TC-3752
FINAL REPORT
EPA-910/9-85-134a
SUMMARY REPORT
FOR THE
COMMENCEMENT  BAY
NEARSHORE / TIDEFLATS
REMEDIAL INVESTIGATION
AUGUST, 1985

PREPARED FOR:
WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY
AND U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Mr. James D. Krull, Project Manager
Washington State Department of Ecology
Olympia, Washington

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TC-3752
Final Report
SUMMARY REPORT  FOR  THE COMMENCEMENT
BAY NEARSHORE/TIDEFLATS REMEDIAL
INVESTIGATION
by

Tetra  Tech,  Inc.
 for

 Washington State Department  of  Ecology and
 U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency
 Mr.  James D. Krull, Project  Manager
 Washington State Department  of  Ecology
 Olympia, Washington
 August,  1985
 Tetra Tech, Inc.
 11820 Northup Way, Suite  100
 Bellevue, Washington  98005
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
GLNPO Library Collection (PL-12J)
77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, IL  60604-3590

                U.S.  Envir
                Region 5, ;,
                77 West Jack x,", •-
-tfon Agency
                                                              x,, •-•:H  io«.
                                                   Chicago, IL  6Q604-3590'Oor

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                                 CONTENTS


                                                                     Page

LIST OF FIGURES                                                       iv

LIST OF TABLES                                                         v

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS                                                      v1

1.  INTRODUCTION                                                       1

     1.1  BACKGROUND                                                   1
     1.2  SITE DESCRIPTION                                             1
     1.3  NATURE AND EXTENT OF PROBLEM                                 4
     1.4  COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT                                        6
     1.5  REPORT OVERVIEW                                              7

2.   APPROACH AND METHODS                                              8

     2.1  MANAGEMENT                                                   8

          2.1.1  PROGRAM MANAGEMENT                                    8
          2.1.2  COMMUNITY RELATIONS                                  11

     2.2  TECHNICAL AND SCIENTIFIC                                    16

          2.2.1  DECISION-MAKING APPROACH                             16
          2.2.2  DATA MANAGEMENT                                      19
          2.2.3  DATA REVIEW AND EVALUATION                           20
          2.2.4  FIELD SAMPLING DESIGN                                21
          2.2.5  SOURCE INVESTIGATIONS                                23
          2.2.6  ENDANGERMENT ASSESSMENT                              25
          2.2.7  IDENTIFICATION OF POTENTIAL REMEDIAL
                 TECHNOLOGIES                                         26
          2.2.8  QUALITY ASSURANCE/QUALITY CONTROL (QA/QC)            28
          2.2.9  HEALTH AND SAFETY                                    28

3.   RESULTS                                                          29

     3.1  ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS                                      29

          3.1.1  CONTAMINATION                                        29
          3.1.2  BIOLOGICAL FFECTS                                   34
          3.1.3  SEDIMENT TOXICITY                                    42
          3.1.4  CONTAMINANT, TOXICITY, AND BIOLOGICAL
                 EFFECTS RELATIONSHIPS                                43

     3.2  PUBLIC HEALTH ASSESSMENT                                    49

     3.3  PRIORITIZATION OF PROBLEM AREAS AND CONTAMINANTS            52

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     3.4  SOURCE INVESTIGATIONS                                        64

          3.4.1  HYLEBOS WATERWAY                                     64
          3.4.2  ST.  PAUL WATERWAY                                     65
          3.4.3  MIDDLE WATERWAY                                       66
          3.4.4  CITY WATERWAY                                        66
          3.4.5  RUSTON-PT.  DEFIANCE SHORELINE                        67
          3.4.6  SITCUM WATERWAY                                       68

     3.5  POTENTIAL REMEDIAL TECHNOLOGIES                              69

4.   RECOMMENDATIONS OF AREAS AND SOURCES  FOR  POTENTIAL
     REMEDIAL ACTIONS                                                 75

     4.1  INTRODUCTION                                                75

     4.2  REOMMENDATIONS FOR REMEDIAL ACTION                          78

          4.2.1  HYLEBOS WATERWAY                                     78
          4.2.2  SITCUM WATERWAY                                       79
          4.2.3  ST. PAUL WATERWAY                                     79
          4.2.4  MIDDLE WATERWAY                                       80
          4.2.5  CITY WATERWAY                                        80
          4.2.6  RUSTON-PT.  DEFIANCE SHORELINE                        80

     4.3  GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS                                     81

5.   OVERVIEW OF CONTAMINATION AND  BIOLOGICAL  EFFECTS  IN
     COMMENCEMENT BAY                                                 82

6.   STUDY DESIGN EVALUATION AND  RECOMMENDATIONS  FOR
     FUTURE STUDIES                                                   85

     6.1  SEDIMENT CHEMISTRY                                          85

     6.2  BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS                                          86

     6.3  DECISION-MAKING APPROACH                                     88

     6.4  SOURCE IDENTIFICATION                                        89

7.   RFERENCES                                                       91
                                  111

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                                  FIGURES


Number                                                                  Page
   1   General location of study area in Puget Sound                      2

   2   South and southcentral Puget Sound showing locations of
       Commencement Bay                                                   3

   3   Commencement Bay Nearshore/Tideflats study area                    5

   4   Decision-making approach for the Commencement Bay
       Nearshore/Tideflats Remedial Investigation                        17

   5   Area segments defined for Commencement Bay Superfund
       data analysis                                                     30

   6   Summary of spatial  patterns of benthic depressions                36

   7   Summary of areas having significantly elevated prevalences
       of one or more hepatic lesions in English sole                    41

   8   Summary of spatial  patterns of significant bioassay
       responses                                                         44

   9   Example use of synoptic benthic effects and sediment
       toxicity data to determine apparent chemical effect
       thresholds                                                        47

  10   Relative ranking of study area segments by average and
       maximum observed contamination, toxicity, and biological
       effects                                                           57

  11   Definition and prioritization of Commencement Bay problem
       areas                                                             58

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                                   TABLES


Number                                                                  Page

   1   Agency and contractor responsibilities                             9

   2   Technical Oversight Committe members and affiliation              12

   3   Citizens Advisory Committee Commencement Bay Nearshore/
       Tideflats Remedial Investigation                                  13

   4   Summary of general study design                                   22

   5   Relative abundances of fishes captured in Commencement
       Bay and Carr Inlet                                                38

   6   Apparent effect thresholds (AET) for sediment contaminants
       and conventional variables                                        48

   7   Action assessment matrix of sediment contamination, sediment
       toxicity, and biological effects indices for Commencement Bay
       study areas                                                       53

   8   Ranking of study areas based on magnitude and number of
       significant contaminants, sediment toxicity, and biological
       effects                                                           56

   9   Potential problem chemicals in problem areas                      61

  10   Summary of potential contaminant sources, problem contaminants,
       potential remedial technologies, and data needs for the ten
       priority problem areas in Commencement Bay                        71

  11   Final ranking of problem areas                                    76

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                              ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
     This document was  compiled by Tetra Tech, Inc., under the direction
of Dr. Thomas  C.  Ginn,  for  the  State of Washington Department of  Ecology
(WDOE)  in  partial  fulfillment of Contract No. C-84031 for the Commencement
Bay Nearshore/Tideflats Area  Superfund  Project.  Mr.  James D. Krull  of
the WDOE was  the  Project Manager.   Ms. Mary Ruckelshaus of WDOE provided
project assistance.  Mr.  Larry  Marx  provided project coordination for  Tetra
Tech.   Mr.  Charles Kleeburg and Mr.  Robert  Kievit were the U.S. EPA Region X
project officers.   The  work was conducted  under a U.S. EPA/State Cooperative
Agreement (No. CX810926-01-0).

     The primary authors  of this report  were Mr. Robert Barrick, Dr. Scott
Becker, Dr.  Donald Weston,  and  Dr. Thomas  Ginn.   Individuals contributing
to the sampling,  data analysis, and  report  writing efforts are listed below.
Tetra Tech, Inc.  Technical  Staff

Ms. Ann K.  Bailey
Mr. Robert C.  Barrick
Dr. D. Scott Becker

Dr. Gordon R.  Bilyard
Ms. Marcy B, Brooks-McAuliffe
Ms. Roberta P. Feins
Dr. Thomas C.  Ginn
Mr. Thomas Grieb
Mr. Thomas L.  Johnson
Dr. Marc W. Lorenzen
Mr. Larry Marx
Ms. Nancy A.  Musgrove
Dr. Robert A.  Pastorok
Ms. Glynda J.  Steiner

Mr. Jeff Stern
Dr. Michael Swayne
Mr. Gary Weins, P.E.
Ms. Julia F.  Wilcox

Dr. Les G. Williams

Production Staff

Mr. A. Brian  Carr
Ms. Betty Dowd
Ms. Lisa M. Fosse
Ms. Gretchen  Margrave
Chemistry Quality Assurance
Chemistry Quality Assurance
Field Sampling, Data Analysis,
Decision-Making Approach
Field Sampling, Fish  and Shellfish,
Data Analysis
Benthic Infauna, Data Analysis
Technical Editor
Database Management
Management, Data Analysis,  Endanger-
ment Assessment, Decision-Making
Approach
Data Analysis, Statistics
Remedial  Technologies
Management, Quality Control,  Review
Health and Safety, Project Coordination
Database Management
Study Design, Field Sampling
Preliminary Remedial  Technologies,
Source Identification
Field Sampling, Data  Analysis
Database Management
Source Evaluations
Chemistry Quality Assurance,  Data
Analysis
Bioassays, Data Analysis
Graphics
Graphics
Word Processing
Word Processing
                                   v1

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Ms. Sharon I. Hinton
Ms. Karen L. Keeley
Ms. Gail Singer
Ms. Gestin K. Suttle
Ms. Stephanie Turco
Word Processing
Graphics
Word Processing
Word Processing
Reproduction
University of Washington/Evans Hamilton,  Inc
Mr. Jack Q. Word

Mr. Keven Li
Mr. Jeff Ward
Ms. Karen L. Keeley
Ms. Julia L. Schroeder

EVS Consultants

Dr. Robert N. Dexter
Dr. Peter Chapman
Benthic Sampling Supervision, Benthic
Data Interpretation
Benthic Taxonomy
Benthic Taxonomy
Benthic Taxonomy
Benthic Taxonomy
Field Supervision, Data  Interpretation
Bioassays
Raven Systems and Research Inc.

Mr. John Dermody
Mr. Michael Healey

Fish and Wildlife Health Consultants

Dr. Marsha Landolt
Dr. Richard Kocan
Mr. Dave Powell

JRB Associates (SAIC)

Dr. Don Weston
Mr. Richard Greiling
Ms. Barbara Morson
Ms. Patricia 0'Flaherty

AB Consultants

Ms. Ann K. Bailey

Versar, Inc.

Mr. Douglas A. Dixon
Ms. Gena Dixon
Mr. Walt Palmer

Tacoma Pierce County Health Department

Mr. Douglas Pierce
Field Mobilization, Geophysics
Field Mobilization, Geophysics
Fish Pathology
Fish Pathology
Fish Pathology
Source Identification
Source Identification
Source Identification
Source Identification
Qua!ity Assurance
Endangerment Assessment
Endangerment Assessment
Endangerment Assessment
Community Relations, Drainage Map
  and Survey
                                   vii

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Mr. James Mitchell
Mr. Thomas Rogers
Drainage Maps
Drainage Survey
Washington Department of  Ecology-Water  Quality Investigations Section
Mr. William Yake
Mr. Art Johnson
Mr. Dale Norton
Source Investigation
Source Investigation
Source Investigation
U.S.  Army Corps  of Engineers,  Seattle District  and  Waterways Experiment

Station (WES)

Mr. Keith Phillips (Seattle District)

Dr. Charles Lee (WES)

Dr. Richard Peddicord  (WES)

Dr. Michael Palermo  (WES)

Mr. Norman Francinques  (WES)
Alternative Dredging Methods
  Treatment
Decision Making Framework for
  of Dredged Material
Decision Making Framework for
  of Dredged Material
Decision Making Framework for
  of Dredged Material
Decision Making Framework for
  of Dredged Material
, Disposal

Management

Management

Management

Management
Others

Mr. Wayne Palsson
Ms. Ruth Mandapat
Dr. Richard Branchflower
Dr. John Hedges
Field Sampling
Fish Aging
Toxicology, Risk Assessment
Chemical Analyses, Suspended Particu-
  lates
     Appreciation  is also  extended  to  the U.S.  Environmental  Protection
Agency's (EPA) Superfund Contract  Laboratory  Program for analytical  support,
to  the  U.S.  EPA Region X/WDOE Manchester  Laboratory for analytical  support,
and to U.S. EPA Region X for quality assurance  support.   We also appreciate
the assistance of Mr. Charles Eaton, Skipper of the R/V Kittiwake, in conducting
the field sampling for benthos and  fishes,  and  Mr.  Benjamin Huntley, Skipper
of the M/V Readout and the M/V Cathlamet Bay,  in  conducting the field sampling
for sediment cores and suspended solids.

     Preparation of this report was aided  greatly by the support and  construc-
tive contributions of many WDOE and U.S. EPA  staff.

     Special appreciation is extended  to the  members of the  Technical  Oversight
Committee for their constructive guidance  throughout  the  project, and  to
the Citizens Advisory Committee  who volunteered  their time to  contribute
to the project.
                                   vm

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                             1.  INTRODUCTION
1.1  BACKGROUND

     On October  23, 1981,  the U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency  (EPA)
announced  an "interim  priority  list"  of 115 top-priority hazardous waste
sites targeted for action  under  Superfund as authorized under the Comprehensive
Environmental  Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA).   Commencement
Bay,  located  in  the  southern  Puget Sound region,  was listed  as  the  top
priority site in  the state of  Washington, and  was  grouped within  the 10
highest priority  sites  in  the nation  under consideration for  federal  funding
of necessary remedial  action under CERCLA.  At  that  time the  Commencement
Bay  site  was divided  into four areas:   the Deepwater, the Nearshore,  the
Tideflats  Industrial,  and  the South Tacoma channel.  On December  30, 1982,
the U.S. EPA proposed  additions  to the national priority list.  These additions
increased  the list to  418  hazardous waste sites  ranked by their  potential
threat  to public  health  and the environment.  On this subsequent Superfund
list, the  Nearshore and the Tideflats Industrial  areas of  Commencement
Bay  were  designated as  a  separate project, as was the South  Tacoma channel,
while the  Deepwater area was eliminated as a  priority site because water
quality studies indicated  less  contamination in that area than  was initially
suspected.  On September 6,  1983, U.S.  EPA published and promulgated the
first  official National  Priority List (NPL) of 406 hazardous waste sites,
including  the Commencement  Bay  Nearshore/Tideflats area.

     On April  13, 1983,  the  U.S.  EPA announced that an agreement had been
reached with  the Washington  Department of Ecology (WDOE) to conduct  a remedial
investigation of  the  hazardous substance contamination in the  Nearshore/
Tideflats  Industrial  areas of  Commencement  Bay.  Under the Cooperative
Agreement, the WDOE was  delegated the lead role in the investigation.

     The  project  consisted of two distinct parts:   chemical  contamination
(metals) of  the upland  environment near the ASARCO smelter  (Ruston/Vashon
tasks), and  chemical  contamination and its effects in the marine environment
(Waterways/Shoreline tasks).  This report deals with the Waterways/Shoreline
tasks.

1.2  SITE  DESCRIPTION

     Commencement Bay  is  an  embayment of  approximately 9  square miles in
southern Puget Sound, Washington (Figures 1 and 2).  The bay  opens to Puget
Sound  to  the northwest,  with the city of Tacoma situated on  the south  and
southeast  shores.   Residential  portions of northeast Tacoma and the  Browns
Point section of  Pierce  County  occupy the north shore of the  bay.   Ownership
of the shoreline  is vested  in the Port of Tacoma, the city of Tacoma, Pierce
County, the state  of  Washington, the  Puyallup Indian Tribe, and numerous
private parties.   Much  of the  publicly owned  land  is leased to  private
industrial and commercial  enterprises.

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                                               10    -20
                                               J	I  MILES
                                                   KILOMETERS
                                         0   10   20
Figure  1.   General location of study  area in Puget  Sound.

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     The project area has been  defined as  the  area along the Ruston Way
shoreline from the head of City Waterway to Point Defiance,  and the waterways
including  Hylebos Waterway, Blair Waterway, Sitcum Waterway, Milwaukee
Waterway, St.  Paul Waterway, Middle Waterway, City  Waterway,  and the Puyallup
River  as  far upstream  as  the Interstate-5 highway bridge  (Figure 3).  The
waterward  boundary of  the project was established  at the  60-ft water  depth
contour.  The project  boundaries are shown in Figure 3.

1.3  NATURE AND  EXTENT OF PROBLEM

     Urbanization and industrial  development of the Commencement Bay area
began  in the late 1800s.  At that time, the south end of the bay was primarily
tideflats  formed  by  the  Puyallup  River delta.   Since their inception in
the 1920s,  dredge and fill activities have significantly altered the estuarine
nature  of  the bay.   The  intertidal  areas were  covered and the meandering
streams and rivers were channelized.   Numerous industrial  and commercial
operations were  located  in  the newly  filled areas  of the bay, including
pulp and lumber mills,  shipbuilding, shipping, marinas, chlorine and chemical
production,  concrete production,  aluminum smelting, oil  refineries, food
processing, automotive repair services, railroad  operations, and a number
of  other  storage, transportation, and  chemical  manufacturing companies.
The documented waste  management practices of these operations included
direct  and indirect  discharges, landfills, open dumps, chemical recycling
and reclamation,  and on-site  storage and treatment facilities.  A  smelter
(ASARCO)  has been located  in the Nearshore area close to  Ruston since the
late 1800s.  The  plant, operational until March, 1985, generated substantial
amounts of slag  containing  various metals.  This slag has been deposited
along  the  shoreline near the  plant and  has been used  as  fill, riprap,  and
ballast  material in the Tideflats  area.   The  slag  has also been used to
produce commercial sandblasting material used widely in the  study area.

     Since initial industrialization of the Commencement Bay area, hazardous
substances  and waste  material have been released into  the terrestrial,
freshwater,  groundwater, and marine  environments.  Discharges and dumping
of solid,  liquid, organic, and inorganic waste materials, and contamination
from  airborne wastes entering via surface and  groundwaters have modified
the chemical  quality of the waters and  sediments  in  many  portions of  the
area.   These pollutants include metals (e.g., arsenic, lead, zinc, copper,
and mercury)  and  organic compounds [e.g., polychlorinated biphenyls  (PCBs)  ,
dibenzofurans, chlorinated pesticides,  plasticizers (phthalates), and products
of incomplete combustion of fuels (PAH)].

     Investigations initiated by NOAA  in 1978 and subsequent investigations
by others raised  concerns over chemical  contamination and possible biological
effects of  this  contamination in the area.  The pollutant loadings in Commence-
ment Bay originate from  both  point  and  nonpoint  sources.  Point  sources
include wastes   from  approximately 27  NPDES-permitted  discharges (including
two sewage  treatment plants).  Nonpoint  sources  include  two creeks;  the
Puyallup River; over 300 storm drains,  seeps, and  open  channels; groundwater
seepage, atmospheric fallout, and spills  or releases  to  the environment.
The most  recent  information indicates  that there  are over 425 potential
pollutant  sources within the  study area.

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     Previous  investigations  of the nearshore waters of Commencement  Bay
have indicated  that  the  highest concentrations of certain metals  (arsenic,
copper,  lead,  and  mercury) are  found  in sediments from the waterways  and
along the southwest  shore  near the ASARCO smelter.  Sediment  contamination
by persistent organic  compounds (e.g., PCBs) has been detected in  the heavily
industrialized  waterways and along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline.

     Commencement Bay,  like much of Puget Sound, supports important fishery
resources, especially  anadromous salmonid populations.  Although  occupying
Commencement Bay for only part of  their life  cycle, these  species have
critical estuarine migratory  and rearing habitat requirements.  The Commencement
Bay  area also  supports  recreational  fisheries  including  pollock, hake,
rockfish, and  cod.  In addition, many other important fishes and invertebrates
(e.g.,  English  sole  and  crab) live  in contact with the bottom  sediments,
resulting in a high potential for uptake of sediment-associated contaminants.
Concern has existed  over the potential human health impacts from the  consumption
of local  seafood  organisms  that contain chemical contaminants.  The Tacoma-
Pierce  County  Health Department issued an advisory on fish consumption
in January, 1983 advising against any consumption of bottom fish from Hylebos
Waterway and against regular consumption of  bottom fish  from  the other
waterways.

1.4  COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT

     Under the  U.S. EPA/WDOE  Cooperative Agreement, the general  objective
of the  work was  to identify the worst  problems  and  to provide a  database
and  framework  for  future activities.   The ultimate goal  of the  Superfund
project was to  define  the extent of  contamination and to  remedy  public
health  or environmental  threats in  a  prioritized manner.   The remedial
investigation concentrated on sediment  contamination,  effects  on  biota,
and the sources of contamination.  The overall scope of work for the remedial
investigation included the  following tasks:

     Task 1.    Investigative Support
     Task 2.    Develop preliminary remedial objectives (Approach
                 to  Decision Criteria)
     Task 3.    Determine  the  type  and  extent of  contamination and
                 exposure  pathways
     Task 4.    Determine  the sources of contamination and characterize
                 as  current or historical
     Task 5.    Endangerment assessment support
     Task 6.    Identify  potential remedial technologies
     Task 7.    Safety plan; quality assurance/quality control  plan.

     The following objectives were set for the remedial  investigation:

     •     Define  a problem  sediment

     •     Apply definition of problem  sediment  to delineate problem
          areas

     •     For problem areas, determine problem chemicals

     •     For problem chemicals, determine problem sources

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     •    Prioritize  problem areas,  problem  chemicals, and  problem
          sources

     t    Assess  impacts  of  fish and crab consumption on human health

     •    Document alternative methods  of dredging,  handling, and
          disposing of contaminated sediments

     •    Initiate a decision-making framework for managing the  disposal
          of contaminated  sediments

     •    Identify potential  remedial alternatives.

