.
Karl
Gus
tavs
on (U
.S. A
rmy
Corp
s of
En
gine
ers/
USA
)
Man
agem
ent o
f Con
tam
inat
ed
Sedi
men
ts w
ith S
peci
al F
ocus
on
Ben
efici
al U
se b
y M
ass
Stab
ilisa
tion/
Solid
ifica
tion
Tech
niqu
e. S
. Knu
tsso
n,
B. S
vedb
erg,
and
G. H
olm
.Su
sann
e C.
Ros
tmar
k (L
ulea
U
nive
rsity
of T
echn
olog
y/Sw
eden
)
Cont
rolli
ng S
torm
wat
er S
ourc
es to
Se
dim
ent a
t the
Por
tland
Har
bor
Supe
rfun
d Si
te. D
. San
ders
.D
awn
Sand
ers
(City
of P
ortla
nd/
USA
)
Eval
uatio
n of
New
and
Tra
ditio
nal
Tool
s fo
r Est
imat
ing
Cont
amin
ated
Se
dim
ent V
olum
es. J
. Sch
ofiel
d,
P. G
oova
erts
, J. T
elec
h, a
nd
L. B
lum
e.Ju
dith
Sch
ofiel
d (C
SC/U
SA)
Dev
elop
men
t of A
ltern
ativ
es fo
r an
Inte
grat
ed U
plan
d an
d Se
dim
ent
Rem
edy.
W.C
. Har
diso
n,
J.D
. Bab
cock
, R.J
. Sco
tt,
D.R
. Sie
bert
, and
L.M
. Tel
esca
.W
ayne
C. H
ardi
son
(Hal
ey &
Ald
rich,
In
c./U
SA)
Eval
uatio
n of
Rem
edia
l Ef
fect
iven
ess:
McC
orm
ick
and
Baxt
er S
uper
fund
Site
. H. B
lisch
ke,
K. P
arre
tt, a
nd S
. Man
zano
.H
eidi
Blis
chke
(GSI
Wat
er S
olut
ions
, In
c./U
SA)
Sand
Reu
se o
n th
e Fo
x R
iver
Se
dim
ent R
emed
iatio
n Pr
ojec
t.
S. M
cGee
, R. M
angr
um,
B. L
amm
ers,
N. G
eeve
rs, G
. Ber
ken,
an
d J.
Law
son.
Step
hen
W. M
cGee
(Tet
ra T
ech
EC,
Inc.
/USA
)
Dio
xin
in th
e Pa
ssai
c R
iver
(NJ)
: Th
e Ca
se fo
r Tw
o D
ioxi
n So
urce
s.
E.A.
Gar
vey,
S. G
bond
o-Tu
gbaw
a,
J. A
tmad
ja, a
nd S
. McD
onal
d.Ed
war
d A.
Gar
vey
(The
Lou
is B
erge
r G
roup
, Inc
./USA
)
Evol
utio
n of
Geo
spat
ial P
CB
Map
ping
of t
he L
ower
Fox
Riv
er
(OU
s 3
and
4). J
. Wol
fe, N
. Bar
abas
, J.
Ker
n, a
nd T
. Tho
rnbu
rg.
John
R. W
olfe
(Lim
noTe
ch, I
nc./
USA
)
From
Dec
isio
n An
alys
is to
Ada
ptiv
e M
anag
emen
t and
Val
ue o
f In
form
atio
n (V
oI):
Met
hodo
logy
and
Ca
se S
tudi
es. I
. Lin
kov,
C. F
oran
, M
. Sch
ultz
, K. Z
an, J
. Vog
el,
P. B
akht
eiar
ov, a
nd T
. Brid
ges.
Igor
Lin
kov
(U.S
. Arm
y En
gine
er
Res
earc
h &
Dev
elop
men
t Cen
ter/
USA
)
Pers
pect
ives
on
Stak
ehol
der
Invo
lvem
ent a
nd th
e U
se o
f Ad
aptiv
e M
anag
emen
t at
Cont
amin
ated
Sed
imen
t Site
s.
L.J.
McS
hea.
Law
renc
e J.
McS
hea
(ALC
OA,
Inc.
/U
SA)
Doc
umen
tatio
n of
Thi
n-La
yer
Capp
ing
Usi
ng S
edim
ent P
rofil
e Im
agin
g. B
. Bey
lich,
M. S
chaa
nnin
g,
and
E. E
ek.
