DEQ-Approved Well ID Work Plan for PZ Expansion - michigan 2025

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A contaminated ground water plume exists when hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants are present within an aquifer system. A plume of contaminated ground water may be formed when substances are released to ground water from a source at a facility.
Gelman Sciences Inc., a former medical filter manufacturer near Ann Arbor, Michigan, left contamination stemming from years of waste handling on its facility grounds. A plume of 1,4-dioxane has spread through the groundwater in Ann Arbor and Scio Townships, including a western part of the city of Ann Arbor.
Background on the 1,4-dioxane plume: From 1966 to 1986 Gelman Sciences improperly disposed of industrial solvent, causing a plume of 1,4-dioxane contamination in groundwater that is currently four miles long by one mile wide beneath the City of Ann Arbor and Scio Township.
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A contaminant plume is the body of groundwater that has been affected by the presence of pollutants in the soil or aquifer. The extent of the plume is determined by the presence of dissolved pollutants at concentrations above a screening level.
In general, liquid contaminants arent dispersed and diluted in groundwater as much as they are in surface water and, like groundwater itself, they move slowly. A concentrated form of liquid contaminants is called a contamination plume. Often, a plume flows in the same path as the surrounding groundwater.

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