1.5  REPORT OVERVIEW

     This report  summarizes  work completed under the U.S. EPA/WDOE Cooperative
Agreement for the  Commencement  Bay Nearshore/Tideflats Remedial Investigation
of the Waterways/Shoreline area.  The Commencement Bay Superfund investigation
includes various  integrated  program  management  and technical  components.
These  include assessments  of chemical  contamination, biological  effects,
toxicity, and public health  concerns; identification of sources; and  identi-
fication of potential  remedial actions and technologies.  Methods and approaches
used to conduct the investigation are included in Section 2 of this summary
report.   Results  are presented and discussed in Section 3.   These sections
include an assessment of environmental factors (i.e., sediment contamination,
toxicity, biological  effects), an  assessment of public health risks  from
consumption of contaminated  seafood,  identification and  prioritization
of problem areas  and contaminants,  evaluations  of contaminant sources,
and identification of potential  remedial  actions and  technologies.   In
Section 4, high-priority  areas are identified and potential remedial  actions
are recommended.   An overview  of contamination  and biological  effects  in
the entire study  area  is  presented in Section 5.  A retrospective evaluation
of the study design and recommendations  for future studies  are presented
in Section 6.  References  are  listed in Section 7.

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                         2.  APPROACH  AND METHODS
2.1  MANAGEMENT

2.1.1  Program Management

2.1.1.1  Introduction--

     The Washington State Department of Ecology (WDOE)  is responsible for
implementing  the  U.S. EPA/WDOE Cooperative Agreement  for the Commencement
Bay Nearshore/Tideflats Superfund site.  WDOE is responsible for the execution,
administration, and  management of  the agreement  and  for the performance
of remedial  investigation  activities.   The U.S.  Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA)  Region X  provides oversight of  activities conducted  under
the Cooperative Agreement.

2.1.1.2  WDOE Management--

     In order to  carry out its responsibilities under the Cooperative Agreement,
the WDOE appointed a project manager, Mr. James  D.  Krull, to administer
and provide WDOE  technical oversight for the remedial  investigation.  WDOE's
management approach  included contractual  agreements  with  other  agencies
and with  consulting firms,  use of  internal WDOE resources, and support
from headquarters and Region X of the U.S.  EPA.

     Respective  agency/contractor roles  and  responsibilities for each 9f
the seven  tasks conducted  under the  cooperative  agreement are listed in
Table  1.   WDOE recognized  that effective project management was crucial
to complete this  multi-task, multidisciplinary investigation and contracted
with Tetra Tech,  Inc., Bellevue, Washington for overall  technical and program
management  support.  Tetra Tech's management approach was  based upon continuous
communication and  effective quality assurance/quality control  (QA/QC).
This approach  ensured that contractors understood the WDOE program objectives
and fully  recognized the goals, resources, schedules,  and  legal and regulatory
constraints of the program.

2.1.1.3 Management  Tools--

     WDOE and  Tetra Tech recognized that multidisciplinary, politically
sensitive, and  relatively short-duration programs, such  as the Commencement
Bay remedial  investigation, require technical  coordination and open communi-
cation among  all  project participants to ensure that all  work  is technically
sound,  legally defensible,  on time,  and within budget.  Major management
tools  included use  of a  Technical  Oversight  Committee (TOC), use  of an
Internal  Oversight Committee within WDOE, contractor monthly progress reports,
quarterly progress reports to U.S. EPA, and frequent project review meetings.

     The TOC was  established  to  recognize  the involvement of many local
agencies and  authorities and the existence of many other ongoing  studies
in Commencement  Bay Superfund activities.   The TOC  provided a mechanism


                                      8

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                  TABLE 1.  AGENCY AND CONTRACTOR  RESPONSIBILITIES UNDER
                                THE COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT
Cooperative
Agreement Task
Agency/Contractor
Responsibility
Task 1 - Investigative
Support
Task 2 - Preliminary
Remedial Objectives
Task 3 - Determine Type
and Extent of Contam-
ination and Exposure
Pathways
Tetra Tech, Inc.
Tacoma-Pierce County
Health Department

Tetra Tech, Inc.
Tetra Tech, Inc.
                         Brown  and Caldwell/
                         E.V.S.  Consultants

                         E.V.S.  Consultants
                         U.S.  EPA  Contract
                         Laboratory Program

                         U.S.  EPA  Region X/WDOE
                         Manchester Laboratory

                         Tetra Tech,  Inc.
                          Subcontractors:
                           E.V.S.  Consultants
                           Raven Systems Research
                           AB  Consulting
                           Evans Hamilton
                           University of Wash-
                           ington
                           FWHC
Project management
Data management
Community relations  support
Contract procurement
Quality control
Technical oversight
Health and safety program plan

Implementation  of  community  relations
plan

Development of decision-making  criteria
for  establishing  the  existence of  a
signficant threat to  public health,
welfare, and the  environment
Data  evaluation
design
and preliminary study
                         Final  sampling  and analysis plan
                         Final  quality assurance project plan

                         Preliminary  sediment quality survey
                         Geophysical  survey

                         Laboratory support
                         Laboratory  support
                         Conduct  of  final  field sampling program
                         Data  evaluation
                         Quality  assurance
                         Report  production

                         Bioassays,  cruise support
                         Logistics support
                         Quality  assurance
                         Benthic  investigations, cruise support
                         Taxonomic sorting and  identification

                         Fish  pathology
                         Port  of  Tacoma
                         Blair Waterway  investigation

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TABLE  1.  (Continued)
Task 4 - Determine
Sources of Contami-
nation and Characterize
as a Current or
Historical Source
Task 5 - Endangerment
Assessment
Task 6 - Identify
Potential Remedial
Technologies
Task 7 - Additional
Requirements
Washington State
Department of Ecology •
Water Quality Investi-
gations Section

U.S. EPA Contract
Laboratory Program

U.S. EPA Region X/WDOE
Manchester Laboratory

Tacoma-Pierce County
Health Department

Tetra Tech, Inc.
                          ORB  Associates (SAIC)
U.S. EPA Headquarters
Contract Support -
Versar, Inc.

Tacoma-Pierce County
Health Department

U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, Seattle
District and Vicksburg
Waterways Experiment
Station

Tetra Tech, Inc.
Tetra Tech, Inc.
Point and nonpoint source  investigations
Quality assurance
                                                 Laboratory support
                                                 Laboratory support
                                                 Drainage survey and  mapping
Data  evaluation,  technical  oversight,
report production

Source investigations, prioritization
of sources, potential  responsible parties

Assessment of  human health  risk from
ingestion of fishes and  crabs
Human Toxicology  support,  community
relations

Dredging techniques,  treatment and disposal
alternatives for contaminated  sediments

Decision-making framework for disposal
of dredged materials

Identification  of  potential  remedial
technologies and specific  remedial  actions

Feasibility study work  plan

Quality assurance program  plan
Health and safety guidelines
Audits and reporting  for quality assurance,
and health and safety.
                                            10

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for transfer ing information related  to  Commencement  Bay, and acted as a
scientific  review and advisory panel.  TOC members  and  their affiliations
are listed  in Table 2.   The TOC met  on  an  as-needed  basis with at least
one meeting  every three months.  All major project  reports were reviewed
by the TOC.

2.1.1.4  Major Management  Decisions--

     Two management  decisions made early in the project by WDOE in conjunction
with U.S. EPA had a  large  impact on the direction  and scope  of the project.
The first  was to rely on existing groundwater contamination data in the
project area rather  than using limited  project funds  to install networks
of monitoring wells and  conduct the  associated  analyses.  This decision
allowed resources to be focused on defining and prioritizing problem  areas
in and  sources of  contaminants to waterways.  If potential  groundwater
sources were identified,  resources  to  further investigate these  sources
could  then  be focused on areas of need.   The second  decision was to use
the U.S. EPA Superfund Contract Laboratory system for  the  majority of  the
chemical analyses needed for  the project.  This service was  provided outside
of the existing project budget and allowed a dramatic increase in the  area!
coverage of the project and sampling station density.

2.1.2  Community Relations

2.1.2.1  Introduction--

     Community relations  are an important aspect  of all  Superfund projects.
It was especially important for the Commencement  Bay project, where  local
authorities, citizen groups,  and the community-at-large expressed an intense
interest in  the project.  WDOE implemented and expanded the  community relations
task in the U.S.  EPA/WDOE  Cooperative Agreement.

     The Tacoma-Pierce County  Health Department   (TPCHD), by interagency
agreement with WDOE, was delegated to lead local  implement ion  of the community
relations  program  beginning in April,  1983.  In  response to input at a
public meeting, the  TPCHD  formulated a  Citizens  Advisory  Committee  (CAC)
to help implement  the plan.  Members  of the CAC  and  their affiliations
are listed  in  Table 3.   In addition  to the CAC and  the  general  public,
other  interested groups  included  elected officials,  the  Port of Tacoma,
the city of  Tacoma, local  industries, and  the Puyallup  Nation.   Representatives
from  the Puyallup  Nation, the Port of Tacoma, and the  city of Tacoma also
served on the TOC and regularly attended TOC meetings.  The  TOC also  included
representatives from involved federal,  state, and local agencies.   Environmental
groups, businesses,  and local residents were kept  informed through  their
representatives on the  CAC, the news  media, press  releases, and project
update mailings.  Citizens with questions about reported  stories  usually
contacted  the local health  department or WDOE for clarification.  Project
libraries were also  open to the public  at TPCHD and  WDOE.

     A key  goal  in the initial community relations planning  was the assurance
that all concerned parties were accurately informed  about the  ongoing progress
and findings, and   that they had opportunities to provide  inputs concerning
the remedial  investigation.
                                    11

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      TABLE 2.  TECHNICAL OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE MEMBERS AND AFFILIATION
Member
Affiliation
John Armstrong
Dick Bauer
Clifford Bosley
Dick Cunningham
Curtis Dahlgren
Tom Deming
Jim Ebbert
David Jamison
Bob Kievit
Jim Krull
Gary Kucinski
Ed Long
Steve Martin
Merley McCall
Frank Monahan
Dan Petke
Doug Pierce
Rick Pierce
Michael Price
Derek Sandison
Roger Stanley
David Stout
John Underwood
Bill Yake
U.S. EPA, Region X
U.S. EPA, Region X
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
WDOE, Southwest Regional Office
Washington Department of Fisheries
Puyallup Tribe
U.S. Geological Survey
Washington Department of Natural Resources
U.S. EPA, Washington Operations Office
WDOE, Chairman
Port of Tacoma
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle District
WDOE, Southwest Regional Office
WDOE, Southwest Regional Office
U.S. EPA/WDOE Northwest Regional Office
Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department
WDOE, Southwest Regional Office
City of Tacoma, Department of Public Works
Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department
WDOE, Industrial Section
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
U.S. EPA, Region X
WDOE, Water Quality Investigations Section
                                    12

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                  TABLE  3.   CITIZENS ADVISORY COMMITTEE,
        COMMENCEMENT BAY NEARSHORE/TIDEFLATS REMEDIAL INVESTIGATION
Citizen                       Affiliation

Nona Adams                    League of Women Voters
Walt Adams                    Tahoma Audubon Society
Peter Ariessohn               Pierce County Citizen
Mike Bradley                  Vashon Island Citizen
Donald M. Carmichael          University of Puget Sound Law School
Mike Cooney                   Tacoma Citizen
Mike Elenko                   Tacoma Community House (Asian-American)
Dr. Biff Fouke                Pierce County Medical Society
Robert Gordon                 Tahomans for a Healthy Environment
Douglas Jackman               Pierce County Medical Society
Frank Jackson                 Vashon Island Community Council
Diane Robbins                 Citizen
Beth Preslar                  Citizen
Gary Preston                  Epidemiologist, Vashon Island Citizen
Linda Tanz                    League of Women Voters
Sheri Tonn, Ph.D.             Sierra Club
Rich McCurdy                  City Club of Tacoma
To be named                   Tacoma-Pierce County Chamber of Commerce


Agency/Consultant Representative

Debbie Flood                  U.S. EPA Region X
Bob Kievit                    U.S. EPA Region X/WOO
James Krull                   WDOE
Larry Marx                    Tetra Tech, Inc.
Doug Pierce                   Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department
                                     13

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     Specific community concerns  included:

     •    Potential  health problems caused by consumption of contam-
          inated  fish and  shellfish

     •    Potential  impacts  on  recreational  fisheries

     t    Communication of potential  dangers to residents with language
          or cultural differences

     •    The effects of Commencement Bay contamination on local environ-
          mental  quality and recreational values.

2.1.2.2  Objectives--

     The general  objective  of  the community relations program was to ensure
that  information was exchanged between  the government agencies and consultants
trying to understand  and solve  the nearshore/tideflats contamination problems
and members of the  community  who  are either  affected  by the problem or
have information  and  perspectives that will  help the agencies reach solutions.
Through this information exchange, the public and local government agencies
had  ample  opportunity to  keep  up  with the project status  and to review
and contribute to project  direction  and findings.

     Specific objectives included:

     •    Briefing  the Tacoma-Pierce County  Board of Health, Tacoma
          City Council, and  other local  officials  on  project  status
          and progress

     •    Holding  public  meetings  and distributing periodic project
          update  sheets to inform local citizens about  project  status
          and direction in an understandable manner

     •    Utilizing  the CAC  to  disseminate  information to representative
          groups  and  for review of project  presentations and documents


     •    Holding meetings as requested  with interested  citizens and
          groups  to  discuss  findings, alternative remedies, and concerns

     •    Holding site tours by boat  and bus to give visual perspectives
          and to  disseminate site-specific  information

     •    Using the  Tacoma-Pierce  County  Health  Department library
          and WDOE project office as  central depositories of technical
          studies  and other  information concerning the nearshore/tideflats
          area

     •    Making  results of  the remedial investigation available through
          public  workshops and  documents  at local  public libraries,
          and at  TPCHD, WDOE, U.S. EPA Region X, and Tetra  Tech.
                                     14

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2.1.2.3  Implementation--

     Several  techniques were  used during  the  remedial  investigation to
satisfy the objectives  of the  community relations  program.   Forming the
Citizens  Advisory  Committee  (CAC) was a major factor  in implementing the
program.   Committee  members represented professions and civic groups  listed
in Table 3.  The  CAC members viewed their roles and activities as educational,
political, and critical, and  felt  that the community  relations  program
should  educate the public  and elected officials  on  the complexities of
the Superfund program and the remedial  investigation.   They also  felt it
was important to  track  reactions to Superfund activities.

     Different  techniques and activities  used to meet  the objectives of
the community relations program are listed below:

Routine Activities

     1.   Meetings:       Citizens Advisory Committee
                         Tacoma-Pierce County Board of Health

     2.   Press  releases

     3.   Periodic  updates  - mailed  to local  community, state, and  local
          agencies and  concerned citizens.

Spec i a1 Ac 11vitie s

     1.   Presentations to special groups:
                         Local  schools
                         Tacoma Community College
                         League of Women Voters
                         Tacoma City Club
                         Tacoma City Council
                         Tacoma Chamber of Commerce
                         Seattle City Club
                         Pierce Subregional Council of Puget Sound
                          Council of Governments
                         Water  Resources Council

     2.   Special  flier to  the  Asian  community concerning  fishing
          and public health concerns

     3.   Industrial forum  meeting  (all industries within study area
          invited)

     4.   Local  radio talk show

     5.   Bus tours  of  site:
                         Press/media
                         Puget  Sound Water Quality Authority
                         Tacoma Community College
                                    15

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     6.   Boat tour of site:
                         Press
                         Tacoma  City Club
                         Citizens Advisory Committee
                         Water Resources Council

     7.   Public Meetings.

     It is  planned that findings of the  remedial  investigation  will  be
presented  through the  following  activities:

     Presentations/meetings:
                         Citizens Advisory Committee
                         Public  meeting
                         Governmental agencies (federal, state, and  local)
                         Press/media
                         Local schools and colleges
                         Documents made available at local  libraries
                         Chamber of Commerce - business/industrial  community.

Because the level  of  concern remains  high,  community relations support
will  be maintained during both presentation of findings and execution  of
the remedial action feasibility  study, if it is funded.

2.2  TECHNICAL AND SCIENTIFIC

2.2.1  Decision-Making Approach

     The decision-making  approach developed for the Commencement Bay Nearshore/
Tideflats  Investigation  is  described  in  detail  in Tetra  Tech (1984a) and
is summarized  below.   Major elements of the Commencement Bay decision-making
approach  are presented in Figure 4.

      The  first step in  the process was to determine the types of information
needed to  best meet the  objectives of the project (i.e., the  determination
of problem areas, problem chemicals, problem sources, and a means of  ranking
these in  priority order).   Because cause-effect  information  did not exist
for  relating  contaminant  concentrations in the sediments  to actual  effects
in the marine  environment,  it was necessary to collect  information on both
chemistry and biological  effects.  The indicators chosen  were  chemical
contamination in the sediments, sediment toxicity as determined by laboratory
tests  of  field-collected  sediments  (i.e., amphipod bioassays as  a lethal
indicator  and  oyster larvae bioassays as a sublethal indicator), bioaccumu-
lation of contaminants  in English  sole and cancrid crabs, and biological
effects (i.e., alterations  of benthic  invertebrate assemblages and liver
lesions in  English sole).  Other ancillary kinds of information determined
necessary  were the physical characteristics of  the sediments  (i.e., grain
size), the  organic content of the sediments, and a measure of the oxidation
state of  the sediments.   Chemical  analysis of  water column  particulates
was also  determined to be useful in making judgments on contaminant movement
in the project area.

     The  next step in the process was to review and evaluate the  existing
database.   A sampling  and analysis plan was then developed.   Stations were


                                    16

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                             CHARACTERIZE:
                         CHEMICAL CONTAMINATION
                           SEDIMENT TOXICITY
                           BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS
                        DETERMINE ELEVATION ABOVE
                            REFERENCE (EAR)
                       ASSEMBLE ACTION ASSESSMENT
                              MATRICES
                      APPLY ACTION LEVEL GUIDELINES
   n
     O
     u
     A
  T
  A
  T

  V
  E

  R
  E
  L
  A
  T

  O
  N
  S
  H
  I
                >
LJ
                 •>
                        IDENTIFY STUDY AREAS AND
                          SEGMENTS OF CONCERN
                            ±.
                        DEFINE EXTENT OF
                      PROBLEM AREAS WITHIN
                    STUDY AREAS AND SEGMENTS
                      <-
                          RANK PROBLEM AREAS
                           (WORST CONDITIONS)
                                4-
          1  VI
           I  ?l
           in
 IDENTIFY POTENTIAL
PROBLEM CHEMICALS IN
  PROBLEM AREAS
                                4-
4-
lJ
                         RANK PROBLEM CHEMICALS
                                4-
                       CONDUCT SOURCE EVALUATIONS
                          FINAL PRIORITIZATION OF
                           PROBLEM AREAS FOR
                            REMEDIAL ACTION
Figure 4.   Decision-making approach for the  Commencement Bay
             Nearshore/Tideflats  Remedial  Investigation.
                                 17

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located  to  fill gaps  in  the historical  database,  to define more precisely
areas of known  contamination, and to  evaluate gradients  of contamination
and effects  relative  to suspected sources  of contamination.

     A reference  area (Carr Inlet)  was selected  so that  Commencement Bay
data could be compared with data from an embayment  judged  to have relatively
uncontaminated  sediments.  Carr Inlet is located  away from the industrialized
areas of Puget  Sound.  Concentrations of chemicals  in the  sediments  sampled
from  Carr Inlet were comparable or lower than those  in other Puget Sound
reference areas.

     The sampling  plan was implemented by  an intensive field survey conducted
from January to August,  1984 (summarized in Section  2.2.4).  Results  of
the  field survey were used  to characterize the  project  area on several
degrees of spatial resolution:

     t    Overall  Project Area

     •    Study Areas  (the eight waterways  and  the  Ruston-Pt. Defiance
          Shoreline)

     t    Segments (the larger study areas were  divided  into segments)

     •    Problem Areas (areas  within  segments  determined  to  be a
          problem).

     Characterization with  respect to degree  of  sediment contamination,
toxicity, bioaccumulation, and biological  effects  was  achieved by establishing
an index for each  environmental  variable or  indicator investigated, calculating
"elevations  above  reference"  (EAR)  for each indicator,  and testing  each
EAR for significance.   For toxicity, bioaccumulation, and  biological effects,
a significant  EAR  was one that was  statistically different (P<0.05)  from
Carr  Inlet  (except  for  benthic alterations within the waterways, where
Blair Waterway  was used  in  lieu of  Carr  Inlet).   For  sediment chemistry
the  EAR  (elevation  above  reference in  Carr Inlet) was determined to be
significant  if the contaminant value  exceeded the maximum value  in  any
of several reference  areas throughout Puget  Sound.   The  Puget Sound reference
areas used are named  in  Volume 1,  page  3.34 for  organic compounds,  and
in Volume 1, page  3.18 for metals.

     In addition to characterization of  the  project  area as described above,
results of the field survey were also used to  develop quantitative relationships
among  sediment contamination, toxicity,  and  biological  effects.  These
analyses were conducted primarily to determine  levels of sediment contamination
above  which significant  toxicity or  biological  effects would be expected
to occur, and to identify contaminants  suspected of causing the  observed
effects.   Results of the  quantitative  relationships analyses were used
to help define  boundaries of problem areas and to identify potential problem
chemicals.

     EAR  for study areas and segments were  assembled into action assessment
matrices.  These matrices display the indices (EAR)  for  each environmental
variable  or indicator for  each study  area or  segment  under consideration.
Also displayed  is  whether  the EAR  is significant  or  not significant  and


                                    18

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the  reference value  from which the  EAR was determined.   An example of an
Action Assessment  Matrix  is shown in  Table 7, Section 3.3.  Action-level
guidelines  were  then  applied to the matrices  to  identify study areas and
segments of  concern.   Each study area or  segment  of  concern  included  either
a problem  area that  extended over most of the study  area or segment, or
a "hot spot"  of major  significance within the study  area or segment.   The
action-level  guidelines defined the minimum levels and  specific combinations
of environmental  indicators required before problem  area definition could
proceed.   This threshold for action was always exceeded  if at least three
of the five  indicators  of  sediment contamination, toxicity, and biological
effects were determined to be  significantly elevated above reference conditions
in an area.   More  stringent requirements were applied if less than three
indicators  were significantly  elevated in an area.

     After  areas  of concern  were  defined,  problem  areas  were identified
and  their spatial extents were determined.  Problem area definition incorporated
all  available data,  including historical data and  use  of results of the
quantitative relationships among indicators developed  as  part of the  present
study.   Problem  areas were  then ranked according to  their  most  extreme
levels of contamination,  toxicity,  and biological  effects.  Priority  for
evaluation  of potential  sources of contamination was  based  on this ranking.
Potential  problem  chemicals were also identified  and  ranked  at this point.