Bjor
nar B
eylic
h (N
orw
egia
n In
stitu
te
for W
ater
Res
earc
h/N
orw
ay)
Agin
g Ef
fect
s in
Dre
dged
Mat
eria
l-St
eel S
lag
Fine
s (D
M-S
SF) B
lend
s.
D.G
. Gru
bb, M
. Waz
ne, S
. Jag
upill
a,
and
M.S
. Ros
coe.
Den
nis
G. G
rubb
(CET
CO/U
SA)
The
Effe
cts
of L
ocal
and
Reg
iona
l So
urce
s on
Cle
anup
Dec
isio
ns in
th
e Lo
wer
Duw
amis
h W
ater
way
, Se
attle
, Was
hing
ton.
J.H
. Ste
rn.
Jeffr
ey H
. Ste
rn (K
ing
Coun
ty
Dep
artm
ent o
f Nat
ural
Res
ourc
es/
USA
)
Pollu
tant
Dis
trib
utio
ns in
San
Fr
anci
sco
Bay
and
Wet
land
Se
dim
ent C
ores
. D. Y
ee,
D. H
amm
ond,
W. H
eim
, A. R
atto
netti
, an
d S.
van
Ber
gen.
Don
ald
Yee
(San
Fra
ncis
co E
stua
ry
Inst
itute
/USA
)
The
Use
of P
ost-
Dre
dge
Mon
itori
ng
Dat
a to
Dis
tingu
ish
betw
een
Impa
cts
of D
redg
e R
esid
uals
and
O
ngoi
ng S
ourc
es. S
. McG
rodd
y an
d D
. Hot
chki
ss.
Susa
n E.
McG
rodd
y (W
indw
ard
Envi
ronm
enta
l, LL
C/U
SA)
Appl
icat
ion
and
Use
of S
WAC
in
the
Rea
l Wor
ld o
f Sed
imen
ts (F
ox
Riv
er).
J.J
. Hah
nenb
erg.
Jam
es J
. Hah
nenb
erg
(U.S
. EPA
/U
SA)
Geo
stat
istic
al E
valu
atio
n of
MG
P Se
dim
ent S
ite In
vest
igat
ion
Dat
a to
Im
prov
e R
emed
y D
ecis
ions
. R
.H. W
eber
, J.M
. Kah
ler,
and
J. K
ern.
Ric
hard
Web
er (N
atur
al R
esou
rce
Tech
nolo
gy, I
nc./U
SA)
Bene
ficia
l Use
of C
onta
min
ated
Se
dim
ents
in P
ort C
onst
ruct
ions
. G
. Hol
m, L
. Lar
sson
, B. S
vedb
erg,
an
d K.
Lun
dber
g.St
efan
Fal
emo
(Sw
edis
h G
eote
chni
cal I
nstit
ute/
Swed
en)
Adap
tive
Man
agem
ent–
Titta
baw
asse
e R
iver
, Sag
inaw
Riv
er
and
Bay
Site
. T. K
onec
hne,
M
. Log
an, a
nd A
. Tay
lor.
Mar
y P.
Log
an (U
.S. E
PA/U
SA)
Failu
re o
f a P
erm
eabl
e Se
dim
ent
Cap–
The
Rol
e of
Air
Ent
ry P
ress
ure.
T.
Sto
lzen
burg
, J. R
ice,
G. M
cLin
n,
and
A. G
oerg
en.
Tom
Sto
lzen
burg
(RM
T, In
c./U
SA)
Pred
ictio
n an
d Co
ntro
l of S
ulfid
e O
xida
tion
in U
plan
d-Pl
aced
Dre
dge
Sedi
men
ts. W
.L. D
anie
ls, A
. Wic
k,
Z. O
rndo
rff,
and
C. C
arte
r.W
. Lee
Dan
iels
(Virg
inia
Tec
h/U
SA)
Sour
ce A
ppor
tionm
ent o
f Pol
ycyc
lic
Arom
atic
Hyd
roca
rbon
s in
Illin
ois
Riv
er S
edim
ent.
K.J
. Gra
nber
g,
K. R
ockn
e, J
.C. M
arlin
, and
E.
R. C
hris
tens
en.
Kelly
J. G
ranb
erg
(Uni
vers
ity o
f Ill
inoi
s at
Chi
cago
/USA
)
Und
erst
andi
ng R
emed
ial D
esig
n Ef
fect
iven
ess
and
Unc
erta
inty
by
Anal
yzin
g D
esig
n D
ata
Qua
lity.
J.