     After  problem areas and potential  problem chemicals were identified
and ranked,  potential  sources  of contamination were  evaluated.  Final prior-
itization of problem areas recommended for remedial  action was then determined
on the basis of the relative magnitude of problems in  each  area, the  spatial
extent  of  each area,  and the level of confidence that sources of potential
problem chemicals  were  accurately identified.

2.2.2  Data  Management

     The data  management system developed for the  Commencement Bay  project
consisted  of a central  database, additional data  analysis packages,  and
a library.   The  system  was  developed  using an IBM  microcomputer  and the
Knowledge Manager  relational database software package published by Micro
Data Base Systems, Inc.

     The Commencement Bay database consists of  23  data  files, each  storing
a different kind  of data.  Data of  different  kinds  are linked together
by  common  identifiers  (e.g., survey, station,  drainage).   At present, the
database contains  over  25,000  records, each consisting of 15-150 separate
variables.   There  are  descriptions of over 50 surveys,  500  sampling stations,
and 2,000 samples of  water,   solids,  and biota.   Over 400 components of
the  Commencement  Bay  drainage system  have been identified.  Included are
data on sediment and water column chemistry, bioassays, benthic invertebrates,
fish  pathology,  and  bioaccumulation.  All data were  subjected to rigorous
quality assurance  procedures before entering the  database.

     Within the  data  management system, data are manipulated using  a menu-
driven system,  which allows access  to all files.   Data retrieved  by  the
menu-driven  system can  be written to a file and  then included in word-processed
reports, used  with various data analysis  programs, or  transferred to other
computers  via modem.  For the Commencement Bay projects, extensive use


                                     19

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was made of  spreadsheets (particularly LOTUS 1-2-3 published by Lotus Develop-
ment Corporation) and SPSS statistical software (published  by  SPSS, Inc.).

     A project  library was developed  to  hold over 500  documents (e.g.,
reports, correspondence, and maps)  relevant to the Commencement  Bay project.
Each  document is filed under  an  accession number.   This information is
linked to the  database to facilitate  retrieval of original  sources of infor-
mation.   A  complete copy  of the  library is  located  at  the WDOE project
office in Olympia and at Tetra  Tech,  Inc. in Bellevue.

2.2.3  Data  Review and Evaluation

     One of the  first  components  of the Commencement  Bay  Superfund project
was a detailed review and  evaluation of all historical data relevant to
the  project area.   Information was compiled from the WDOE library, the
U.S. EPA Region  X library,  the  University of  Washington  library  system,
the  Tetra Tech  library, WDOE  files (Headquarters and Southwest Regional
Office), Port  of  Tacoma  files,  files of the Tacoma-Pierce County  Health
Department, files  of the  Puget Sound  Air Pollution  Control Agency, and
personal contacts with  scientific  investigators  (WDOE,  COE, EPA, NOAA,
UW).

     A detailed  description of the data  review and  evaluation process is
presented in Tetra Tech  (1983).  Briefly, data  were  evaluated according
to the following  criteria:

     •    Type of data  (e.g.,  sources, contamination, environmental
          effects)

     •    Location(s) and time(s) of  sampling

     •    Sampling  methods  (e.g., collection, handling,  storage, and
          replication)

     •    Analytical methods (e.g.,  accuracy, precision, and  detection
          limits)

     t    Quality assurance/quality control procedures (e.g., spikes,
          blanks).

     Data considered  unacceptable  for  the  needs of  the  Commencement Bay
project were not  considered beyond  the evaluation  step.  Acceptable  data
were  summarized in  a matrix format and entered into  the  Commencement Bay
database.  In addition, station  locations  for  all  acceptable data  were
plotted on maps  of project study areas.

     The acceptable  data  screened  by  the  review and  evaluation  process
were used to 1)  identify known  sources of contamination, 2) identify known
areas of contamination and  effects, and 3) identify data gaps in the historical
database. This  information was  then  used to help  design  the preliminary
and main field studies.
                                    20

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2.2.4  Field Sampling Design

     Field  studies for the Commencement Bay Nearshore/Tideflats Remedial
Investigation were designed to determine the degree  and  spatial extent
of chemical  contamination, adverse biological  effects, and potential threats
to public health.   This information was used  in conjunction with historical
data  to  formulate decision criteria which,  in  turn, were used to identify
problem areas and  to prioritize these  areas  for possible  source control
and/or  sediment remedial  action (Section  2.2.1).  This decision-making
approach is  described in detail in Tetra Tech  (1984a).

     The general  sampling design for the Commencement Bay project is presented
in Table 4.   Chemical contamination was measured in three  media:  bottom
sediments  (surface and  subsurface), water  column  particulates, and  animal
tissues.  Four kinds of biological effects of chemical  contamination were
also measured:  alteration of benthic  macroinvertebrate  assemblages, toxicity
of sediments to  bioassay organisms (amphipods  and oyster larvae), prevalence
of histopathological disorders in English sole  livers, and bioaccumulation
(English sole and  cancrid  crab muscle  tissue).   In addition to the data
collected  as part of the  main Commencement Bay project, contaminant  and
effects information was collected  in  Blair Waterway as  part  of the Blair
Waterway Dredging Survey,  a  combined  effort  between the Port of  Tacoma
and the Commencement Bay  Superfund project.   Because  these  samples were
collected  using methods identical to  those of the Commencement Bay project,
the resulting data  were included in the analyses  in  the present report.

     Final  selection  of sampling stations  was based  on historical data
and on the  results of a  preliminary  survey  conducted  in  January, 1984.
Stations were selected  to  fill  data  gaps,  to  define more precisely  known
areas of contamination,  and to determine gradients of  contamination  in
relation to  suspected sources.

     The extent  and  magnitude of chemical   contamination of sediments  was
determined by comparing chemical concentrations  in  Commencement Bay study
areas  with  reference conditions in  Carr Inlet.  Known and blind replicate
samples prepared from homogenized  sediments  were analyzed  as part of  the
quality  assurance program  to establish  precision of laboratory methods.
Within-station variability was not evaluated.   Therefore, tests  for statisti-
cally  significant differences between Commencement Bay and Carr Inlet that
use within-station  variability were not conducted.   Sediment  contamination
was defined instead as "significant" if the  concentrations in Commencement
Bay sediments exceeded all  reported  values  (or  detection  limits) in  any
of nine Puget Sound reference areas, including Carr  Inlet.

     Pearson  linear correlation analyses and  factor analyses were performed
for subsets  of chemical data.  Results were used  to  establish relationships
among  the distributions of chemicals in Commencement Bay study areas,  and
among sediment contamination, sediment toxicity,  and benthic infaunal  abun-
dances.  "Apparent effect  thresholds"  (AET) for  different chemicals were
established  by comparing the  range  of concentrations  for  each chemical
in each of two groups of stations:  1) stations where no significant toxicity
or depression in benthic infaunal  abundances was  observed, and 2) stations
where  some  toxic  or benthic  effect  was observed.  The toxicity AET is  the
concentration  of a chemical  above  which  significant  sediment  toxicity  would


                                     21

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                     TABLE 4.  SUMMARY OF GENERAL STUDY  DESIGN

Number of
Commencement
Variable Bay
Sediment Chemistry
Surface 15
111
12
Subsurface 18
17
Water Column Chemistry 9
Benthic Macroinvertebrates 44
6
Sediment Bioassays 46
6
Fish Histopathology 15
Bioaccumulation 15
Stations
Carr Study Areas3
Inlet Sampled

4C HY,BL,MI,MD,CI,RS,CR
4 All
BL
HY,SI,SP,MD,CI,RS
BL
HY,BL,SI,MI,MD,CI
4 All
BL
4 All
BL
2 All
2 All
Time of
Sampltgb

January
March
July
May
July
April
August
March
July
March
July
June
June
a The nine  study areas  include Hylebos (HY), Blair (BL),  Sitcum  (SI), Milwaukee (MI),
St.  Paul  (SP),  Middle  (MD) and City (CI) Waterways, the Ruston-Pt.  Defiance  Shoreline
(RS), and  Carr  Inlet (CR).

D All sampling was conducted in 1984.   The stations  sampled  in  January were part of
the  preliminary survey  and the stations sampled in July were part of the Blair  Waterway
Dredging  Survey.

c At two  of  these  stations, only conventional sediment variables  were measured.
                                        22

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always be expected.   Similarly, the benthic effects AET is the concentration
of a chemical above which significant benthic effects would always be expected.
The toxicity  AET and  the benthic effects AET may or may not occur  at  the
same concentration of  a  chemical.

     To determine the  potential biological effects of the observed chemical
contamination,  each  of  four biological  indicators (i.e., benthic macro-
invertebrates,  sediment  bioassays, fish histopathology, and bioaccumulation)
were compared  between Commencement Bay and Carr Inlet.  Although some compar-
isons  were qualitative (i.e., descriptive), most were based  on statistical
criteria.  Use of such  criteria ensured that impacts were judged objectively.
If possible,  comparisons were made  using parametric statistical methods.
Where the assumption  of parametric  tests could  not be met  using either
untransformed  or transformed  (e.g., logarithmic)  data, nonparametric methods
were used with  untransformed data.

2.2.5  Source  Investigations

     The main  objective  of  the  source  investigations was to identify  and
prioritize the  major sources of contaminants in Commencement Bay sediments.
Because of the complexity of the study area,  the numerous  contaminants
present, and  the extensive  industrial  development of the area,  the conduct
of source identifications  represented a complex assessment requiring evaluation
of many data  types.

     The Water  Quality  Investigations section of the Washington State Department
of Ecology (WDOE)  was  given responsibility for five projects to be completed
under  Task 4 (Determine Sources of  Contamination and Characterize as  a
Current or Historical  Source) of the Commencement  Bay Nearshore/Tideflats
Remedial Investigation.   Tne five projects included:

     •    Assessment  of log  sorting  yards as metals sources to the
          Commencement  Bay waterways

     •    Metals in  Hylebos Creek drainage as a metals source  to Hylebos
          Waterway

     •    Routine monitoring of major point sources (other than NPDES)
          to  Commencement  Bay waterways

     •    Source identification of metals in Sitcum Waterway sediments

     •    Sources of metals  and organic priority pollutants to City
          Waterway sediments.

     The Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department conducted an investigation
to identify all  drains,  seeps, and channels that discharge into the waterways
and bay in the tideflats area; to  identify the drainage network into  the
Fife area (Hylebos Creek  and Wapato Creek); and  to identify  outfalls and
drainage  systems along  the  Ruston Way  shoreline.  The investigation was
comprehensive,  incorporating information  gathered from the  numerous case
studies and  identifications previously performed in the area.   It provided
a permanent record of outfall locations  and drainage systems  in place at
the time  of  the  study.   Chemical analysis was performed on  effluents from


                                     23

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selected outfalls and  points within the drainage systems  to  determine whether
pollutants were entering  the aquatic ecosystem and to identify  significant
sources of pollution  not  already recognized through previous  case  studies.
Extensive shoreline  investigations were performed  at low tide  by  boat and
on  foot.   Contributing  drainage systems  were evaluated  by  walking  along
open channel systems,  surveying, some dye testing, and verification of
manhole and catch  basin locations  for closed  storm systems  on  record.
Maps and records of  the storm systems  for the political entities in the
area were obtained and  verified.

     The  efforts of source identification  integrated  a large  database on
potential  contaminant  sources, observed contaminant levels  in water and
sediment, and  ancillary  information.  Some of the most valuable  information
utilized in source identification included:

     •    Spatial gradients of contamination in surficial  sediments

     •    Vertical gradients of contamination in sediment cores

     •    Analyses for  the  contaminant(s) in discharges

     •    Dredging history

     •    Environmental fate processes

     •    Industrial activities.

     Evaluation of spatial  gradients of contamination in  surficial sediments
was the most important component of  the source  identification  process.
Spatial gradients were  evaluated both on a one-dimensional (along the length
of the waterway) and on a two-dimensional basis.   These evaluations  were
conducted  using contaminant concentrations expressed as a dry weight concen-
tration in sediment.   Organic contaminant concentrations normalized to
organic carbon were also used to aid in determination of spatial gradients.
Evaluation of spatial gradients was used to establish the probable  location
of contaminant  sources, with the implicit assumption that  the most contaminated
sediments  were  in closest proximity to the sources.

     Evaluation of  vertical  gradients  of  contamination in sediment  cores
was used to assess the historical pattern of contaminant input.   For  example,
greatest  contaminant  concentrations  in the uppermost  sediments indicated
ongoing or recent input  or past input  exposed  by dredging,  ship scour,
etc.   Alternatively,  subsurface contaminant maxima suggested  that  greatest
inputs occurred in the  past,  or that  the area had been covered  recently
by clean  material.  Uniform contaminant concentrations with depth suggested
long-term  input, groundwater contamination,  or interstitial  water mobility
of the contaminant.

     The contribution of  contaminants by point sources and runoff was assessed
by use of  loading estimates (the quantity of material  expressed in Ib/day
released  to the water).   These  loading estimates were  calculated  from all
available measurements of discharge flow rates and  contaminant concentrations
in the Commencement  Bay database.   The majority of discharge flow and concen-
tration measurements in the database  came from WOOE investigations (e.g.,


                                    24

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Class  II  surveys) and Commencement Bay  nearshore/tideflats remedial  surveys
conducted  by  U.S. EPA, Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department, and  specific
industries.   For  each contaminant of concern, an average loading was  calculated
for each discharge into the defined problem area for which flow and concen-
tration data  were available.

     There is evidence  of groundwater contamination within many portions
of the nearshore/tideflats  area because of  past spills,  use of unlined
industrial waste ponds,  and  landfill  ing of  hazardous materials.   Local,
state, and federal agencies  were contacted  to obtain all  available data
for  information  on groundwater flow  and contamination.   These agencies
included the  Port of Tacoma,  Tacoma Public  Utilities Department, Pierce
County Department of Public  Works, State Department of  Highways,  WDOE,
and  the U.S. Geological  Survey.  The  existing  data were  very  limited.
In general,  existing data  were inadequate  to  determine the magnitude of
groundwater contamination, to predict the route  of groundwater flow from
a  contaminated  area, and  to  determine the loading of contaminants  to the
waterways  via groundwater.

     Files of both  the  U.S. Coast  Guard  (USCG) and WDOE were reviewed to
obtain information on past spills of hazardous materials  in  the nearshore/
tideflats area.   The USCG files were  not useful  because spill  locations
were imprecise (i.e., reported only to the  nearest minute latitude and
longitude) and little information on chemical constituents of spilled material
exists. For  example, a spill at 47° 16' N latitude and 122° 26' W  longitude
could have  occurred in the Puyallup River;  St. Paul, Middle, or City Waterways;
or southeast  Commencement Bay.  WDOE files for  1979 to 1985 contained reports
of approximately  30 hazardous material  spills with potential effects on
water  quality in the study  area.  About 35 petroleum spills in  excess of
50 gallons were also documented during the same period.

     The  dredging  history of  the  nearshore/tideflats  area was reviewed
to help interpret horizontal and vertical contamination gradients  observed
in the sediment core samples.  Information on maintenance dredging  activities
and private dredging activities within  the nearshore/tideflats  area was
obtained by a WDOE review of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (COE) and U.S. EPA
files.  All dredge and fill  applications submitted to the COE from 1972
to the present were reviewed  to identify the  industrial  applicant, the
spatial  extent of dredging activities, and the volume of material  intended
for removal.

2.2.6  Endangerment Assessment

     The objective  of the endangerment  assessment  for the Commencement
Bay Investigation was to evaluate public health risks associated with consump-
tion of contaminated seafood from the study area.  This assessment  considered
three routes  of contaminant exposure: consumption of fish  muscle tissue,
crab muscle  tissue, and  fish  livers.   The overall  assessment  consisted
of an exposure evaluation and a prediction of health effects (i.e., risks).

     The  first step in the exposure assessment was to calculate the  exposed
population (i.e., individuals consuming  fish or shellfish from Commencement
Bay).  Estimates of the exposed population  were  obtained  from a  survey
conducted  by  the  Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department  (TPCHD, Pierce


                                    25

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et al. 1981).   Based  on  results of that survey, 4,070  shore  and boat anglers
were estimated for  Commencement  Bay.   The average  family size  was  3.74
persons, resulting  in  a  predicted exposed population of  15,200 persons.

     The second  step  in the exposure evaluation was to  calculate the amount
of fish consumed  by  the  exposed population.  This was  accomplished  by  using
the  information provided  in  the Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department's
Catch Consumption  Survey  to estimate the frequency of fishing and multiplying
that value by the  average  catch per  trip of nonsalmonid fishes intended
for consumption.  These calculations  indicated  that  a small proportion
of the  exposed population  (i.e., 30  of 15,220  or  0.2 percent) consumed
fish at the highest  estimated rate of  1 Ib/day.   These calculations  also
indicated  that 82 percent  of the exposed population consumed  less than
1 Ib/month and that over half the population (57 percent) consumed Commencement
Bay fish at the lowest rate of 1 Ib/year.  No data were  available on shellfish
consumption rates.   Consumption of crabs was therefore assumed to follow
a distribution  equal  to  fish consumption.

     The final  step  in the exposure evaluation was to  multiply the  estimated
seafood consumption  rates  by the  concentrations  of  contaminants  in  fish
and  crab tissue.  Tissue contaminant data collected  as part of the present
study were used for  this analysis.

     No data were available on consumption rates of fish livers.  Therefore,
it was assumed  that  all  persons who eat fish livers eat them from all  the
fish they  catch.   It was also assumed that the liver mass  was proportional
to the  liver-to-muscle  ratio (12 percent) of  Commencement Bay fishes.
Therefore, at the maximum  estimated  fish consumption rate of  1 Ib/day,
the corresponding maximum liver consumption rate would be 0.12 Ib/day.

     Exposure  calculations were used to predict carcinogenic and  noncarcinogenic
risks to public health.   Carcinogens  in this  assessment were substances
that the U.S.  EPA considers possible cancer-causing  agents.  Public health
risks from  ingestion  of carcinogens  was estimated  using the U.S.  EPA's
Carcinogen  Assessment  Group methodology (U.S. EPA 1984).  Estimated  individual
lifetime risks were  calculated by multiplying  the  exposure for each  of
the contaminants  by  U.S. EPA's unit risk scores.

     Noncarcinogens were assumed to have threshold  toxic  responses (i.e.,
to cause some  ill effect only after a certain dose is  exceeded).  Therefore,
calculated exposures for these substances were compared with  published
Acceptable  Daily  Intakes (ADIs).  Effects were  predicted in the exposed
population  if  exposure exceeded the ADI.

2.2.7  Identification of Potential Remedial Technologies

      The  four major objectives  in  this part of the   investigation  were:
1) to describe  and evaluate  alternative dredging methods and equipment,
disposal methods and sites,  and site  control and treatment practices for
contaminated sediments; 2) to develop a preliminary decision-making  framework
for  the  management  of dredged material; 3) to prioritize sources of problem
chemicals within  each problem area; and 4) to delineate  the remedial  tech-
nologies applicable  to each hot spot or problem area.
                                    26

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     The U.S.  Army Corps  of  Engineers  (COE)  conducted  an  assessment of
alternative dredging  methods and  equipment, disposal methods  and sites,
and  site  control  and  treatment practices for contaminated  sediments derived
from Commencement  Bay.   These alternatives were evaluated based on:

     •    Cost  of  each  alternative

     •    Degree  of confinement and release  of volatile,  soluble,
          and sediment-bound contaminants resulting with each  alternative

     •    Considerations and limitations specific to each alternative
          (e.g., equipment  and site availability, method  efficiency,
          equipment  depth limitations, sociopolitical concerns,  and
          other indicators  of practicability).

     The COE also  developed  a decision-making framework for dredged  material
management.  The decision-making framework is based on the  results  of tech-
nically sound test  protocols, and considers sediment chemistry, the physi-
cochemical  nature  of  disposal site environments, and the biological  effects
of  sediment contaminants.  Test results  from sediments  to  be  dredged are
compared with test results  from reference sediments and with established
criteria.   Test  protocols are discussed that consider the physicochemical
conditions posed by  open-water disposal environments and by confined nearshore
and  upland disposal  environments.   Descriptions  of the physicochemical
conditions  at each disposal  environment are provided as well  as descriptions
and  citations of  the  test methods to be conducted.  In addition,  examples
of test results obtained  from recent test applications at other COE  dredging
projects  are discussed.  Test results are used  to formulate management
strategies  for  placing  dredged material  in specific physicochemical  disposal
environments and  to  determine treatment and control methods for disposing
of contaminated sediments in an environmentally acceptable  manner.

     To define remedial  technologies, two aspects of sediment contamination
in Commencement Bay were  considered:  the type and magnitude of contaminated
sediments,  and  the mechanisms by which contaminants enter the bay.   Technologies
were classified according to the problem they addressed.  Management tech-
nologies for sediments  were  aimed at reducing or mitigating the environmental
and public  health  threats associated with contaminated sediments.   Control
technologies for  sources  were aimed at reducing or preventing contaminants
from entering the  marine environment.   Sediment management technologies
were  classified  as  removal or in situ methods, and source control  methods
were classified as point  or  nonpoint technologies.  A list  of  all potential
remedial technologies was generated, including a description of their  applica-
tions, limitations, cost  estimates, advantages, and disadvantages.   Remedial
technologies were not further screened or ranked, as these  evaluations
will be performed  in  the  feasibility study.

     Prioritization of  sources for remedial  action was based  on the  priority
of the observed contaminants, degree of confidence in source  identification,
magnitude  of relative loading (if  known), and  method of remedial  action
implementation.  For  each problem area  where  contamination sources were
identified, a list of potential remedial  technologies  was developed for
those sources.   Additional  source identification  methods were recommended
for those  contaminants  with  unknown and potential  sources.


                                    27

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2.2.8  Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QA/QC)

     QA/QC procedures  for the Commencement Bay Nearshore/Tideflats Super-fund
Investigation were applied to cover interdisciplinary field  sampling, laboratory
analyses, data validation, and data  analysis.  These  procedures covered
collection and  analysis  of water, fishes, crabs, surface sediments, subsurface
sediments, and suspended particulate material.  Field samples were analyzed
for organic and inorganic chemistry, benthic ecology,  sediment toxicology,
and  fish pathology.   Field tasks were  integrated  by establishing common
sampling sites, sampling methods, and sampling times for  related disciplines,
as specified   in the  project sampling and analysis plan (Tetra Tech 1984b).
Specific procedures  used in each area are summarized in a QA/QC plan approved
by the U.S. EPA and WDOE (Brown and Caldwell and  E.V.S.  Consultants 1984).

     In  addition,  for chemical  analyses,  a  method validation study was
conducted to  evaluate chemical protocols used  for  the  determination of
trace  organic  compounds  in sediments by four  analytical laboratories.
Results from analytical  laboratories were reviewed by Tetra  Tech  for  conformance
with QA/QC requirements.  Detection limits, accuracy,  precision, completeness,
and conformance with the specified protocol were verified during data review.
Ten  to  twenty percent of  the data was examined in  a complete verification
effort.  The remainder of the  data was evaluated for outliers  and completeness
prior  to database  entry.   All of the  spectral  data  for  the tentatively
identified organic  compounds were  manually examined.   When possible, QA
audits  included the  use  of known geochemical trends in  environmental data
to evaluate the reliability  of  the data returned  for  interpretation.

2.2.9  Health  and  Safety

     Because  soils, sediments,  water, and waste material  associated with
contaminated areas  may present  significant health hazards, personnel  who
came  into direct  contact  with contaminated materials  were provided with
personal, dermal,  and  respiratory protection.

     Safety plan  guidelines developed for the  Commencement Bay Nearshore/
Tideflats Remedial  Investigation (Tetra Tech 1983) covered field  procedures
to collect and process  samples of  water, sediment,  fishes,  and  crabs.
These guidelines also  covered  other  activities  that might be  associated
with  future Superfund activities (e.g., surveying,  dredging, excavation
and dewatering of  sediment,  and waste hauling).

     The site-specific safety plan for the investigation (Brown and Caldwell
and E.V.S. Consultants 1983) ensured safe conduct  of  field  operations  and
collection of data.  The  plan specifically called  for  a modified Level D
protection, with the substitution of marine rubber  work boots with  non-
slip soles for steel-toed  boots.  Monitoring  equipment  included an HNu
photoionization detector and  personnel  organic monitoring badges.  Collection
of certain deep core and  sediment samples required  the  use of respirators
with  GMC-H combination cartridges for  acids, gases,  and  organic vapors
(MSA 464046).

     The  site safety  plan  guidelines and  site-specific  safety plan were
approved by the WDOE  Project Manager and the U.S. EPA Region X  Safety Officer.


                                    28

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                                3.   RESULTS
3.1  ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS

3.1.1  Contamination

     The evaluation  of contamination  in Commencement Bay focused on surface
and subsurface  subtidal sediments.   General  objectives of  the sediment
contamination studies were to:

     t    Determine  the magnitude  of contamination relative  to the
          project reference  area  (Carr Inlet)

     •    Develop a  condensed list  of  chemicals  of  concern  (i.e.,
          concentrations exceeding maximum Puget Sound reference levels)
          from  the numerous chemicals  analyzed  in Commencement Bay
          sediments

     •    Develop  a  list of Commencement Bay areas with highest  levels
          of each chemical of concern.

     Commencement Bay  study areas were divided into 20 segments as  shown
in Figure 5.  The major reason  for defining segments was to provide a means
of reporting major  chemical, sediment toxicity, and biological  gradients
within areas that sometimes  contained  dozens of stations in various arrays.
Hence, small areas such as Sitcum, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Middle Waterways
were  not subdivided.   Boundaries  of segments within large areas were generally
established to define major  zones of varying chemical contamination.  Contam-
ination from one group of chemicals sometimes extended well  past a segment
boundary defined according to a zone of contamination for other chemicals.

     At a minimum, each segment was required to  contain  at  least  three
stations (except Segment CIS2 which consisted of the isolated Wheeler-Osgood
branch  of  City Waterway).   Segments  were also required to contain at  least
one station for which complementary biological  and  sediment  toxicity data
were  available  (except Segment BLS4 located  in  deeper water outside of
Blair Waterway).  Average concentrations of chemicals within  segments are
used  in  later  discussions   to evaluate trends  in  chemical concentrations
along  areas.  "Hotspots" of chemical contamination are evaluated at individual
stations when chemical gradients  are apparent within segments.

3.1.1.1  Metals--

     3.1.1.1.1  Surface Chemistry—Metals were detected over a wide  range
of concentrations in  Commencement Bay  surface sediments (i.e.,  <1 to >30,000
mg/kg  dry  weight).   Highest  concentrations  of most metals  were measured
along  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline near the ASARCO smelter.  Comparisons
with the range of Puget Sound reference levels  indicated that concentrations
of beryllium, chromium,  and silver were not significantly elevated in Commence-
ment  Bay  sediments.   There  was no evidence of elevated selenium  or thallium


                                    29

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30

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31

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concentrations  outside the Ruston-Pt. Defiance  Shoreline area.  The remaining
eight metals (antimony, arsenic, cadmium,  copper, lead,  mercury, nickel,
and  zinc)  were elevated  above maximum Puget  Sound reference levels at one
or more sites in Commencement Bay, and were  therefore identified as inorganic
contaminants of concern.

     For the Commencement Bay  waterways, average  elevations  above Carr
Inlet values (EAR)  (by waterway) were  typically less  than  a factor  of  20
for  sediment metals (i.e.,  metals concentrations in waterway sediments
were  less than 20 times those of Carr Inlet  reference sediments).  Individual
sampling  stations within  the waterways  had  higher metals concentrations.
The highest levels  of metals contamination  exceeded 1,000  times Carr  Inlet
levels  for antimony and  arsenic only  at three stations  near the ASARCO
outfalls on the Ruston-Pt.  Defiance  Shoreline  (Segment  RSS2).  Cadmium,
copper,  lead,  mercury,  and  zinc were  elevated above 100 times Carr Inlet
concentrations  in  this  area.  Sediment metals concentrations decreased
sharply  both alongshore and offshore from the ASARCO plant vicinity.  High
metals concentrations also were observed in the Pt. Defiance area (Segment
RSS3),  and appeared to  be  associated directly with the presence of ASARCO
slag.

     Within  the waterways, several localized  areas of significant sediment
contamination by metals were found.  Upper  Hylebos Waterway  (Segments  HYS1
and  HYS2)  was  highly contaminated by metals, especially arsenic and copper.
High concentrations of metals (including mercury) have also been reported
in intertidal   sediments  from the south shore of Hylebos Waterway.  Sitcum
Waterway was distinguished from neighboring waterways  by  high EAR of  most
metals.   Even  higher metals  concentrations  were  previously reported  in
nearshore sediments from Sitcum Waterway.  The  highest  concentrations  were
found  in  the northeast  corner of the  waterway.   Sediment concentrations
of copper and mercury in Middle Waterway were  among the  highest observed
in the  waterways.  Maximum  levels were  measured  near  the  mouth of that
waterway.   City Waterway was distinguished by  having  some  of the highest
sediment  lead  concentrations found in the waterways.  Lead concentrations
decreased consistently from the head to the mouth  of that waterway.  Intertidal
sediments along the eastern shoreline of City Waterway (south of Wheeler-Osgood)
have  high concentrations of copper, zinc, and, near the head of the waterway,
nickel.

     3.1.1.1.2  Subsurface Chemistry--Twenty-three  sediment  cores were
collected  in 13 areas of Commencement Bay containing contaminated surface
sediments.  The areas sampled  were  located  in Hylebos, Sitcum, St. Paul,
Middle, and City Waterways, and along  the  Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline.
Maximum  subsurface concentrations of  metals were observed in cores from
the Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline and were  typically 1.5 to  3 times  higher
than  maximum concentrations in surface sediments from  the same  area.  Concentra-
tions of priority pollutant  metals  (e.g., lead and copper)  also did not
vary  substantially with depth  in cores  from Wheel er-Osgood Waterway, the
middle of the main channel of City Waterway, and St. Paul Waterway.  Concentra-
tions  of  these metals in  cores from  other locations showed more variable
patterns.   Metals concentrations equal  to Puget Sound reference conditions
were  found in  the  deepest interval of cores from Blair and Hylebos Waterway
(except near the mouth of the waterway). Concentrations  of metals  in the
deepest interval  of cores from St. Paul Waterway and the head of City Waterway


                                    32

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exceeded  Puget Sound  reference  conditions by  less than a factor  of  two.
Concentrations of  at  least  one metal  in the bottom of cores  from Sitcum,
Middle, Wheeler-Osgood,  and  the mouths of City and Hylebos Waterways exceeded
the range  of  Puget  Sound reference  conditions  by more  than  a  factor of
two.

3.1.1.2  Organic  Substances--

     3.1.1.2.1   Surface Chemistry—Of the  133 U.S.  EPA organic priority
pollutants  and  hazardous substance list organic compounds analyzed  in  Commence-
ment  Bay  sediments, 53 were undetected  in surface sediments.   For these
compounds, analytical  detection  limits typically were  in the  low parts
per billion range.  Undetected compounds included 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-
dioxin, and most  organonitrogen compounds (bases), pesticides,  and  volatile
compounds.  Rarely  detected  organic substances included several  substituted
phenols and halogenated ethers.  Of  special note was the absence  of  pesticides
such as aldrin,  lindane, and  DDT that were previously identified at  relatively
high concentrations  in  some areas of Commencement Bay.  The highest  historical
pesticide  values  were found  in subtidal and intertidal sediments  from Hylebos
Waterway.   Intertidal sediments were not resampled in the current  investiga-
tion.

     Nineteen organic   compounds  or compound  groups  (representing 42 of
the 133 organic  priority pollutants  and hazardous  substance  list organic
compounds) were  of concern because  their concentrations in  Commencement
Bay sediments exceeded  maximum concentrations  in Puget  Sound  reference
sediments.  Six  organic  compounds were found at especially high concentrations
(>1,000 times  EAR) at individual stations:  benzo(a)pyrene, 4-methylphenol,
2-methoxyphenol,  phenanthrene, trichlorobutadienes,  and tetrachlorobutadienes.
Similarly  high concentrations of hexachlorobenzene and hexachlorobutadiene
were also  reported in past  studies of subtidal sediments from Hylebos Waterway.
Additional  compounds or compound groups with EAR from 100 to 1,000  at  Commence-
ment Bay stations  included:   low and high molecular weight aromatic hydrocarbons
(LPAH and HPAH), dibenzofuran,  1,2-dichlorobenzene, bis(2-ethylhexyl)  phthalate,
PCBs, and  2-methylnaphthalene.

     Hylebos  Waterway  displayed  high sediment concentrations  for  several
groups of  organic  compounds.  Subtidal  and intertidal sediments  in that
waterway  contained the highest  levels  of chlorinated organic  compounds
(e.g., PCBs; chlorinated ethenes,  benzenes, and  butadienes;  as  well as
a complex mixture of unidentified chlorinated compounds)  in  the  project
area.  Highest levels of chlorinated butadienes  and chlorinated  benzenes
occurred  toward  the waterway mouth.   Chlorinated ethenes have been found
in high concentrations in intertidal sediments in two areas along  the south
shore of Hylebos Waterway.   The distribution of PCBs was patchy, with elevated
levels occurring throughout  subtidal sediments of the waterway.   The  entire
upper  reach of Hylebos Waterway was  highly contaminated by  HPAH.   Blair,
Sitcum, and Milwaukee Waterways generally had low concentrations  of organic
compounds compared with other areas of Commencement Bay.   An  area adjacent
to the Champion  International pulp mill near the mouth of St. Paul  Waterway
was  characterized by organic contamination from  methylated phenols and
LPAH.  Several parts of  City Waterway  were characterized  by high  levels
of LPAH,  HPAH,  and chlorinated benzenes.   High  PCB concentrations reported
at a single station near the mouth of  City Waterway in an earlier study


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were not evident  in  the more recent sampling.   Along  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance
Shoreline,  the  area  adjacent to the ASARCO smelter was  highly contaminated
by several  organic compounds, including PAH,  PCBs, and  1,4-dichlorobenzene.
With some of the exceptions noted, comparable or  higher concentrations
of most  organic  compounds  were found  in  the current sampling of subtidal
sediments as compared with past studies.

     3.1.1.2.2   Subsurface Chemistry—Many  organic  compounds were measured
at concentrations that  were  considerably higher in  subsurface  sediments
than  in  surface sediments.  Examples  (with  ratios  of maximum subsurface
to surface concentrations)  include:   2-methylphenol  (19), pyrene  (22),
1,4-dichlorobenzene (41), hexachlorobutadiene  (61),  hexachlorobenzene (13).
Highest concentrations of organic compounds were  found  in subsurface sediments
from  Hylebos and City Waterways.  Concentrations of one  major class of
compounds,  hydrocarbons, typically exceeded  Puget Sound reference conditions
by a  factor of 2-10 at  the bottom of  all  cores  except  those drilled in
Blair Waterway.   This was  true even in  the  eight cores  where the bottom
intervals had no  evidence of metals contamination.

3.1.2  Biological Effects

3.1.2.1  Benthic  Macroinvertebrates--

     Bottom-dwelling organisms are an  integral  part  of marine and estuarine
ecosystems.  They consume organic materials,  bioturbate sediments, promote
nutrient regeneration from sediments,  and  are prey  of fishes, birds, and
marine mammals.   Because benthic organisms are relatively  sedentary,  they
cannot  avoid organic  materials and chemical  contaminants deposited on the
bottom.   They are also sensitive to  environmental  disturbance, organic
enrichment, and chemical contamination  of the  sediments.  These characteristics
make them an excellent indicator group for assessing the  areal extents
and magnitudes  of environmental stresses.

     In the  present study, 119,095 benthic macroinvertebrates belonging
to 407 species were collected at 56  stations.  Total macroinvertebrate
abundances  at most stations  in Commencement  Bay ranged from 2,500 to 15,000/m2.
The most abundant  taxonomic groups were  Polychaeta (worms),  Bivalvia (clams),
Nematoda  (worms),   and Crustacea (e.g., amphipods).  The polychaetes were
represented primarily by Tharyx multifilis,  and the  bivalve  molluscs  were
represented primarily by flxinopstda serfTcata.  These  two  species accounted
for 70,084 individuals, or 59 percent of all  benthic  organisms collected.

     Among  the nine study  areas,  numbers of  species tended to be higher
along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline and  in  Carr Inlet than in the water-
ways.  Conversely, total abundances tended to  be higher within the waterways
than along  the Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline or in  Carr Inlet, because
populations of  some  polychaete and mollusc species and populations of nematodes
(at certain stations) were enhanced.   The lower  numbers of  species, higher
numbers  of  individuals, and enhanced  abundances  of a few species that typically
occurred  within the  waterways resulted  in  communities dominated by a  few
species.   Such  "high dominance" communities are  generally indicative of
environmentally stressed areas, because less  tolerant species are eliminated
and opportunistic   species  tend to achieve  higher abundances in stressed
areas compared  to unstressed areas.


                                    34

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     The most  adversely  affected benthic  assemblages in Commencement Bay
were found off  ASARCO,  off Champion International, and at the  head  of City
Waterway.  The  station  closest  to  ASARCO (RS-18) was nearly devoid of benthic
invertebrates.   Of the  four grab samples collected  at this site,  only two
contained any macroinvertebrates (i.e., a total of seven organisms).  The
station closest to Champion International (SP-14) also was  nearly  abiotic,
with  only 32 organisms  collected in four grab samples.  This  compares with
an average of approximately 2,300 organisms  collected in all  four grab
samples  from each  station within the Commencement Bay  study area.  The
depressed abundances at Stations RS-18  and SP-14 indicate severe  stress.
Benthic  invertebrate  assemblages at  stations  off Champion  International
(SP-15) and at  the head of City Waterway (CI-11) were numerically dominated
(82.7 percent and  98.6  percent, respectively) by nematodes and by the polychaete
Capitella capitata.   Dominance  by  these taxa indicates organic enrichment
of the sediments.

     To develop indices  of  benthic  effects,  abundances  of  major benthic
taxa (i.e., total  taxa, Polychaeta, Mollusca, and Crustacea) at potentially
impacted  sites were compared statistically with their respective abundances
at reference sites.   A  significant decrease (P<0.05) in the abundance  of an
indicator taxon was  considered  a benthic impact (i.e., a benthic depression).
Because sediment grain  size characteristics at  the  stations in Carr  Inlet
differed  considerably from  those at most waterway stations, Blair Waterway
was used  as a reference area  for benthic determinations for the waterways.
Blair  Waterway was  a  relatively clean  waterway  with respect to sediment
chemistry and toxicity.   Carr Inlet was retained as the reference area
for the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline and for Station HY-44 because sediment
grain size characteristics  were similar in these areas.

     Results of the  statistical comparisons (Figure 6) showed that no benthic
depressions were found in Middle  and Milwaukee Waterways.  In  Sitcum Waterway,
single depressions  (Crustacea)  were found at two of three stations  (SI-11
and SI-12).  The remaining  four study  areas (Hylebos, St. Paul,  and City
Waterways, and the  Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline) included  stations with
multiple  benthic depressions.   Locations with multiple depressions  included
the head  of Hylebos  Waterway  (HY-17, HY-22, and HY-23), the middle of Hylebos
Waterway  (HY-32),  the stations closest to Champion International  (SP-14
and  SP-15), the  head  of City Waterway  (CI-13), the Wheeler-Osgood  branch
of City Waterway (CI-16),  and the  station closest to ASARCO (RS-18).

     Compared with the  results  of  a study conducted in  1950 (Orlob et al.  1950),
benthic conditions in the  vicinity of  Station  RS-18 (near ASARCO) do not
appear to have  improved.   Some  improvement in benthic conditions does  appear
to have occurred in  upper  Hylebos  and upper City Waterways, as  these  areas
are no longer devoid of benthic macroinvertebrates,  as the limited historical
data indicate.

3.1.2.2  Fish Ecology--

     English sole (Parophrys  vetulus) was  selected as the representative
fish species for  several  reasons.   First, this  species  is  abundant and
widespread throughout Commencement Bay,  enhancing the probability that
adequate  sample  sizes could be obtained  at all  study sites.  Second, English


                                     35

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36

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sole  live  in close contact with bottom  sediments, prey  mainly on small
benthic infauna,  and exhibit high levels of tissue  contamination and disease
in urbanized  areas  of  Puget  Sound (Malins et al.  1980, 1982).  It is therefore
likely that this  species  is being influenced by  contamination of  bottom
sediments.  Finally,  because English sole  is frequently caught and consumed
by recreational  fishermen, this speies is part of  a  pathway through  which
contaminants  can  move  from sediments  to humans.

     General  characteristics of the total bottom-dwelling  fish assemblages
and the English sole  populations sampled at 17 trawl  transects in Commencement
Bay and Carr  Inlet  were examined qualitatively to  determine  if large differences
existed between  the two embayments.  The total  assemblages in Commencement
Bay and Carr  Inlet  were compared with respect to  species composition, number
of species,  species  diversity, and total abundance.   English  sole populations
in Commencement Bay  and  Carr Inlet  were compared with respect to median
length, abundance,  and condition.

     A total  of  6,686 fishes,  representing  17 families  and 40  species,
was collected in  this  study  (Table 5).  Commencement  Bay study areas yielded
4,951  individuals and 38 species, whereas 1,735 fishes and 13 species were
collected in Carr  Inlet.   Much of  this discrepancy in  species richness
resulted  primarily from the larger sampling effort expended in Commencement
Bay (15 transects)  compared  to Carr Inlet (2 transects), but may also  have
been  partly  due to increased habitat  complexity  (e.g.,  pilings, rocks,
debris) in Comnencement Bay.  The fish assemblages sampled in both Commencement
Bay and  Carr Inlet were  dominated  by  pleuronectids (i.e., flatfishes).
The most abundant pleuronectids were  English sole  (Parophrys vetulus)  and
rock sole (Lepidopsetta bilineata).

     For six  of  the eight Commencement Bay  study  areas, total fish abundance
(as catch per unit  effort) was over twice as large as that  in Carr  Inlet.
Only Hylebos  Waterway  and the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline had  fish abundances
similar to  that  in  Carr Inlet.  Total numbers of  fish species in individual
Commencement Bay  study areas (e.g.,  waterways)  were relatively similar
to that in  Carr  Inlet.  Diversity indices of fish assemblages  in Commence-
ment Bay study areas were greater than that in  Carr Inlet.   Diversity indices
in four of  the eight study areas (Hylebos,  Milwaukee, and City Waterways,
and the  Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline)  exceeded  that  in Carr Inlet by a
factor of 1.5 or  more.   These results  indicate that the distribution  of
individuals  among  species  is more  even in Commencement  Bay waterways than
in Carr Inlet.   In summary, fish assemblages  in Commencement Bay  study
areas' generally were more  abundant  and  more diverse than  those in Carr
Inlet,  whereas   total numbers of species were  similar  among all  areas.
Although  these  comparisons  are largely descriptive,  they  show no indication
that the gross characteristics of  fish assemblages in  Commencement  Bay
were negatively  affected by  chemical  contamination.