Ben
aman
, A. C
loug
h, a
nd
J. C
onno
lly.
Jenn
ifer B
enam
an (A
ncho
r QEA
, LL
C/U
SA)
E10. Adaptive Management
D10. Case Studies: Evaluations of Remedial Effectiveness
C10. Beneficial Use of Contaminated Sediments
B9. Contaminant Source ID and Control
A9. Geospatial Delineation of Remediation Footprint
noteSn
ot
eS
Sponsors
Plan to attend the Eighth International Conference on Remediation of Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds. The Conference has become one of the world’s leading environmental remediation conferences. It focuses on innovative application of existing or new technologies and approaches for characterization, treatment, and monitoring of chlorinated and other recalcitrant compounds in various environmental media. The 2010 Conference was attended by more than 1,500 scientists, engineers, regulators, remediation site owners, and other environmental professionals representing universities, government site management and regulatory agencies, and R&D and manufacturing firms from 32 countries. The program consisted of more than 850 presentations in 65 technical sessions. Exhibits were provided by 78 companies and government agencies engaged in remediation-related activities, and 12 short courses were offered.
The 2012 Conference will offer a comparable array of platform and poster presentations, short courses, and exhibits. Battelle will organize and present the Conference, and sponsors will include other leading organizations active in site remediation research and application.
The Call for Abstracts brochure will be available in March 2011. Abstracts will be due in July, and short course proposals will be due in September. To request a copy of the brochure or to inquire about exhibiting or sponsoring, call 800-783-6338 (U.S. and Canada) or 614-488-2030 or e-mail [email protected].
www.battelle.org/chlorcon
May 21-24, 2012 • Monterey, California
Eighth intErnational ConfErEnCE
Remediation of ChloRinated and ReCalCitRant Compounds
SUSTAINABLE MEETINGS
Battelle has been working to reduce the environmental impact of the International Conference on Remediation of Contaminated Sediments and the other conferences we conduct. Brochures are printed with soy-based inks on post-consumer recycled paper, and we’ve reduced the quantity of paper consumed. CDs have replaced printed abstract books and proceedings. Instead of the 40-page Preliminary Program, brief brochures were used for the informational mailing in October; they highlighted the various aspects of the program and directed readers to the details provided in the Preliminary Program, posted as a PDF document on the Web site.
The Symposium on Bioremediation and Sustainable Environmental Technologies incorporates topics beyond those addressed by its predecessor, the In Situ and On-Site Bioremediation Symposium. The Symposium’s new name and expanded scope reflect bioremediation’s maturity and new directions in environmental remediation research and application. Bioremediation continues to be a core area, but the program also considers how biological technologies and strategies can be employed to assess risks to human and ecological health and to develop sustainable practices in remediation, production, and other human activities. The program was built around the following major topic areas:
v Bioremediation Technologies: Approaches, Applications, and Lessons Learned
v Tools for Assessing Bioremediation
v Assessment and Treatment of Emerging Contaminants
v Degradation Pathways and Microbial Ecology
v Biology-Based Alternative Energy
v Sustainable Site Management Strategies
v Green and Sustainable Remediation (GSR)
v Crude Oil in the Environment
v Vapor Intrusion
The program is made up of nearly 600 platform and poster presentations, scheduled in 54 sessions. In addition, five panel discussions will provide the opportunity for discussion among experts and with the audience. The Preliminary Program, now available at www.battelle.org/biosymp, lists the presentations by session and provides overviews of the panels.
The Preliminary Program also provides descriptions of the 10 short courses and of several new features designed to help support students and other attendees engaged in career planning. Exhibits will be provided by organizations that provide environmental assessment, remediation, and management services and products. To inquire about exhibits, call 800-783-6338 (U.S., Canada) or 614-488-2030 or e-mail [email protected].
www.battelle.org/biosymp
June 27-30, 2011 • Reno, Nevada
iNteRNatioNal symposium oN
Bioremediation and SuStainaBle environmental technologieS
monday, feBRuaRy 7, 2011
tueSday, feBRuaRy 8, 2011
WedneSday, feBRuaRy 9, 2011
tHuRSday, feBRuaRy 10, 2011
Continental Breakfast 7:00–7:45 a.m. • Exhibits and Group 1 Poster Display 7:00 a.m.–7:15 p.m.
Platform Sessions 10:05 a.m.–5:35 p.m.; lunch and breaks scheduled in each track
Panel Discussion 7:45–9:30 a.m. “Integrating Stakeholder Perspectives”
Poster Sessions: Group 1 Presentations & Reception 5:45–7:15 p.m.