     Although relative abundances  of English  sole were  similar  between
the two embayments, length distributions of captured  fish were significantly
different  (P<0.001).  Median length  of English sole  in Carr Inlet (14.9 cm)
was substantially lower  than that in  Commencement  Bay  (25.2 cm) because
populations  in   the former  embayment  were dominated by young fish.  This
size discrepancy  probably arises from the fact that  juvenile English  sole
prefer  shallow   sandy habitats as nursery areas.  Thus,  the muddy nature


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     TABLE  5.      RELATIVE  ABUNDANCES OF FISHES CAPTURED IN
                 COMMENCEMENT BAY AND  CARR  INLET
Family
Squal idae
Rajidae
Chimaeridae
Clupeidae
Engraulidae
Batrachoididae
Gadidae
Zoarcidae
Embiotocidae
Bathymasteridae
Stichaeidae
Scorpaenidae
Hexagrammidae
Cottidae
Agonidae
Bothidae
Pleuronectidae
Species
Squal us acanthias
Raja rhina
Hydro! agus colliei
Clupea harengus
pal lasi
Engraulis mordax
mordax
Porichthys notatus
Gadus macrocephalus
Merluccius productus
Hicrogadus proxiinus
Lycodopsis pacifica
Cymatogaster aggregate
Embiotoca lateral is
Tlhacochilus vacca
Ronquilus jordani
Lumpenus sagitta
Sebastes auriculatus
Sebastes caurinus
3ebastes fhal iger
Sebastes melanops
Hexagrammos stelleri
OpModon elongatus
Chitonotus pugetensis
Enophrys bison
Leptocottus armatus
Scorpaenichthys
marmoratus
Agonopsis emmelane
Agonus acipenserinus
Citharichthys sordidus
litharichthys stlgmaeus
Eopsetta Jordan i
Glyptocephalus zachirus
Hippoqlossoides
eiassodon
Inopsetta ischyra
lepidopsetta bil ineata
Lyopsetta exilis
Microstomus pacificus
Parophrys vetulus
Tlatichthys stellatus
Pleuronichthys coenosus
Psettichthys
me! anost ictus

Relative Abundance (%)
Common Name Commencement Carr
Bay Inlet
spiny dogfish
longnose skate
spotted ratfish
Pacific herring
northern anchovy
plainfin midshipman
Pacific cod
Pacific hake
Pacific tomcod
blackbelly eelpout
shiner perch
striped seaperch
pile perch
northern ronquil
snake prickleback
brown rockfish
copper rockfish
quillback rockfish
black rockfish
whitespotted
greenling
lingcod
roughback sculpin
buffalo sculpin
Pacific staghorn
sculpin
cabezon
northern spearnose
poacher
sturgeon poacher
Pacific sanddab
speckled sanddab
petrale sole
rex sole
flathead sole
hybrid sole
rock sole
slender sole
Dover sole
English sole
Starry flounder
C-0 sole
sand sole
TOTAL CATCH
0.1
0.1
2.3
2.1
a
0.1
a
0.1
4.3
1.5
0.6
0.1
0.1
0.3
0.3 0.2
0.1
a
0.6
a
0.2
0.1
0.6 5.6
0.1
1.1 0.3
a
0.1
a 0.2
2.7
0.4 1.7
a
a
3.9
a
13.8 25.0
0.2 0.4
7.6
55.6 65.8
0.4 0.3
0.1 0.2
0.4 0.1
4,951 1,735
a <0.1 percent.
                                 38

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and altered benthos  of most areas sampled in Commencement  Bay may be suitable
for adult English  sole, but largely unacceptable  for younger individuals.

     At  five  of the eight Commencement Bay  study  areas (Blair, Sitcum,
St. Paul, Middle, and  City Waterways), English sole  abundance  was  more
than  twice that  in  Carr  Inlet.  Hie Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline was the
only study area in  which  English  sole  abundance was  lower than  that in
Carr  Inlet.   These  data  indicate that, except  for the Ruston-Pt. Defiance
Shoreline, the Commencement Bay study  areas generally  attracted  consid-
erably more English  sole than did the reference area.  A possible explanation
for this pattern is  that most of the Commencement Bay study  areas  support
considerably higher standing crops of English sole prey  (i.e., benthic
invertebrates)  than does Carr Inlet.  Studies of English sole in Commencement
Bay  (Becker  1984)  have shown that they prefer as food items the polychaete
worms and clams  that are enhanced in abundance  in the waterways.

     The  condition  (i.e., weight-at-length) of all 1,007 English sole of
known sex subsampled for histopathological  analysis was  compared  between
Commencement Bay and Carr Inlet using regression analysis.  Results showed
that the condition of most fish in Commencement  Bay exceeded that  of  fish
from  Carr Inlet, suggesting  that  English sole from Commencement Bay were
able to obtain and store more energy than were  fish from Carr Inlet.   Thus,
there  is no  evidence that  chemical contamination in Commencement Bay is
substantially affecting the condition of resident English  sole.

3.1.2.3  Fish Histopathology--

     The  liver  is singled out  for pathological and  contaminant analyses
because it is  the  organ most closely associated with regulation and  storage
of many toxic chemicals  (Fowler 1982).   Also, for English sole in Puget
Sound, the liver  is  the  organ most  heavily afflicted with pathological
disorders (Mai ins  et al. 1980, 1982).

     Histopathological analyses were conducted  on 1,020 English sole subsampled
from 17 trawl  transects.  Four kinds of liver lesion (i.e., altered  tissue)
were  evaluated microscopically:  hepatic neoplasms, preneoplastic nodules,
megalocytic hepatosis, and nuclear  pleomorphisms.  Hepatic  neoplasms  are
tumors that are  either benign (adenoma)  or malignant (carcinoma).  Preneoplastic
nodules are lesions  thought to irreversibly progress to neoplasms.  Megalocytic
hepatosis (enlarged cells  and  nuclei)  and nuclear pleomorphisms (enlarged
nuclei) are degenerative conditions, but are not  known to  progress  to  neo-
plasms.   The causes of the  four kinds  of liver lesion are  unknown.  It
is possible that they are induced by chemical contaminants in the  environ-
ment.   Morphologically similar lesions have been  induced  in  laboratory
mamnals and fishes  by  exposure to toxic and/or carcinogenic chemicals (Maiins
et al. 1984).

     Hepatic  neoplasms  were found  in  English  sole  from every study area
except the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline and Carr Inlet.   The highest preva-
lences  of neoplasms were  found in Middle (8.3 percent) and Sitcum (5.1
percent) Waterways.   Preneoplastic nodules  were found  in fish from  every
study  area,  including Carr  Inlet  (5.8 percent).   As with neoplasms, the
highest prevalences  of preneoplastic nodules were in Middle  (26.7  percent)
and Sitcum (18.6 percent) Waterways.  Megalocytic hepatosis was found in


                                    39

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English sole from  every  study area, with Carr Inlet having the lowest prevalence
(0.8 percent).   Highest  prevalences of this condition were  in Hylebos  (18.3
percent)  and Milwaukee (16.7 percent)  Waterways.  Nuclear pleomorphisms
were found in fish  from every study  area except Milwaukee Waterway  and
Carr  Inlet.  Highest prevalences of  this  disorder were found in Middle
(10 percent) and Hylebos  (5.6 percent)  Waterways.

     Fish data were age-corrected  because  the  prevalence of several  major
lesion types correlated  with age of fish and  because age composition varied
among  study areas.   Therefore,  fish were grouped to allow for comparisons
to be made without dependence on  fish  age.   Agecorrected data indicated
that, on an embayment  basis, prevalences of preneoplastic nodules, megalocytic
hepatosis, and nuclear pleomorphisms  were significantly  higher  (P<0.05)
in Commencement  Bay  than  in Carr Inlet.  Hepatic  neoplasms  were not signifi-
cantly higher in  Commencement Bay  than in Carr Inlet.   Among the  eight
Commencement Bay study areas, prevalences of preneoplastic  nodules and
nuclear pleomorphisms  were significantly elevated (P<0.05) only in Middle
Waterway.  Prevalences  of megalocytic hepatosis  were significantly elevated
(P<0.05) in Hylebos,  Blair, Milwaukee, and Middle Waterways.   Based  on
individual  trawl  transects within the larger  study areas  (Hylebos, Blair,
and City Waterways  and  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline), prevalences
of megalocytic  hepatosis were significantly elevated (P<0.05) at all  three
transects in Hylebos  Waterway (HY70,  HY71, and HY72) ,  at the two  inner
transects in Blair Waterway (BL70 and  HY71), and at the inner transect
along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline (RS70).

     Spatial patterns  of  English sole haying  significantly  elevated (P<0.05)
prevalences of one or  more of the four kinds  of  liver lesion are summarized
in Figure 7.  Significant  elevations  (P<0.05)  in lesion  prevalences were
found in Hylebos,  Blair, Sitcum,  Milwaukee, and Middle  Waterways (based
on study areas) and at  HY71, HY72, BL71, BL72,  and RS70 (based on transects
within the larger  study  areas).

     Results of  the  present study were compared with historical data collected
by Malins et al. (1984).  Absolute  values of the prevalences  of hepatic
neoplasms,  preneoplastic nodules, and megalocytic hepatosis in the present
study were  generally larger  than those  found  by  Malins et  al. (1984).
However, this discrepancy may largely be the  result of different age distribu-
tions of English sole  sampled by  the  two studies.  In contrast with  the
absolute values, the  relative magnitudes of  lesion prevalences across  areas
were very similar  between the two  studies.  In both studies, prevalences
were  lowest at  reference sites,  highest in  the  Commencement Bay waterways,
and intermediate in magnitude along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance  Shoreline.

3.1.2.4  Bioaccumulation--

     Bioaccumulation  studies  were  conducted to determine if sediment or
water  contaminants were  accumulated in the muscle  tissues of  fish or shellfish
living in Commencement Bay.  These data were  used as an  indicator of biological
effects and as the database for predicting possible human health effects
from  consumption  of  contaminated  seafood.  Bioaccumulation studies were
conducted on  two resident organisms living in close  contact with the sediments:
English sole (Parophrys  vetulus) and cancrid  crabs (Cancer  spp.).
                                    40

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41

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     Concentrations of metals  in  English sole muscle tissue were relatively
homogeneous among study  areas, and  there were few cases in which Commencement
Bay  fish displayed  elevated  concentrations relative to those in  the  Carr
Inlet reference area.   Copper was statistically elevated (3-9 times reference
levels)  in English  sole  from  Sitcum and St. Paul Waterways and the Ruston-
Pt.  Defiance Shoreline.   The only  metals displaying elevated concentrations
in Commencement  Bay crab muscle tissue were  lead  and mercury.   Maximum
lead and mercury concentrations  in Commencement Bay crabs  were found in
Sitcum and Hylebos  Waterways, respectively, and were about five times the
reference levels.   Although arsenic was highly elevated in some Commencement
Bay  sediments, there  was no  evidence of excess  arsenic  accumulation in
English sole or crab muscle tissue.

     Most  of  the  organic  compounds analyzed in this study were not  detected
in any of the  English sole or crab  muscle samples.  Several  compounds,
such as  some phthalates  and  volatile substances,  were detected at  very
low  concentrations in only a few samples.  Eleven organic compounds  occurred
at sufficient  frequency  or concentrations to be evaluated for differences
in spatial distribution:  tetrachloroethene, ethylbenzene, hexachlorobenzene,
1,3-dichlorobenzene,  hexachlorobutadiene, naphthalene, bisf2-ethylhexyl)
phthalate, di-n-butyl phthalate, di-n-octyl phthalate, DDE, and PCBs.

     Hexachlorobenzene and hexachlorobutadiene (both chlorinated compounds)
were  detected only in English sole from Hylebos Waterway and at concentrations
near the method  detection  limits.  Highest concentrations of tetrachloro-
ethene and ethylbenzene (both volatile compounds) also occurred  in  English
sole from Hylebos  Waterway.  Although  the waterway sediments displayed
highly elevated concentrations  of  aromatic hydrocarbons,  naphthalene was
the  only aromatic  hydrocarbon detected in fish muscle tissue.  These results
are  consistent with the  high rate  of  metabolism  of aromatic  hydrocarbons
documented for fishes.

     PCBs were consistently detected in  English sole  and crabs  from the
study area.  The maximum  concentration of 1,300 ug/kg wet  weight was  measured
in the  muscle  tissue  of  English sole from Hylebos Waterway.  Highest average
concentrations of PCBs  exceeded 300  ug/kg wet weight (about 10 times reference
levels)  and were  measured in  English sole from Hylebos  and City Waterways.
Statistically  significant  PCB elevations in fish  muscle tissue  were found
in Hylebos, City,  Sitcum,  and Blair Waterways.  In the heavily fished Pt.
Defiance area, concentrations of PCBs, as well  as other organic  compounds,
were close to  reference  levels.

3.1.3  Sediment Toxicity

     Two separate  toxicity tests were used to evaluate the relative  toxicity
of Commencement Bay sediments:  the  amphipod mortality bioassay  and the
oyster  larvae  abnormality  bioassay.  The toxicity of Commencement Bay  sediments
was compared statistically to the  toxicity of Carr Inlet  sediments.  The
amphipod  bioassay was  used  to measure a direct lethal  response, while the
oyster  larvae  bioassay was used primarily to measure induction  of abnormal
development in embryos.

     Sediments from 18 of  the 52 sampling stations were toxic (statistically
greater than Carr  Inlet, P<0.05) to amphipods.   Toxic sediments occurred


                                    42

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at one or more stations  in all study areas except  Middle Waterway.  Exposure
to sediments  from 15 of  the 52 sites caused significant oyster larvae abnor-
mality  (P<0.05).  Significant oyster larvae  abnormality was measured only
in Hylebos,  St. Paul,  and  City Waterways,  and  along the  Ruston shore.
Overall,  24  of the 52  stations displayed  significant responses (P<0.05)
from one or both of the  bioassays (Figure 8).

     Ten stations  were significantly toxic  (P<0.05) using both bioassays.
Several  of these sites also displayed very high (>50  percent)  toxicities.
These highly toxic sites were concentrated  in the following areas:   upper
Hylebos  Waterway, City Waterway, off Champion  International  near the mouth
of St.  Paul  Waterway,  off  ASARCO on  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline,
and at a single  site off Old Tacoma.

     The most toxic  sediments  tested as part of this study were collected
from  locations near two  industrial sites:  the  Champion  International pulpmill
and  the  ASARCO smelter.   It  should  be  noted that the sediments at both
of these sites were organically enriched and  that the observed toxicities
were probably due in part to low dissolved oxygen  in the test containers.

     In  both  the amphipod and oyster larvae bioassays,  dilution of Commencement
Bay test sediments with  clean sediment reduced  the toxicity.  For the amphipod
bioassays, a 50-75 percent  dilution  with  control sediment generally was
sufficient to reduce mortality to control levels.  However, the sediment
stations  off ASARCO  were  still highly  toxic at a 90 percent dilution.
For the  oyster  larvae  bioassay, greater than 75 percent  dilutions  were
required to reduce  abnormalities to control levels.

     A lower  percent  of toxic  sediments was found  in  the present  study
than  in  past  studies.   This  apparent relationship may be  due to one  or
more  of  the following  factors:

     •    Overall decline  in  toxicity over  the  5-yr period  between
          surveys

     •    Lack of sample replication for most  historical data

     •    Differences  in  sampling station locations:  some historical
          sites were intertidal, while current sites were mainly midchannel
          (i .e., subtidal).

In several areas, however,  there was good  agreement between historical
and present data.  Areas  with  significantly  toxic sediments  during  both
past and  present surveys included upper  Hylebos  Waterway, the head of City
Waterway,  the area off Champion International  near the mouth  of St.  Paul
Waterway,  and lower Sitcum Waterway.

3.1.4 Contaminant, Toxicity, and Biological  Effects Relationships

     Quantitative relationships among the  independent contaminant, toxicity,
and biological effects variables were evaluated to meet two objectives:

     1.    To  determine  levels of  sediment  contamination above which
          significant toxicity or biological effects would be expected


                                    43

-------
44

-------
     2.   To identify  contaminants of  concern from the numerous con-
          taminants detected in Commencement  Bay sediments.

     Both statistical  and nonstatistical approaches were used to evaluate
whether toxicity  or adverse biological effects increased  with increasing
sediment  contaminant  concentrations.  In  this study, it was assumed  that
contaminants displaying monotonically increasing relationships with toxic
or biological  effects have a higher relative  priority (i.e., a higher potential
for being  a  causative agent) than do contaminants displaying no discernible
relationship with effects.

     Where synoptic biological  and chemical data were collected, significant
toxicity in both the amphipod mortality and  oyster  larvae abnormality bioassays
as well  as  benthic effects  (i.e., depressions of  abundance of total taxa,
Polychaeta,  Mollusca, or Crustacea) were observed  at all  but one station
where  the dry-weight  concentration of at  least  one contaminant exceeded
1,000 times  reference conditions.  The  exception was Station  HY-43, where
trichlorinated butadiene  concentrations were  nearly 2,000 times reference
conditions,  but neither bioassay nor any benthic  effect  was  significant.
In other  sediments without significant  toxic  responses or benthic effects,
concentrations  of organic  compounds (other  than  chlorinated butadienes)
ranged  from 1  to <400 times  reference conditions, and concentrations of
metals were  <50 times reference conditions.

     Sediment  toxicity and the  number  of significant benthic effects  were
highest in  the most chemically contaminated study areas.  Typically, toxicity
increased  and  abundances of major taxa  decreased with increasing concentrations
of some contaminants over the entire study area.  A common characteristic
of these  relationships was that at lower  chemical concentrations, there
was considerable  scatter in the magnitude of sediment toxicity and taxon
abundances.  When  trends  were observed, the minimum toxicity observed at
a given concentration of a chemical increased  and  the maximum abundances
decreased at higher contaminant concentrations.   When data  from all study
areas were plotted together for a given contaminant, there  was no clear
trend  in  the values of maximum toxicity or  minimum abundances over the
concentration  range of  the contaminant,   thus it is concluded that no one
contaminant or contaminant group correlated with the effects observed in
all areas.

     In some cases,  there was random  scatter  in the values up to a certain
contaminant  concentration.   Above that  concentration,  there was a rapid
change to  uniformly high toxicity or low  abundances  at the few most contami-
nanted sites.  If the  high contaminant levels were associated with the
effects observed,  the abrupt change in the  scatter suggested an "effect
threshold" for  the contaminant.

     The  synoptic  chemical, toxicity,  and  benthic  infaunal data for 52
Commencement Bay  stations  were examined for each  contaminant of concern
to evaluate effect thresholds.  An example  of  this approach  using  lead
data  is shown  in Figure  9.   In this case,  the available data indicated
that significant toxicity or benthic effects did not occur  when sediment
lead  concentrations were below  11 mg/kg dry weight  (EAR=1.2).   This level
defined a  "potential effect threshold".   This threshold was termed "potential"


                                    45

-------
because  toxicity or benthic  effects were  found at some, but not all,  of
the stations with higher lead concentrations.  The effects observed  at
these stations  could have resulted from other contaminants or conditions.

     Toxicity  "apparent effect  threshold"  (AET) was defined as the lowest
contaminant concentration above which  significant  toxicity was observed
at all stations.   An analogous benthic AET was defined as the lowest contaminant
concentration above which significant benthic effects occurred at all stations.
For lead, the  toxicity  AET was 660 mg/kg dry  weight  (EAR=72) and the benthic
AET was 300 mg/kg dry weight (EAR=33)  (Figure 9).   The  effect thresholds
were  termed "apparent"  because significant toxicity  or  benthic effects
were not found  at some  stations with  equal  or lower lead  concentrations,
while  significant sediment  toxicity  or benthic effects were found at all
stations with higher  concentrations.   These empirical  relationships  do
not  prove that contaminants  found  above an AET were  responsible for the
observed toxicity or benthic effects.   However, within the  limits of  this
data  set, chemicals present  above  these concentrations  were associated
exclusively with  problem  sediments having significant toxicity or depressed
benthic  infaunal abundances  (or both).  Because  of this association, all
chemicals present above toxicity or  benthic AET were defined as problem
chemicals requiring further evaluation.

     The approach shown  in Figure 9 was used  to  identify  toxicity and  benthic
AET for all chemicals of  concern.  The AET expressed  on a dry-weight basis
are  summarized for metals,  organic compounds, and conventional  sediment
variables in Table 6.

     AET were  exceeded by a number of chemicals  at most of the 29 stations
exhibiting statistically  significant  biological effects.   All six of the
29 stations where neither AET was  exceeded were  unusual in that only one
of the biological  indicators showed a  response.   Most of  these six stations
exhibited toxicity by  the amphipod bioassay  only, and the toxicity may
have been related to  the high percentage of fine-grained material  (>80
percent)  at each station.   The difference in  thresholds for toxicity and
benthic effects for several  chemicals  suggests that both  bioassays  were
more sensitive  to organic compound contamination,  and that benthic depressions
were more sensitive to metals  contamination.

     AET were  also  calculated  for  normalizations to  organic  carbon and
percent fine-grained material.   For most sediments with  multiple toxicity
and benthic effects, chemicals exceeded an AET regardless of normalization.

     Gradients of effects were analyzed for  study areas  having a sufficient
number of stations with  biological measurements to allow  such analysis.
Five  such areas  were  analyzed.   Strong relationships were observed for
a few chemicals that were present at concentrations  above an AET.  Exposure-
response relationships were found for:

     •    PCB  concentrations, sediment toxicity,  and mollusc abundance
          along a Hylebos Waterway transect

     •    4-Methylphenol  concentrations, sediment toxicity, and crustacean
          abundance along a St. Paul  Waterway transect
                                    46

-------
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                                                                47

-------
        TABLE 6.  APPARENT EFFECT THRESHOLDS  (AET)  FOR SEDIMENT
                 CONTAMINANTS AND CONVENTIONAL  VARIABLES

Metals
Antimony
Arsenic
Cadmium
Copper
Lead
Mercury
Nickel
Zinc

Organic Compounds
Phenol
2 -methyl phenol
4-methyl phenol
LMW aromatic hydroarbons
HMW aromatic hydrocarbons
Chlorinated benzenes
Chlorinated butadienes9
Total phthalates
Total PCBs
Benzyl alcohol
Dibenzofuran
n-Nitrosodiphenylamine
Tetrachlorethene
Ethyl benzene
Total xylenes
2-Methoxyphenol
l.l'-Biphenyl
Dibenzothiophene
Pentachlorocyclopentane9
Isopimaradiene
Kaur-16-ene (possible id)
Retene
Conventional Variables
Total volatile solids (%)
Total organic carbon (%)
Nitrogen
Oil and grease (mg/kg)
Toxic ity
AET (mg/kg DW)
5.3
93
5.8
310
660
0.59
39
490
Toxicity
AET (ug/kg DW)
420
63
670
5,200
12,000
270
47,000
3,400
420
130
540
28
140
37
120
930
260
240
72
1,500
2,000
1,200
Toxicity AET
22.2
15.1
0.28
2,200
Benthic Effects
AET (mg/kg DW)
3.1
85
5.8
310
300
0.52
39
260
Benthic Effects
AET (ug/kg DW)
1,200
72
670
5,200
17,000
400
47,000
5,200
1,100
130
540
28
140
37
120
930
270
250
72
1,500
2,000
2,000
Benthic AET
22.2
15.1
0.28
4,300
No station exhibiting  toxicity or  benthic effects had  concentrations
exceeding  these  levels
                                 48

-------
     t    Organic  enrichment  (and  selected metal  concentrations),
          sediment toxicity, mollusc abundance, and crustacean abundance
          along  a City Waterway transect

     •    Mercury concentrations and  polychaete abundance along  the
          same City Waterway transect noted  above

     t    Mercury, LPAH  concentrations, and  sediment toxicity along
          an  onshore-offshore Ruston-Pt. Defiance transect

     •    Most  metal and  organic compound  concentrations with mollusc
          and polychaete abundances along  the same Ruston-Pt. Defiance
          transect noted above.

     These four  transects included stations  with the most extensive  toxicity
and benthic effects observed in Commencement Bay.  Sediment toxicity tended
to correlate  better with contaminant concentrations than did benthic effects.

3.2  PUBLIC HEALTH ASSESSMENT

     Results of this  study and  previous investigations have shown  that
various inorganic and organic contaminants  are bioaccumulated by Commencement
Bay fishes.  The objective of the public  health assessment was to determine
if there  are  significant health risks associated with consumption  of fish
and shellfish  from Commencement Bay.   This assessment considered  only one
exposure  route (i.e., eating  non-salmonid  fish,  fish livers, and crabs)
from Commencement Bay.   Other possible exposure  routes (drinking  water,
inhalation) were not included in this assessment.

     English  sole and cancrid crabs were selected for these analyses because
of their  availability in the project area and  because they  live  in  close
association  with  contaminated bottom sediments.   Although  English  sole
are not commonly caught by local fishermen,  they were used  in  the  present
study  to  provide  a conservative estimate of the maximum contaminant  levels
that would be expected in edible tissues  of any fish species  captured in
Commencement  Bay.   Data  from  a previous  study  (Gahler et al. 1982)  have
shown  that concentrations of PCBs and arsenic are two to three times higher
in English sole  than in commonly caught  fish such as walleye pollock, Pacific
hake,  and  Pacific cod.

     Available  data  from a catch/consumption  survey indicated that  15,220
persons may consume fish  from Commencement  Bay.  Of this  total  exposed
population,  only  30 persons  were estimated  to  eat 1 Ib of fish  per  day.
This was the highest estimated consumption  rate in the survey.  Approximately
82 percent of  the  exposed  population (12,500 persons)  consumes less  than
1 Ib of fish  per month.  For the risk assessment, maximum  individual  risks
of contracting  cancer were  calculated for the  maximum consumption rate,
as well as for  the more  commonly experienced lower consumption  rates.
Individual risks  are expressed mathematically as negative exponents.  In
such expressions, 10~6  would represent a one in one million chance of
contracting  cancer during  a  lifetime exposure  (i.e., 70  years)  to  the
contaminated  fish flesh.
                                    49

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     The Commencement Bay public  health  assessment is highly conservative
in that it  tends  to overestimate any effects of seafood  consumption.   The
following conservative factors are incorporated  into the approach:

     t    U.S.  EPA's method  estimates  upper bounds of  carcinogenic
          risk

     •    Esposure is assumed to occur continuously for  a lifetime
          (70 years)

     •    English sole  are generally more contaminated  than commonly
          caught  sport fish

     •    The maximum consumption rate of  1  Ib/day  is probably  an
          overestimate.  This  rate  would require  the  consumption  of
          two or more meals  of Commencement Bay fish  every day for
          a lifetime.

This  conservative approach  is used because of the overall importance of
public health concerns and because of the many uncertainties in the method-
ology.  Given these factors, it is prudent  to use such a conservative approach,
recognizing that  the predicted public health effects are  most likely  over-
estimated.

     At the  maximum  estimated  consumption  rate  of  1  Ib/day of fish from
Commencement Bay, the estimated individual lifetime risks would exceed
one  in  one million (10~6) for six carcinogens:  PCBs, arsenic, hexachloro-
benzene, hexachlorobutadiene, bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate,  and tetrachloro-
ethene.   At  a  fish consumption rate of  1  Ib/month, only PCBs and  arsenic
would exceed  the  one in one million (10~6)  risk  level.  For a given consumption
rate, estimated  individual risks from consuming  Commencement Bay fish muscle
would  exceed those for consuming Carr Inlet (reference area) fish for  three
of the  above six carcinogens:   PCBs, bis(2-ethylhexyl)  phthalate,  and
tetrachloroethene.  For PCBs, individual  risks  from consuming Commencement
Bay fish would be about five times higher  than those from  consuming  Carr
Inlet fish.  For  arsenic, estimated individual risks from consuming Commencement
Bay fish and  Carr Inlet fish would be similar, although  Carr Inlet  risks
would be slightly higher.

     Fish tissue  concentrations, and hence  the associated risk for consuming
fish, varied somewhat among  the Commencement Bay waterways.  For  PCBs,
the  suspected  carcinogen  representing the greatest individual  risk, fish
consumed  from  City and Hylebos Waterways  represent the  greatest  risk.
Based  on  PCB contamination, risks associated with eating fish from Hylebos
and City Waterways are about 10 times higher than for fish from Carr Inlet.

     Much  of the shore  fishing  in  Commencement  Bay occurs on piers  along
the Ruston-Pt. Defiance  Shoreline.   Therefore, contamination of fish  in
this  area  is of  special  concern relative to possible public health impacts.
The available data indicate that risks associated with  PCB contamination
of fish tissues decrease with distance from City Waterway towards Pt. Defiance.
Moreover, estimated individual risks for  all  chemicals in  the Pt. Defiance
area are similar  to those in the Carr Inlet reference area.
                                    50

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     A primary  objective of the  Commencement  Bay project was to determine
if the levels  of fish  tissue contamination resulted  in  the  prediction  of
one  or more excess cancer  cases in the  exposed population over a 70-year
period due to  ingested tissue.  This assessment  was accomplished by applying
the  individual  risks for each carcinogen to the  exposed population estimated
from the  catch/consumption  survey.  The  highest estimated incidence  of
cancer in the exposed  population of 15,220  persons  is between one and  two
cases in  70 years,  and is attributable to PCBs causing cancer of the liver.
All  available data indicate that the  chemical  group associated with  the
highest individual  lifetime  cancer risk is PCBs.  The  next highest risk
is attributable to arsenic.   Only for PCBs,  however, does the estimated
number of cancer cases  in  the  exposed  population exceed  one, even with
the  conservative approach taken in this  assessment (e.g., continuous exposure
for  70 years).   Arsenic exposure is estimated  to result  in  fewer than  one
case over 70 years, and  it is the second highest  in individual risk.  Therefore,
aside from PCBs, no other chemical is estimated to produce  cancer in  the
exposed population  under the circumstances  presented in this assessment.

     The  risk  assessment was  also  conducted  for  consumption of crabs in
Commencement Bay.   For  PCBs  and arsenic,  estimated  individual risks  for
eating crabs  were approximately the  same as  those  for eating fish.   Only
PCBs, however,  resulted  in  a higher  risk  (about three  times higher)  for
eating Commencement Bay crabs when compared with Carr  Inlet crabs.

     Three  noncarcinogens were present in fish muscle at levels that  would
cause exposure to  exceed  the U.S. EPA Acceptable Daily  Intake (ADI)  at
the  1 Ib/day consumption rate:  antimony, lead,  and mercury.  Tissue concen-
trations  of these chemicals were very similar among  project areas and  at
the  Carr  Inlet reference  site.   Therefore, the ADIs would be exceeded  at
both Commencement Bay  and  Carr  Inlet for  the 1 Ib/day  consumption rate.
Limiting  consumption of  fish  to one-half pound per day would result in
an exposure below  the ADI  for all of  these  chemicals.   However, health
risks  at  this consumption  rate would  still exist due to the presence of
carcinogens in  these fishes.

     For  consumption of crab muscle at the  maximum rate of 1 Ib/day, calculated
exposures  exceeded  the ADI for the following contaminants:  antimony, lead,
silver,  zinc,  and  mercury.   For these metals, the ADIs were exceeded  for
crabs from both  Commencement Bay and Carr Inlet.  For most  of the metals,
the  differences between Commencement  Bay and Carr  Inlet were slight.   By
limiting  consumption of crabs from either  Commencement  Bay  or Carr Inlet
to 1 Ib/week,  all noncarcinogenic exposures would be below the ADI.

     Twenty-one  chemicals were detected  in  at  least one fish liver composite
sample from Commencement Bay.  Four of the  detected chemicals are considered
to be carcinogens:  PCBs, hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorobutadiene, and  arsenic.
At the maximum consumption  rate of  0.12  Ib/day, consumption of PCBs  in
fish  liver would  result  in  a  predicted  individual  lifetime risk of  two
in one hundred  (2xlO~2).   This  risk is higher than the corresponding  risk
associated  with consumption of PCBs in  fish muscle tissue, six in one thousand
(6x10-3)t because  of the much higher  PCB concentrations in fish livers.
The predicted risk  level  for PCBs in  Commencement Bay fish  livers is about
15 times  higher  than the corresponding risk for  fish livers from Carr Inlet.
                                    51

-------
     Maximum estimated  carcinogenic risks for hexachlorobenzene and hexachloro-
butadiene in fish  liver were about  the same  as  the corresponding risks
for  fish muscle [i.e., one in ten  thousand (10~4) and one in one hundred
thousand (10-5),  respectively].  All  other estimated carcinogenic  risks
were much lower  than  these  levels.

     All  calculated  exposures for the noncarcinogens present in fish livers
from Commencement Bay were  less than 10 percent of the corresponding ADIs.
Therefore,  even at  the maximum consumption rate of 0.12 Ib/day,  no  human
health effects  attributable to these noncarcinogens would be expected.

     Of  the  chemicals  detected  in fish livers from Commencement Bay,  PCBs
pose the greatest potential  risk  to  public  health.   Although  the maximum
estimated risk  of one in one hundred (10'2)  is associated with a high consump-
tion rate, even  much  less frequent consumption of fish livers would result
in a substantial  predicted  risk.

     As  a result of the public health assessment, the Tacoma-Pierce County
Health Department,  in conjunction with the Department of Social  and Health
Services, issued  a  revised  health advisory.  The advisory recommended against
the consumption  of  fish  from the Commencement Bay waterways.  The advisory
also  recommended  that  consumption of fish caught from the southwest  shore
of Commencement  Bay and  in  Carr Inlet be limited.

3.3  PRIORITIZATION OF  PROBLEM AREAS AND CONTAMINANTS

     The objective  of this  part of the Commencement Bay Remedial  Investigation
was to identify  and  prioritize problem areas  and  problem contaminants.
This  prioritization resulted from  the decision-making approach described
in Section 2.2.1.

     An  important  part of the  decision-making process was the development
of action assessment  matrices for  study areas  and  segments.   The action
assessment  matrix for  the eight Commencement Bay  study areas is  shown  in
Table 7.  This matrix represents a characterization of the largest scale
of contamination  and  effects considered in this study.  Variables are averaged
across all stations within  each study area.  Similar  matrices without fish
pathology and bioaccumulation results were constructed for waterway  segments
shown in Figure  5 (Section  3.1.1).  Values listed  in the matrix represent
elevations above  reference  (EAR), and those enclosed  by a box were significant.
Chemical significance was defined as an exceedance of the maximum concentration
observed in any Puget  Sound reference area.  Biological  significance was
based on statistical  criteria and an experimentwise error rate of 0.05.

     Based  on average  values over each study area (e.g., Hylebos Waterway)
the following conclusions are evident:

     •    Several  organic  compounds were  significant  in all  study
          areas.

     •    Metals contamination was  significant  in all areas  except
          St. Paul  Waterway.
                                    52

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   TABLE   7.     ACTION  ASSESSMENT  MATRIX OF SEDIMENT  CONTAMINATION,  SEDIMENT TOXICITY,
               AND  BIOLOGICAL  EFFECTS  INDICES  FOR  COMMENCEMENT BAY STUDY  AREAS
STUDY
VARIABLE Hylebos Blair
SEODCNT CHEMISTRY
Sb
As
Cd
Cu+Pb+Zn
Hg
Ni
Phenol
Pentachlorophenol
LPAH
HPAH
Chlor. benzenes
Chlor. butadienes
Phthalates
PCBs
4-Methyl phenol
Benzyl alcohol
Benzole acid
Dlbenzofuran
Nitrosodlphenylamin
Tetrachloroethene
SEDIMENT TOXICITY
Amphipod bloassay
Oyster bloassay
INFAUKA0
Total benthos
Polychaetes
Molluscs
Crustaceans


10.
12.
2.4
10.
8.1
1.4
< 6.4
1.7
<45.
<120.
9.9
130.
4.0
<48.
4
e

<7.3
5.0
0.7
29.
2.1
12.

2.1
2.2
1.2
ITT"
1.5
4.0
4!8
< 3.7
0.7
< 5.2
< 2.3
<28.
<42.
< 4.4
<12.
< 2.2
< 3.2
25.
< 2.4
< 0.6
1.9
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
Sltcum
8.0
11.
2.8
24.
5.0
0.6
4.3
< 2.1
<68.
<65.
2.6
10.
2.4
< 0.5
73.
< 7.3
U 1.0
0.7
0.4
1.4
AREA
Milwaukee
3.6
3.6
1.7
3.'e
0.8
<60.
<68.
< 2.5
< 1.2
< 0.66
13.
3.4
< 0.7
u i.'o
0.8
0.7
1.1
0.4
ELEVATIONS3
St. Paul Middle City Ruston
4.2
2.2
1.7
5.5
5.1
0.8
U L9
<73.
<27.
< 1.8
< 1.3
< 0.56
1300.
< 6.7
1 52! I
U 1.2
U 1.0
1 4.8
J • O
1.9
1 6J8
1.0

9.3
9.6
2.8
18.
26.
0.7
11.
5.6
<110.
< 97.
< 6.1
< 6.8
< 5.1
8.5^

< 33.
3.3
U 0.1
< 1.0
1.4
1.8
1.5
0.7
5.4
4.6

7.0
7.5
5.5
22.
10.
1.4
9.4
< 1.9
<120.
<140.
< 9.0
< 1.9
< 7.1
<12.

30.
4.7
< 1.6
58.
14.
U 1.0
2.7
2.6
0.7
0.8
2.5
1.2




510.
620.
27.
120.
160.
2.8

4.5
< 1.0
<87.
<85.
< 3.3
< 1.7
4.5
19.

<10.
< 1.2
< 0.5
<160.
<22.

3.9
2.2
0.6
0.5
1.2
0.7
REFERENCE
VALUED
110. ppb
3370. ppb
950 . ppb
35000. ppb
40. ppb
1740. ppb
< 33 ppb
U 33. ppb
< 41. ppb
< 79. ppb
U 21. ppb
U 62. ppb
< 280. ppb
< 6.0 ppb
< 13. ppb
U 10. ppb
< 140. ppb
U 3.7 ppb
U 4.1 ppb
U 10. ppb
9.3 1
13.0 I
d
d
d
d
FISH PATHOLOGY
 Lesion prevalence
1.7
2.1
6.7 I
FISH BIOACCUMULATION
Copper
Mercury
Naphthalene
Phthalates
PCBs6
DDE


5.6
1-5,
0.67
21.
9.2
3.8









1.0
0.93
0.41
11.
7.0
5.1


L_4.0_| 2
0.80 1
0.33 24
0.53 3
1 4.8 | 2


.3 I 9.n 1.0 3
.6 0.76 1.3 C
0.19 0.19 4
6 0.41 0.41 6
.8 1.1 4.7 9
.4 1.7 1.7 6


.8 | 2.5 |
.82 0.96
.1 0.19
.7 5.6
.8 1.9
.2 2.9


U 38. ppb
U 55. ppb
< 54. ppb
< 74. ppb
< 36. ppb
< 1.8 ppb

8  Boxed numbers  represent elevations of  chemical concentrations that exceed  all Puget Sound reference area values,
and statistically significant toxlcity and biological effects  at the P<0.05 significance level  compared with reference
conditions.  The "U" qualifier indicates the chemical was undetected and the detection limit is shown.  The "<" qualifier
indicates the chemical  was undetected at one or more stations.  The detection limit is used in  the  calculations.

b  Elevation above reference (EAR) values shown for each area  are based on Carr  Inlet reference values for each variable
except  for benthos (see footnote d).

c  Infauna EAR are  based  on  the elevation  in  biological effects represented by reductions in  infaunal abundances
relative to reference conditions.  EAR for all other variables reflect an increase in the  value of the variable  at
Commencement Bay compared with reference conditions.

d  Different  benthic reference  values  were used depending on sediment  grain  size.

e Locations where PCB concentrations are significantly elevated also pose a significant health  risk to the  exposed
population (see Table 6.8 guidelines).
                                                     53

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     •    Blair and  Milwaukee Waterways had the least  chemical contami-
          nation based on number and magnitude of significantly elevated
          chemical  indices.

     •    Sediment  toxicity was  statistically elevated  (P<0.05) in
          all  areas except  Middle Waterway,  as indicated  by  one or
          both bioassays.

     t    Sediment  toxicity as indicated by both bioassays was statis-
          tically  elevated only in Hylebos and City  Waterways.

     t    Benthic effects  as  indicated  by  depressions in  infaunal
          abundances  were statistically significant  (P<0.05) in Hylebos,
          Sitcum,  St. Paul, Middle, and City Waterways.

     •    Liver lesions  were significantly elevated  (P<0.05) in all
          study areas except St. Paul  and City Waterways  and the Ruston-
          Pt.  Defiance Shoreline.

     •    Bioaccumulation  of at  least  one chemical  in  English sole
          muscle tissue was  significantly  elevated (P<0.05)  in all
          study areas except Middle Waterway.

     Evaluation of waterway  segments defined  in  Section 3.1.1 indicated
that contamination,  toxicity, and benthic effects were heterogeneous within
the  large study areas (i.e., those areas containing more than one segment).
For example,  although Hylebos Waterway  as a whole exhibited the largest
number  of significant  indicators, and  chemical contamination was evident
throughout the waterway,  there was  no  significant  toxicity in Segments
HYS3 or  HYS4, and  no significant benthic effects in  Segments HYS3 or HYS6.
In general, chemical contamination in Hylebos Waterway  was  most  extensive
at the head of the waterway, with additional  high values  for selected chemicals
in Segment HYS5 near the  mouth of  the  waterway.  Relatively low levels
of chemical  contamination  were observed in Blair Waterway as compared to
the other areas.   These  lower contaminant levels  corresponded  to a  lack
of significant toxicity  or benthic  effects indicators when averaged over
any segment.   Within City Waterway,  contamination, toxicity, and benthic
effects  were highest near  the head (Segment CIS1) and within the Wheeler-
Osgood branch  of the waterway  (Segment CIS2).  The mouth  of City Waterway
(Segment CIS3) was  comparable in number and magnitude of  significant indicators
to Segment RSS1 along the eastern Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline.  The extreme
metals contamination and high level of organic compound  contamination within
Segment RSS2 corresponded to the largest number and highest average magnitude
of toxicity  and benthic  effects indicators along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance
Shore!ine.

     Action-level  guidelines  specified  in  the decision-making approach
were applied  to the  action assessment matrices to determine  problem areas.
One  of  the guidelines specified that if significant  elevation in any three
of the five indicators  (sediment  chemistry, sediment  toxicity, infauna,
fish pathology, bioaccumulation) occurred, then a problem area was indicated.
Use of this guideline resulted in the designation of  problem areas in  all
Commencement Bay study areas and segments.   Several  of the segments within
the larger study areas met this criterion only when  study-area wide values


                                    54

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for  fish  pathology  and  bioaccumulation were considered.   According  to  the
guidelines, significant bioaccumulation of PCBs in Hylebos,  Blair, Sitcum,
and City Waterways  warrants  source  identification based solely on the prediction
of possible significant health effects.

     Among  the  large study  areas (i.e., Hylebos, Blair, and City  Waterways,
and the Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline)  six  segments  within  these areas
had  significant EAR for  all three of the site-specific indicators (contam-
ination, sediment toxicity,  and benthic effects), including:

     t    Segments  HYS1, HYS2, and  HYS5 in Hylebos Waterway

     •    Segments  CIS1 and  CIS2 in City Waterway

     •    Segment RSS2 along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline.

     Of the small study areas, Sitcum and St. Paul Waterways had significant
EAR for these indicators.

     A problem  area  was also indicated in Segment HYS4  of  Hylebos Waterway,
because mollusc  abundances were depressed more  than 95 percent relative
to reference conditions (i.e., EAR >20).  According to  the guidelines, this
condition  indicated  a problem area regardless of the values  for  other indi-
cators.

     Because all study areas  and segments exceeded the action-level  guidelines
for further definition of problem areas for source evaluation, an independent
ranking procedure was applied to the  data to  prioritize study areas  and
segments.   Results  of the  ranking procedure are  presented  for  study areas
in Table  8 (for explanation of ranking  procedures,  see  Volume 1).   For
segments,  ranks  based on the average  and maximum conditions are shown in
Figure  10.  According to these ranking  procedures,  segments in Hylebos,
Sitcum, and City Waterways,  and Segment RSS2 along the Ruston-Pt.   Defiance
Shoreline consistently  scored high  based on contamination  and effects.
Milwaukee  Waterway,  four Blair Waterway segments, and Segment  RSS1 on the
eastern Ruston-Pt.  Defiance  Shoreline were consistently  low in the ranking.

     The  spatial extent  of  problem  areas within the  prioritized segments
was established  using the  chemical data set and quantitative relationships
among  sediment contamination, toxicity, and biological effects  [i.e.,  the
"apparent  effects thresholds" (AET)].   AET levels were applied  to stations
with  only  chemical  data to help define the extent of problem  areas.   Historical
chemical data as well  as project data were used.  Historical  amphipod bioassay
data  indicating high toxicity (>50 percent mortality) were also used, where
available, to define  problem  area boundaries.   The interpolation of chemical
concentrations was  attempted  between stations because of the  often  patchy
distribution of  problem sediments.  However,  when  no data  were  available
for  nearshore subtidal  and intertidal  sediments,  the problem  areas were
assumed to extend to  the shore.