Poster Sessions: Group 2 Presentations & Reception 5:45–7:15 p.m.
Platform Sessions 8:00 a.m.–5:35 p.m.; lunch and breaks scheduled in each track
Platform Sessions 8:00 a.m.–5:35 p.m.; lunch and breaks scheduled in each track
Track AA1. Sediment Transport:
Fundamentals and Novel Techniques for Measur ing and Modeling
A2. Sediment Transport: Applications, Model Validations, and Peer Reviews
Track BB1. Ecological and Human-Health
Risk AssessmentB2. Chemical/Toxicological/
Biological Measurements and Characterization
B3. Contaminant Forensics
Track CC1. Monitored Natural Recovery
(MNR) and Enhanced MNRC2. In Situ TreatmentC3. Ex Situ Treatment
Track DD1. Successfully Combining
RemediesD2. Monitoring Effects during
Remedy ImplementationD3. Using Biological Monitoring
to Assess Remedy Effectiveness
Track EE1. Site Management Decision
StrategiesE2. Ecosystem and Watershed
Assessment and ManagementE3. Sustainable Sediment
Management
Continental Breakfast 7:00–8:00 a.m. • Exhibits and Group 2 Poster Display 7:00 a.m.–7:15 p.m.
Track AA3. Groundwater/Porewater/
Surface Water InteractionsA4. Bioavailability of
ContaminantsA5. Geomorphology-Guided
Sediment Characterization and Remediation
Track BB4. Applications of Innovative
Characterization and Assessment
B5. Assessment of Urban Waterways
B6. Passive Samplers
Track CC4. Cap DesignC5. Capping: Bench-Scale StudiesC6. Capping: Pilot Studies
Track DD4. Habitat and Wetlands
Mitigation and RestorationD5. Shoreline Remediation
ChallengesD6. Challenges of Ports and
Harbors ManagementD7. Resuspension and Residuals
Track EE4. Sediment Quality GuidelinesE5. Effective Communication and
Facilitation with StakeholdersE6. Risk-Based Management and
Cleanup Decisions
Continental Breakfast 7:00–8:00 a.m. • Exhibits 7:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. • Group 2 Poster Display 7:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.
Track AA6. Contaminant Partitioning and
Transport in SedimentsA7. Decision Analysis Modeling
and ToolsA8. Contaminant Fate and
TransportA9. Geospatial Delineation of
Remediation Footprint
Track BB7. Tools for Innovative Field
Sampling and In Situ Measurements
B8. Noncontaminant StressorsB9. Contaminant Source ID and
Control
Track CC7. Environmental Dredging:
Experience and DesignC8. Dredge Material DewateringC9. Dredge Material Disposal and
ContainmentC10. Beneficial Use of
Contaminated Sediments
Track DD8. Hudson River Remediation
ProgramD9. Great Lakes Legacy Act and
Great Lakes Restoration Initiative
D10. Case Studies: Evaluations of Remedial Effectiveness
Track EE7. Sediment TMDLsE8. Defining Background and
Establishing Remediation Goals
E9. Frameworks for Integrating Restoration Strategies
E10. Adaptive Management
Sessions included in Poster Group 2: A6–A9, B6–B9, C4–C10, D6–D10, E6–E10
Sessions included in Poster Group 1: A1–A5, B1–B5, C1–C3, D1–D5, E1–E5
ConFerenCe SCheduleSixth international ConferenCe remediation of Contaminated SedimentSFebruary 7–10, 2011 • New Orleans, Louisiana
www.battelle.org/sedimentscon
Short Courses 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.v Evaluating Sediment Transportv The Use of Spatially Explicit Methods in Site Investigations
8:00 a.m.–Noonv Building a Better Background Data Setv The Use of Radionuclides and Chemical Markers
1:00–5:00 p.m.v Hands-On Introduction to Databases and GISv Managing the 4 Rs of Environmental Dredgingv Geochemical Evaluations of Metals in Environmental Media
Short Course Registration 7:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
Conference Registration 2:00–8:00 p.m.
Exhibits/Welcome Reception/Group 1 Poster Display 4:30–6:30 p.m.
Plenary Session 6:30–8:00 p.m. Adm. Thad Allen, U.S.Coast Guard (Retired) “Managing the Response to the Deepwater Horizon Incident in the Gulf of Mexico”
Printed with non-toxic dry ink toner on ECF post-consumer recycled paper.