     The  spatial extent  and general priority for source  evaluation  of  all
problem areas  identified in  Commencement Bay are  summarized in Figure 11.
At the  highest priority  sites, all  three site-specific  indicators were
significant.  Of the  21 problem areas, eight received  the highest priority


                                    55

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TABLE 8.  RANKING OF STUDY AREAS BASED ON MAGNITUDE AND
 NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT CONTAMINANTS, SEDIMENT TOXICITY,
                 AND  BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS
Sediment Contamination
         Toxicity/Biological  Effects
      Ruston
      Hylebos
      City
      Middle
      Site urn
      St. Paul
      Blair
      Milwaukee
(Highest)
 (Lowest)
Siteurn
Hylebos
City
Blair
Middle
Milwaukee
St. Paul
Ruston
                            56

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RANK
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                                                   SEGMENT



                                               CIS1


                                               HYS2, CIS2


                                               RSS2, SIS1, HYS1


                                               SPS1


                                               HYS5


                                               HYS4
                                               CIS3


                                               MDS1, HYS3, BLS1


                                               RSS3, RSS1, MIS1, HYS6


                                               BLS2, BLS4
     "SCORES ARE SUMS FOR CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL INDICATORS
      FROM TABLES 6.10 AND 6.11

     bSCORES ARE SUMMARIZED IN TABLE 6.12
Figure  10.   Relative  ranking of  study area  segments by average
             and maximum observed contamination toxicity,  and
             biological  effects.
                            57

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58

-------
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                  59

-------
for  source evaluation,  including three within Hylebos Waterway,  two  within
City Waterway, and  one  within  Sitcum Waterway, one within St.  Paul  Waterway,
and  one  along the  Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline.  The second  priority sites
are "hot spots" where chemical  contaminants exceeded an AET, and  both  bioassays
were  significant  or_ multiple benthic depressions were observed  within  the
problem area.   Four problem  areas received second priority for source eval-
uation,  including  one within each of Hylebos, Middle, and City  Waterways,
and at Station RS-13 along along the eastern Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline.
Third  priority sites  include those  where chemical  contaminants exceeded
an AET, and one of  the  bioassays was significant or_ a single  benthic taxon
was significantly depressed.   The lowest priority sites for source evaluation
include those areas where no  sediment toxicity or benthic  effects were
observed  but where AETs applied to available chemical data  suggested that
toxicity or benthic effects  would have been found had biological  data been
collected.

     Chemicals  of  concern  were  defined in Section 3.1.1 as  chemicals with
concentrations  exceeding all Puget Sound reference conditions.  These  chemicals
were  not  necessarily  considered problem chemicals because  most  sediments
in Commencement Bay were  contaminated above reference conditions  and only
some  of  these sediments exhibited toxicity or benthic effects.   Although
source evaluations  may be conducted  on all  chemicals of concern, it is
important to further  evaluate these  contaminants to identify  chemicals
posing the greatest environmental  hazard.   This  further prioritization
of chemicals is based  on the  toxicity and benthic AET identified  in  Section
3.1.4.  Because these AET were defined  as the  contaminant concentrations
above  which toxicity  or benthic effects were  always observed,  chemicals
present above these thresholds were considered problem chemicals.

     Problem chemicals  were  further prioritized into three categories:

     •    Priority  1:   Present above an  AET with distribution corresponding
          to observed toxicity or benthic effects gradients

     •    Priority  2:   Present above  an AET at more than one station
          in the problem  area with no apparent relationship to toxicity
          or benthic effects gradients, or insufficient effects  data
          were available  for evaluation of gradients

     •    Priority  3:   Present above an AET at only one station within
          the problem area.

Priority  1 chemicals  for each of the segments containing the eight  highest
priority  problem areas  are listed  in  Table 9.   Six of the  eight problem
areas  contained Priority 1 problem chemicals.   Within the Priority 1  groups
for each  problem area,  chemicals are listed in  descending order  of their
"toxicity significance  factors."  These factors represent a  combined  index
of the literature values  of the potential  mammalian toxicity and  the  potential
for contaminant uptake  by  marine organisms.   All  Priority 1  chemicals  are
recommended for  source  evaluation.  No Priority 1 chemicals were identified
for the remaining  12  problem areas.   For 10 of  these areas, there were
not enough stations  to  establish correspondence between toxicity or benthic
effects and sediment contamination.
                                    60

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               TABLE  9.
                        POTENTIAL PROBLEM  CHEMICALS  IN PROBLEM AREAS
  Segment
 Containing
Problem Areaa
(in rank order)
                           Potential  Problem Chemicals'*
    HYS2
CIS1       Priority 1:   Hg,  Zn,  Pb  [TOC<1]C
           Priority 2:   HPAH,  Cd, Ni,  Cu, LPAH, 2-methy1 phenol, 4-methyl-
                        phenol,  phthalate esters [oil & grease]c
           Priority 3:   dichlorobenzenes, N-nitrosodiphenylamine, [aniline,
                        benzyl  alcohol]c

           Priority 1:   PCBs
           Priority 2:   HPAH, Ni,  As,  tetrachloroethene [Hge, Cue, Znef
                        Pbe  (intertidal sediments only)]
           Priority 3:   HCBD, chlorinated benzenes, phthalate esters,
                        phenol [benzyl  alcohol, dibenzothiophene, methyl-
                        phenanthrenes,  methylpyrenes]c

           Priority 1:   none
           Priority 2:   HPAH,  Cd, Cue,  zn t  dichlorobenzenes,  LPAHe,
                        Pb,  N-nitrosodiphenylamine, 4-methylphenol ,
                        phenol  [biphenyl, TVS, TOC, oil & grease]c

RSS2       Priority 1:   Hg,  As,  LPAH
           Priority 2:   HPAH,  PCBs, Cd, Ni, Cu, Zn, Pb, Sb [dibenzofuran]C
           Priority 3:   dichlorobenzenes, N-nitrosodiphenylamine, 2-methyl-
                        phenol, 4-methylphenol, phthalate esters,  [1-methyl-
                        (2-methylethyl)benzene, biphenyl, dibenzothiophene,
                        methylphenanthrenes, retene, methylpyrenes]c
    CIS2
    SIS1       Priority  1:: none
               Priority  2:  Ase,  Cue, Zn, Pb
               Priority  3:  N-nitrosodiphenylamine [dibenzofuran, 1-methyl-(2-
                           methylethyl)benzene, diterpenoid hydrocarbons]c,
                           LPAH, HPAH

    HYS1       Priority  1:  HPAH, As,  Zn  (limited  evidence of  a  gradient
                           for each with  one or more toxicity/effects
                           indicator)
               Priority  2:  phenol,  Sb
               Priority  3:  Phthalate esters, ethyl benzene, tetrachloroethene,
                           [xylenes,  1-methyl-(2-methyl ethyl) benzene,
                           methylpyrenes, TVS]C

    SPS1       Priority  1:  4-methylphenol
               Priority  2:  [benzyl  alcohol, l-methyl(2-methylethyl)benzene,
                           2-methoxyphenol]c
               Priority  3:  Ni, LPAH,  2-methylphenol, phenol [biphenyl,
                           diterpenoid hydrocarbons, retene, TVS, TOC]C
                                    61

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TABLE 9.
(Continued)
    HYS5       Priority  1:   PCBs
               Priority  2:   HCBD, chlorinated benzenes, chlorinated ethenes
                            [pentachlorocyclopentane isomer]^ pb
               Priority  3:   Hg,  HPAH6,  Cu^  Zne, LPAHe,  phenol  [benzyl
                            alcohol, biphenyljc
    HYS4
 (hotspot)
    BLS2
(no action)
    CIS3
 (hotspot)
    MDS1
    HYS3
 (no action)
    BLS1
 (no action)


    RSS3
 (hot spot)
    RSS1
 (hot spots)
  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:
  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:

  Priority 3:
  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:

  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:
  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:

  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:

  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:

  Priority 1:
  Priority 2:
  Priority 3:
none
none
HPAHe, PCBs6, HCBD, LPAH6, N-nitrosodiphenylamine
[benzyl  alcohol,  dibenzofuran6,  pentachloro-
cyclopentane isomer, methypyrenes]C

none
dichlorobenzenes, N-nitrosodiphenylamine, 4-methyl-
phenol, phenol
As,  HCBD,  pentachlorophenol,  2-methylphenol,
oil & grease

none
HPAH, LPAH
PCBse, Zne, phenol [biphenyl, dibenzothiophene]c

none
Hg, Cu
HPAH, As, Zn, dichlorobenzenes,  LPAH, pentachloro-
phenol,  Pb,  4-methylphenol, phenol  [dibenzo-
thiophene, diterpenoid hydrocarbons, methylpyrenes]c

none
PCBs, As, Zn
n-Nitrosodiphenylamine

no toxicity/effects observed at  stations  tested
none
HPAH, phenol

none
As, Cd, Cu, Zn, Pb, N-nitrosodiphenylamine,  Sb
none

none
none
Station RS-13 hotspot:  HPAH, dichlorobenzenes,
LPAH, 2-methylphenol, 4-methylphenol [dibenzofuran,
biphenyl, methylphenanthrenes, retene,  methyl-
pyrenes]c
Station RS-15 hotspot:  As, HCBD, Cd,  Ni, Cu,
Zn, phenol (these chemicals exceed  AET at RS-15
only  after normalization to percent fine-grained
material or to organic carbon content)
                                    62

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TABLE 9.
(Continued)
    MIS1       No chemicals  found  above apparent effect levels at stations
 (no action)    sampled  in  Milwaukee Waterway
HYS6
(no action)
BLS3
(no action)
BLS4
(no action)
Priority 1:
Priority 2:
Priority 3:
Priority 1:
Priority 2:
Priority 3:
Priority 1:
Priority 2:
Priority 3:
no toxicity/effects observed
none
phthalate esters
at station tested
no toxicity/effects observed at stations tested
none
pentachlorophenol , 2 -methyl phenol , 4 -methyl phenol
no biological data available
none
phthalate esters


   Problem areas encompass  all  stations sampled in 1984 only in Segments HY
SI, SIS1, CIS1, RSS2,  RSS3, and possibly MDS1 (Station MD-12 in this segment
was close to apparent  effect thresholds for several chemicals).
b  Concentrations  of  these  chemicals  exceeded an apparent effect threshold
(by various normalizations)  in  sediment from  at  least  one  station in  the
defined problem area.   Chemicals  are  listed in  each priority group in descending
order  of  their calculated toxicity significance factor,  if  available.
Stations with and  without biological  data  area included.  Priority 1 chemicals
showed  a concentration gradient with  toxicity or biological effects gradients.
Priority  2 chemicals  were above  apparent effect thresholds at more than
one station within the  problem  area,  but either  no gradient  corresponding
to that for toxicity/effects  was  observed, or  no biological data were available
to assess gradients.  Priority 3 chemicals  were above apparent effect thresholds
at one station only within the  problem  area.

c  Toxicity significant  factors  were not  available for  the chemicals listed
in brackets.  These chemicals have  not  been prioritized relative to  other
chemicals in the same priority  group.

d  TOC  concentrations did not  exceed an AET in  the  problem area defined
in Segment CIS1 but the  TOC concentration gradient corresponded with observed
changes  in effects  (e.g., sediment toxicity).   This  correspondence may
result from the covarying distribution  of TOC  with other  contaminants,
including lead and zinc.
e  Chemical  elevated  above an AET  in  the defined problem area on 1 j
basis of historical  data.
                                                        on the
                                     63

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     Priority 2 chemicals  were  identified  in all eight of the highest priority
problem areas.   Priority 2 chemicals  were  also  identified  in three  of  the
lower priority  problem areas.   Priority  2  chemicals include:

     •    Cadmium, nickel, and  antimony

     •    Hexachlorobutadiene,  chlorinated benzenes, chlorinated ethenes,
          phenol, 2-methylphenol,  n-nitrosodiphenylamine, dibenzofuran,
          and selected phthalate esters

     •    Selected tentatively  identified  compounds.

Priority 2 chemicals are  recommended for  source evaluation where sufficient
spatial data are available to  indicate sources.

     Priority  3 chemicals not already identified in the Priority 2 group
included pentachlorophenol, aniline, and  selected tentatively identified
compounds.  These  chemicals  are  not recommended for source evaluations
unless their occurrence at a single station  in a problem area is associated
with  a potential  source  that  is  not necessarily  indicated by other problem
chemicals.

3.4  SOURCE INVESTIGATIONS

     Source  investigations were  conducted for all of the highest priority
and second priority problem areas  identified in Figure 11.  These 12 problem
areas  are located in Hylebos  (4 areas), St. Paul  (1 area), Middle (1 area),
City (3 areas), and Sitcum Waterways  (1  area) and along the Ruston-Pt. Defiance
Shoreline (2 areas).  Some of these problem  areas  are  adjacent to each
other  and are not distinguished  in  Figure 11  (e.g., two high priority problem
areas  near the  head of Hylebos  Waterway).  Each area is discussed in the
following section.  Detailed source investigations have not been conducted
for the  remaining lower priority  problem  areas shown in Figure 11 and these
areas are not discussed.

     The contaminants of concern subjected to source evaluations were specific
to each problem area.  Potential sources that  have been  evaluated for  the
contaminants of  concern   include  contaminated  groundwater, surface water
runoff, spills, and industrial  discharges.   It  should be  noted that most
of  the  contaminants of concern discussed  in this report are not typically
regulated under existing NPDES  permits.

3.4.1  Hylebos  Waterway

     Source identifications were conducted for nine contaminants  or contaminant
groups for the  four problem areas  identified in Hylebos Waterway.  Of these,
one or more sources could  be identified  for  chlorinated hydrocarbons, aromatic
hydrocarbons, and metals.   The  source or sources of PCBs in Hylebos Waterway
could not be clearly identified as  historical or ongoing.  There is evidence
that exposure of historically  contaminated  sediments may  be contributing
to the patchy distribution of  PCBs  in Hylebos Waterway.

     Occidental  Chemical  Corporation  is implicated  as the major  source
of chlorinated  hydrocarbons (chlorinated benzenes, butadienes, and ethenes)


                                    64

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to Hylebos Waterway.   Historically, the chlorinated  organic compounds have
entered the waterway  via direct discharge from the  chlorine production
facilities and the solvents plant.   They have also  entered the waterway
via groundwater as a  consequence of  spills and on-site waste disposal.
At present,  the chlorinated ethenes, benzenes  and butadienes are entering
the waterway principally  through groundwater and,  to a  lesser extent, through
the main outfall.

     Pennwalt  Corporation appears  to be  a current  source of chlorinated
ethenes, arsenic,  copper, lead, and  zinc.  The chlorinated ethenes  are
presently being discharged  to the waterway through  the  main plant outfall
and through groundwater  that has become contaminated  as  a result of  past
on-site waste disposal.   Arsenic  is  presently entering the waterway via
the main outfall  and through groundwater that has become contaminated  as
a result of on-site disposal of a sodium arsenite pesticide.

     Kaiser Aluminum  and Chemical  has historically been a major  source
of high molecular weight PAH to Hylebos Waterway, principally via discharge
through Kaiser Ditch.   Discharge of PAH through  this  ditch has historically
been much greater than it  is at present, but there is  evidence that  some
release of PAH continues.   Kaiser Ditch  is  also a source of arsenic and
metals.   The  relative contributions of Kaiser  Aluminum  and other properties
bordering the  ditch are  unknown.

     Hylebos  Creek  is  an  ongoing source of arsenic, copper, lead, and zinc. The
U.S.  Gypsum landfill and the B&L Landfill  are major  contributors to  the
arsenic load  in Hylebos  Creek, although the  arsenic contribution from the
U.S.  Gypsun landfill should decrease with time as  a result  of recent remedial
action.  Fife  Ditch is the major contributor of zinc to  Hylebos Creek.

     The  six  unpaved  or partially  paved  log sort yards bordering Hylebos
Waterway are sources  of arsenic, copper, lead, and  zinc because of  the
use  of ASARCO slag as  ballast.  High  concentrations  of these metals were
present in the runoff  from the yards.   As  a group,  these log sort yards
contribute approximately  11 Ib/day of arsenic and 11 lb/day of metals (copper,
lead, and zinc) via surface runoff (contribution of Dunlap Towing not quantified
nor  included  in total loading).  Additional loading from  the log sort  yards
via groundwater could  be  significant but is unquantified.  U.S. EPA acute
water quality  criteria were exceeded for zinc and copper in Hylebos Waterway
near  two of the log sort yards.

3.4.2  St. Paul  Waterway

     Evaluation  of contaminant  sources for  the problem area  identified
off the mouth  of  St. Paul Waterway indicates that Champion  International
(formerly St. Regis  Paper Company)  is the major source of the contaminants
of concern, including  alkylated phenols, methoxyphenols, copper, and organic
enrichment.   Levels of  copper measured  in the water column in this area
have  been reported  to  sometimes exceed  water quality criteria.   The toxicity
and benthic  effects  AET for copper concentrations in  sediment samples was
not exceeded.   The proximity of the  most contaminated  sediments to  the
firm's  main outfall indicates that this discharge is the route of contaminant
input.   The source of these contaminants is ongoing and none of the contaminants
of concern resulted strictly from historical discharges.


                                    65

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3.4.3  Middle  Waterway

     Of the six  contaminants or  contaminant groups  of concern in Middle
Waterway,  possible  sources for three (pentachlorophenol ,  copper, mercury)
have  been identified.   It  is  possible  that  the dichlorobenzenes and PAH
are entering the  waterway via the  storm  sewer system  or possibly one  of
the other discharges  at the head of the waterway, but the ultimate source
or sources within the drainage area could  not be  identified.

     Five  industries  have been  identified as  possible sources  based  on
their possible use  of products containing  the  contaminants  of concern and
their  potential  discharge  to  areas of  the waterway  showing  the highest
sediment contaminant concentrations.  These industries include:

     •    Champion International  (formerly St.  Regis Paper Company) -
          potential unconfirmed  source of  pentachlorophenol via  the
          storm sewer system  (may account  for high sediment  concentrations
          near the  drain  at the head of the waterway)

     •    Coast Craft - potential unconfirmed source of pentachlorophenol
          (used as a wood preservative) by spillage  or other unauthorized
          discharge

     •    Cook's Marine  Specialties  (formerly  Peterson Boat), Foss
          Tug, and  Marine Industries Northwest  -  potential sources
          of  copper  and mercury  by release  of  antifouling paints,
          sandblasting material, or other  products used  in ship repair

     •    Paxport Mills - potential source of metals and organic compounds
          from a  wood waste and  ASARCO slag mixture  used as fill  in
          a salmon  enhancement area near the waterway mouth.

3.4.4  City Waterway

     Source investigations were conducted for three problem areas and nine
contaminants or contaminant groups  of  concern  in City  Waterway.   Several
industries and storm  drains have been identified as probable contributors
of metals, PAH, or  total  organic carbon (TOC)  to City  Waterway.   Sources
of dibenzofuran  are presumed  to be the  same  as  those  for PAH.   No sources
were conclusively identified for PCBs, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, or 1,2-dichloro-
benzene.

     The Nalley  Valley and  south Tacoma drains  are the major contributors
of many of the contaminants of concern to  City  Waterway.   They are  ongoing
sources of all metals of concern  in  the waterway, contributing 87, 88,
and 81 percent of the quantified loading of lead,  copper,  and zinc,  respec-
tively.  One or both of these drains is  also the major historical  and poten-
tially ongoing source of  organic material  to  the waterway.   Finally, the
two drains are probably also a major ongoing source of PAH to City Waterway.

     Discharge from  the 15th Street drain contributes  metals  and PAH  to
the waterway,  but in much lower amounts than  the two storm  drains at the
                                    66

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 head of the waterway because of  its much smaller drainage  basin  and lower
 average flows.

     Hygrade Foods and/or  its predecessor, Carsten's Packing  Company, appear
 to be responsible for historical organic enrichment in Wheeler-Osgood  Waterway.
 Both were major dischargers of organic material.  The potential  of  continuing
 periodic discharges from Hygrade  Foods  is possible, as is natural  decay
 of accumulated  organic debris in the anoxic basin.  Storm drains  to Wheeler-
 Osgood Waterway are sources of copper, lead, and zinc.  There may  be  other
 sources of metals  to the waterway as well.  Possible sources of 4-methylphenol
 to the Wheel er-Osgood Waterway are groundwater from the Tar Pits,  and degrada-
 tion of wood chip  debris in the sediments.

     Martinac  Shipbuilding is a probable source of copper and  zinc to City
 Waterway.   Sandblasting  and antifouling paints  are  suspected contributors
 to the  contamination.  North  Pacific  Plywood, Puget  Sound Plywood, the
 Tar Pits,  and the  23rd and A Street coal  gasification site are all  possible
 sources of 4-methylphenol  to City Waterway.  Input from North  Pacific Plywood
 may have occurred  via groundwater or  from spills  of phenolic  glues  which
 entered the storm sewer  leading  to  the 15th Street drain.   Glue wastes
 from Puget Sound Plywood may be contributing to  elevated sediment  levels
 of 4-methylphenol  found  near  the mouth of City  Waterway.  The 23rd and
 A Street site and  possibly the Tar  Pits  are potential ongoing  sources  of
 4-methylphenol  and LPAH  through groundwater.

     D  Street  petroleum facilities contribute low molecular weight aromatic
 hydrocarbons to City Waterway via  shallow groundwater  that seeps out  of
 the  bank  near that  facility.   It is apparent that  the  problem has been
 ongoing for at  least 12 years.  Sediments near the D Street site  are contam-
 inated  by PAH characteristic  of combustion sources, while the  groundwater
 is contaminated mainly by  petroleum compounds.   Therefore, no relationship
 could  be  established  between  the chemical  contamination  of  groundwater
 and contamination  of sediments in  the area.   The  D Street facilities  do
 not  appear to be  a  source of sediment HPAH contamination near  the waterway
mouth, although the actual source or  sources of  these compounds  have  not
 been identified.

 3.4.5  Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline

     Source  investigations were  conducted  at two problem areas  along the
 Ruston-Pt. Defiance shoreline:  a single-station hot  spot and  a  larger
 area  adjacent to  the  ASARCO smelter.   Eleven contaminants or  contaminant
groups were subjected to source evaluations.

     At the  hot  spot, no sources  (including nearby properties  and drains)
were  identified  for the contaminants identified in  sediments.   It  is possible
that  historical  discharges  from a local drain may have contributed to the
contamination.

     With the  possible exception  of PCBs, sediment contamination near the
ASARCO facility can be attributed  to  the ASARCO  property.   The  firm  has
been documented to be a major source of arsenic  and  metals, with  the plant's
three NPDES-permitted outfalls  alone  contributing 780  Ib/day  of arsenic
and metals to Commencement Bay.   There have also been many documented releases


                                    67

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of fuels  that have contributed to the  PAH contamination now observed in
sediments  of the  Ruston-Pt. Defiance  Shoreline.  Transformers containing
PCBs have  been used on the ASARCO property.  While there have been no documented
spills from these  transformers, the spatial  gradient  of  PCB contamination
in the  bay sediments suggests that releases have  occurred.  Tacoma City
Light maintains an electrical substation near the  ASARCO property.   Any
past  spills from this  facility could  also potentially be responsible for
the contamination  of bay sediments observed, particularly  near the  ASARCO
north outfall.

     Although  ASARCO  is the major  source  of contaminants to the problem
area, for  most of the contaminants  it  is  difficult to  determine  if the
major  input has  occurred  through any one  route.   There are several routes
by which contaminants may migrate from the ASARCO property  into the bay:

     •    Outfalls - There are four  outfalls which serve the ASARCO
          property, three of which are NPDES-permitted.  Their effluents
          originate from  a variety of  sources, including stormwater
          runoff,  groundwater seepage, noncontact cooling water, contact
          cooling water  (pre-1976), and spills.  The three discharges
          that have been sampled have all  been found  to be major sources
          of arsenic and metals.

     •    Groundwater - Much of the ASARCO property has  been created
          by the dumping of molten slag into  Commencement Bay.  Movement
          of groundwater  through this slag, promoted by tidal action,
          may be  a significant  source of  arsenic  and metals  to the
          bay. Chronic discharge of acidic  wastewater may  have enhanced
          leaching of metals from the slag.   The historical practice
          of spreading out molten slag on the ground surface and irrigating
          it to promote cooling may also have  contributed to arsenic
          and  metal contamination via groundwater.

     •    Atmospheric Emissions - In-plant emissions may contribute
          to stormwater runoff or groundwater contamination.

     With   the  recent  closure  of  the copper smelting operations at ASARCO,
a decrease  in contaminant release can be expected, particularly in atmospheric
emissions.  However, groundwater and discharge of storm water and/or cooling
water through  the  four outfalls can be  expected to  continue, introducing
contaminants to the bay for many years to come.

3.4.6  Siteurn Waterway

     The Sitcum Waterway source evaluations  were conducted on six contaminants
or contaminant groups.   Four  sources of copper, lead,  zinc, and  arsenic
to Sitcum  Waterway have been identified,  all of which  are ongoing:

     •    The North Corner  storm drain  (SI-172)  is  the major source
          of arsenic to the Sitcum Waterway,  contributing 93 percent
          of the  total  quantified loading.  It is  also a significant
          source of copper, lead, and  zinc.
                                   68

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     •    The  elevated metal  concentrations  along the  north shore
          are believed  to be  a  result of  ore  spillage  from  the Port
          of Tacoma  ore docks.  Copper,  lead, and zinc ores  are off-
          loaded at  the facility and spillage is traditionally washed
          into the waterway.

     •    Drain SI-717, which discharges along  the  north shore near
          the head of the waterway, is a source of copper,  lead, and
          zinc.   The sources of metals  to this  drain  have not been
          determined,  but may  be associated with the Port's  ore  handling
          facilities.

     t    Drain SI-176, which discharges on  the  south shore  of the
          waterway,  is  a source of copper, lead, and zinc.   The source
          of metals  to  this drain is unknown.

     No definite  sources could  be identified for aromatic  hydrocarbons
and dibenzofurans.  The area  of highest  concentrations  near  the waterway
mouth may have been  caused by exposure by dredging  of historically contaminated
sediments.

3.5  POTENTIAL REMEDIAL TECHNOLOGIES

     Eleven problem  areas in  five waterways and along  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance
Shoreline have been  recommended for evaluation of potential  remedial action.
Potential sources and corresponding problem contaminants associated with
each source are sunrnarized in Table 10 for  each problem  area.  Classifications
of potential  source  control remedial technologies (i.e., direct waste discharge
controls, surface  water controls) are identified for each potential  source.
Specific source control  technologies and  their applicability to  each problem
area are identified  in detail as  part  of the  Commencement  Bay Remedial
Investigation (Task  6).

     In general,  there are  three  basic  sediment management  technologies:
removal (dredging),  capping,  and in situ  treatment.   In no  case  is sediment
remedial action recommended until the sources of contamination are effectively
controlled.

     Dredging methods are classified as mechanical, hydraulic,  or pneumatic.
As part of the Commencement Bay Remedial  Investigation  the U.S.  Army  Corps
of  Engineers prepared  an  evaluation of  alternative dredging  methods and
equipment.  According to their evaluation, hydraulic  dredging  is the most
efficient method for  removing sediments contaminated  with particle-bound
or soluble contaminants,  and mechanical  dredging is  the most efficient
method for removing  sediments contaminated with volatile  contaminants.

     Capping  and  in  situ treatment may  have  limited applicability within
the Commencement  Bay waterways due  to  the frequent  dredging  activities
required  to  maintain adequate water depths for deep draft  shipping vessels.
In addition, most in situ  treatment/ stabilization methods  are new or emerging
technologies whose  effectiveness may be  unproven.   The National  Contingency
Plan (NCP) criteria  encourage the evaluation of these  innovative  or advanced
technologies.  However, there must be  some degree  of  certainty regarding
the effectiveness  of  these technologies or they  will  likely be  eliminated

                                     69

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by the criteria established for the initial  screening process.  The feasibility
of dredging, capping, and  in  situ technologies will  be evaluated in  the
Commencement Bay Nearshore/Tideflats  Feasibility Study.
                                     70

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                    TABLE  10.    SUMMARY  OF  POTENTIAL  CONTAMINANT  SOURCES,  PROBLEM
                   CONTAMINANTS,  POTENTIAL  REMEDIAL  TECHNOLOGIES,   AND  DATA  NEEDS
                         FOR  THE  TEN  PRIORITY  PROBLEM  AREAS  IN  COMMENCEMENT  BAY
Segment Containing
Problem Area*  and
Potential Sources
Potential Source Control
Remedial Technologies
                                                              Potential Problem Contamlnantsb
                                                                                                     Data Needs
• Ruston-Pt. Defiance
   Shoreline, Segment 2

  • ASARCO
                                Direct waste discharge
                                controls

                                Atmospheric  release controls

                                Surface water controls

                                Contaminated soils management'

                                Surface water treatment

                                Sroundwater  controls'

                                Eroundwater  treatment'
                              Priority 1:   Hg, As. LPAH

                              Priority 2:  HPAH. PCh, Cd. HI. Cu.
                              Zn. Pb, Sb [d1benzofuran]c

                              Priority 3:  dlchlorobenzenes.
                              N-nitrosodiphenylamine, 2-methyl-
                              phenol, 4-methylphenol. phthalate
                              esters, [l-methyl-(2-«ethy1ethyl)-
                              benzene, blphenyl, dlbenzothlophene,
                              methylphenanthrenes, retene, methyl-
                              pyrenes]'
 Additional source Identification
 for  problem chemicals with
 unknown sources

   Priority 1:  LPAH

   Priority 2:  HPAH, PCBs [dlbenzo-
   furan]C

   Priority 3:  dfchlorobenzenes,
   N-n1trosod1phenylam1ne, 2-
   methylphenol, 4-«ethylphenol,
   phthalate esters,  [1-methyl
   (2inethylethyl)benzene, blphenyl,
   dlbenzothlophene,  methylphenan-
   threnes, retene, and nethylpyrenes]'
                                                                                                    Define contaminant transport
                                                                                                    mechanisms and quantify
                                                                                                    relative  loadings fro* ASARCO
                                                                                                    Determine teachability of
                                                                                                    metals  1n slag
                                                                                                    Determine vertical extent
                                                                                                    of contamination
e St.  Paul Waterway

  - Champion International
                                Direct waste discharge
                                controls

                                Surface water controls'

                                Surface water treatment'
                              Priority 1:4-methylphenol

                              Priority 2:[benzyl alcohol, 1-methyl-
                              (2-methylethyl)benzene, 2-nethoxy-
                              phenol]c

                              Priority 3:H1, LPAH, 2-methyl phenol,
                              phenol [blphenyl, diterpenotd
                              hydrocarbons, retene. TVS, TOCJC
Additional characterization
of effluent from Champion
International  for problem
chemicals and  their pre-
cursers

  Priority 1:  4-methylphenol

  Priority 2:  [benzyl  alcohol,
  1 -me thy 1 (2 -methyl ethyl) benzene,
  2-«ethoxyphenol]C

  Priority 3:  Hi, LPAH,
  2-«ethy1phenol, phenol, [blphenyl,
  dlterpenold  hydrocarbons, retene]C
                                                                                                    Determine  spatial and vertical
                                                                                                    extent of  contanlnatlon
                                                                                                    Determine potential recovery
                                                                                                    rate for contaminants in
                                                                                                    problem area
                                                                    71

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 Table   10.     (Continued)
 • City Waterway Segment 1

   -  Storm drains
     CN-237. CS-237, «nd CI-230
  - Hartinac Shipbulldingc
  - American Plating
  Direct taste tflscMrge
  controls

  Surface water controls

  Stora sewer Inspection
  and maintenance

  Stomwater treatment

  Discharge to POTW
  Direct waste discharge
  controls

  Atmospheric release controls

  Surface water controls

  Surface water treatment
  Direct waste discharge
  controls

  Contaminated soils Manage-
  ment

  Groundwater controls?
 Priority 1:  Ng, In, ft [TOCOjc

 Priority 2:  MPAH. Cd, HI. Cu, LPAH.
 2-aKthylphenol. 4-methylphenol,
 phthalate esters [oil t greasejc

 Priority 3:  dicnlorobenzenes,
 N-nltrosodiphenylamine, [aniline,
 benzyl a)cohol]c
 Mdltlonal  source identification
 for problem chemicals  with
 unknown sources

   Priority  2:   HPAH, LPAH. 2-«thyl-
   phenol, 4-«iethylphenol, phthalate
   esters

   Priority  3:   dlchlorobenzenes.
   N-n1trosod1phenylam1ne, [analine,
   benzyl alcoholjc
                                                                                                              Source  Identification within
                                                                                                              drainage  areas
                                                                                                              Determine  potential  for Wheeler-
                                                                                                              Osgood  as  a  source of contaminants
                                                                                                              to City Waterway
                                                                                                              Determine  sedimentation rate
                                                                                                              Determine  vertical extent of
                                                                                                              contamination
                                                                                                              Conduct  storm  and  sanitary sewer
                                                                                                              surveys  to  Identify cross
                                                                                                              connections and unauthorized
                                                                                                              connections
                                                                                                              Investigate potential sources of
                                                                                                              gasoline  and oil observed at the
                                                                                                              Tacoma  Spur site. West Coast
                                                                                                              Grocery,  and 15th Street
 e Hylebos Waterway Segment S

   - Occidental Chemical Corp.
                                    Direct  waste discharge
                                    controls

                                    Surface water controls

                                    Surface water  treatment

                                    Contaminated  soils management

                                    Groundwater controls

                                    Groundwater treatment
                                   Priority 1:  PCBs

                                   Priority 2:  HCBD,  chlorinated
                                   benzenes, chlorinated  ethenes,  Pb
                                   Cpentachlorocyclopentane  1somer]c

                                   Priority 3:  Hj,  HPAH*, Cu«,  In*.
                                   LPAHe, phenol  [benzyl  alcohol.
                                   blphenyljc
                                           Mdttlona!  source Identification
                                           for problem chemicals with
                                           unknown sources

                                             Priority  1:  PCBs

                                             Priority  2:  HCBD, chlorinated benzenes,
                                             chlorinated  ethenes, Pb, [pentachloro-
                                             cyclopentane Isomerjc

                                             Priority  3:  Hg, HPAH«, Cu*, Zn«, LPAH«,
                                             phenol, [benzyl alcohol, b1phenyl]C
                                                                                                              Determine vertical  extent of
                                                                                                              contamination
                                                                                                              Industrlal/coiwierclal  source  Investi-
                                                                                                              gation for PCBs
• SlUimi Waterway

  - Port of Tacoma's
     Terminal  7,  ore
     unloading facilities
  - Storm drains
    SI-172
    SI-176
    SI-717
 Direct  waste  discharge
 controls

 Atmospheric release controls

 Surface water controls

 Surface water treatment


 Improve materials handling
within drainage areas

Surface water controls

Surface water treatment

Storm sewer Inspection
and maintenance

Discharge to POTW
Priority 1:  none

Priority 2:  As*. Cuet jn>  pt,

Priority 3:  N-nitrasod1phenylMlne
[dlbenzofuran,  1 -methyl-(2-methyl-
ethyl{benzene,  dlterpenold
hydrocarbons]^ LPJ»HI  UPAH
Additional  source Identification
for problem contaminants with
unknown sources

  Priority  3:  N-n1trosod1phenyt-
  amlne, [dlbenzofuran, 1-methyl
  (2iMthylethyl(benzene, dlterpenotd
  hydrocarbons]c  Lpj»H. HPAH
                                                                                                             Source identification within
                                                                                                             drainage  areas
                                          Determine vertical extent of
                                          contamination
                                                                        72

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 TABLE  10.    (Continued)
• Hylebos Waterway Segment 1

  - Log sort yard, (unpaved
      that used ASAHCO slag
      is ballast}
 Surface Mter controls

 Surface water treatment

 Contaminated soils Management'

 Sroundwater controls'

 Groundwater treatment'
  Priority  1:  »AH, As, Zn (limited
  evidence  of • gradient for each
  •1th one  or more toxicity/effects
  Indicator)

  Priority  2:  phenol. 9>

  Priority  3:  phthalate esters,
  «thylbenzene. tetrachloroethene,
  [xylenes, l-methyl-(Z-methylethyl)-
  benzene, metnylpyrenes, T¥S]C
 Additional  source  Identification
 for  problem chemicals with
 unknown  sources

   Priority  1:  HPAH

   Priority  Z:  phenol

   Priority  3:  phthalate esters,
   ethylbenzene, tetrachloroethene,
   [xylenes. I-methyl(2-methylethyl)
   benzene, methylpyrenes]c
    Hylebos Creek
  - raiser Ditch
 Surface water controls

 Surface water treatment

 Contaminated soils and
 landftiled materials
 management



 Direct waste discharge

 Surface water controls

 Surface water treatment

 Contaminated soils management
                                                                                                              Source Identification within
                                                                                                              drainage areas
                                                                                                              Determine vertical  extent  of
                                                                                                              contamination
                                                                                                              Conduct Industrial/commercial
                                                                                                              source  Investigations  for  PCBs
                                                                                                              Additional  sediment  sampling
                                                                                                              for PCBs  to determine  temporal
                                                                                                              trends and  gradients
                                                                                                              Investigate ongoing release
                                                                                                              of PAHs  fron Kaiser DUch
 i Hylebos Waterway Segment 2

  - Pennwalt Chemical  Corp.
                                  Direct waste discharge
                                  controls

                                  Surface water controls

                                  Surface water treatment

                                  Contaminated soils management

                                  Sroundwater controls

                                  Groundwater treatment
                                  Priority 1:   PCBs

                                  Priority Z:   HPAH, Hi, As,  tetra-
                                  chloroethene  [Hge  Qjt  int  pt,e
                                  (Intertldal sediments only)]

                                  Priority 3:   HCBO, chlorinated
                                  benzenes, phthalate esters, phenol
                                  [benzyl  alcohol, dibenzothlophene,
                                  •ethylphenanthrenes, methylpyrenesjc
                                          Additional  source  Identification
                                          for  problem chemicals with
                                          unknown  sources

                                            Priority  1:  PCBs

                                            Priority  2:  HPAH, N1, [Hg«. Cue
                                            In*. Pb«]

                                            Priority  3:  HCBD, chlorinated
                                            benzenes,  phthalate esters,
                                            phenol, [benzyl  alcohol, dibenzo-
                                            thlophene, methylphenanthrenes,
                                            methylpyrenesjc
  - Mornlngslde Ditch
                                  Direct waste discharge
                                  controls'

                                  Surface water controls

                                  Surface water treatment

                                  Contaminated soils'
                                                                           Source identification within
                                                                           drainage area
                                                                           Determine vertical  extent  of
                                                                           contamination
                                                                           Addition sediment sampling
                                                                           for PCBs to determine  temporal
                                                                           trends and  gradients
                                                                                                             Conduct industrlal/comnerclal
                                                                                                             source investigation for PCBs
• City Waterway Segment 2
  (Wheeler-Osgood)

  - Storm drain
     CW-2M
Surface water controls

Surface water treatment

Storm sewer inspection
and repair

Groundwater controls'

Groundwater treatment'

Discharge to POTW
Priority 1:  none

Priority Z:  HPAH, Cd. Cu«. Zn,
dichlorobenzenes, LPAh«, Pt>,
N-n1trosodiphenylam1ne. 4-«ethylphenol,
phenol [blphenyl, TVS, TOC, oil 1
grease]c
Additional source Identification
'or problem chemicals  with
unknown sources

  Priority 2:   HPAH, Cd,  Cu«, In,
  dichlorobenzenes, LPAH, Pb,
  N-n1trosod1phenylamine, 4-methyl-
  phenol, phenol, [blphenyl)C
                                                                                                             Determine sedimentation rate
                                                                                                             Determine vertical extent of
                                                                                                             contamination
                                                                                                             Conduct storm and sanitary sewer
                                                                                                             surveys to Identify cross
                                                                                                             connections and unauthorized
                                                                                                             connections
                                                                                                              Investigate groundwater from
                                                                                                              the  Tar Pits as a source of
                                                                                                              methyl phenols to Wheeler-Osgood
                                                                                                             Additional sampling to
                                                                                                             establish contaminant gradients
                                                                                                             within the waterway
                                                                         73

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TABLE  10.    (Continued)
t Middle Waterway

  - Maritime  Industries
     (Foss  Uunch and Tug,
     Marine Industries
     Northwest, Cooks Marine
     Specialties)
Direct taste discharge
controls

Atmospheric release
controls'
              Priority 1:  none

              Priority 2:  Hg, Cu

              Priority 3:  HPAH.  As,  Zn. dlchloro-
              oeflzenes, LPAH,  pentachlorophenol,
              Pb, 4-methylphenol, phenol [dlbenzo-
              thlophene, dlterpenold  hydrocarbons,
              nethylpyrenes]c
 Additional source Identification
 for those cho»fcals  with
 unknown sources

   Priority 2:   Hg. Cu

   Priority 3:   HPAH, As,  Zn, d1-
   chlorobenzenes. LPAH, pentachloro-
   phenol, Pb,  4-methylphenol, phenol,
   [dlbenzothlophene, dlterpenold hydro-
   carbons, «ethylpyrenes]c
                                                                                                             Additional  sediment  sampling
                                                                                                             to define spatial  extent and
                                                                                                             contaminant gradients
                                                                                                             Determine vertical  extent of
                                                                                                             contamination
                                                                                                             Characterize  storm water from
                                                                                                             drains  at  the head of the
                                                                                                             waterway


                                                                                                             Investigate the  release of con-
                                                                                                             taminants  by  the maritime
                                                                                                             Industries along Middle Waterway


                                                                                                             Investigate wood products
                                                                                                             Industries (Champion  International,
                                                                                                             Coast Craft,  Paxport) as potential
                                                                                                             sources of wood  wastes and
                                                                                                             wood treating wastes
• Ruston-Pt.  Defiance
  Shoreline Segment 3

  - ASARCO (slag  1n sedi-
    ment)
Stabilize or
along shore
             Priority 1:  none

             Priority 2:  As, Cd, Cu,  Zn.  Pb,
slag         K-nitrosod1pheny1am1ne, Sb

             Priority 3:  none
Additional  source  Identification
for those chemicals with unknown
sources

  Priority 2:   N-n1trosod1phenyl-
  amlne
                                                                                                            Determine  vertical extent of con-
                                                                                                            tamination
                                                                                                            Analyze  sediments off ASARCO for
                                                                                                            M-d1methylan111ne  (DMA); review
                                                                                                            tentatively  Identified compounds
                                                                                                            in past  samples for  DMA
• CU/ Waterway Segment 3

  - *D* Street  Petroleum
     storage facilities
Improved product handling

Inspection of storage and
distribution system, and
Implementation of appropriate
corrective measures

firoundwater controls

Groundwater treatment
              Priority 1:  done

              Priority 2:  HPAH. LPAH

              Priority 3:  PCBse, jne. phenol
              tblphenyl. d1benzothiophene]c
Additional source Identification
for those chemicals  with
unknown sources

  Priority 2:  HPAH, LPAH

  Priority 3:  PCBs*,  zne, phenol,
  [blphenyl, dlbenzothlophene]'
                                                                                                            Determine  vertical extent of
                                                                                                            contamination
                                                                                                            Identify sources and transport
                                                                                                            mechanisms  for  PAH
 *  Problem areas  encompass  all  stations sampled 1n 1984 only 1n Segments
 HYS1, SIS1.  CIS2. P.SS2.  RSS3. and possibly MDS1 (Stat1on~Mt-12  1n  this
 segment was close to apparent effect thresholds  for teverat chemicals).

 0  Concentrations of these  chemicals  exceeded  an apparent effect threshold
 (by various normalizations) 1n sediment  from at least  one station  1n the
 defined problem area.  Chemicals  are listed In each priority group In descendl/g
 order of their calculated  toxlclty significance factor.  If  available.
 Stations with and without biological data area Included.  Priority 1 chemicals
 showed a concentration gradient with toxldty or biological effects gradients.
 Priority 2  chemicals were  above apparent  effect thresholds at more than
 one station within the problem area, but  either no gradient corresponding
 to that for  toxlcity/effects was  observed, or no biological data were available
 to assess gradients.  Priority 3 chemicals  were above  apparent effect thresholds
 at one station only within the problem  area.
                                             c Toxlclty significant factors were not available for the chemicals listed
                                             In brackets.  These chemicals have not been  prioritized  relative to other
                                             chemicals in the same priority group.

                                             d TOC  concentrations did not  exceed an AET  in the problem area defined
                                             1n Segment C1S1 but the TOC concentration gradient corresponded with observed
                                             changes  In effects  (e.g..  sediment  toxlcity).   This correspondence may
                                             result from the  covarylng distribution of TOC with other  contaminants,
                                             Including lead and zinc.

                                             * Chemical elevated above  an  AET In the  defined problem area only on the
                                             basis of historical data.

                                             f May not be applicable, additional evaluation  1s necessary to confirm.
                                                                        74

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                 4.  RECOMMENDATIONS  OF AREAS AND SOURCES
                      FOR POTENTIAL REMEDIAL ACTIONS
4.1  INTRODUCTION

     The final  prioritization of problem areas for  potential remedial  actions
is presented  in  this  section.  Recommendations of  areas  and sources  for
these remedial  actions  are based on evaluations of:

     •    The environmental  hazard indicated by the  problem area con-
          tamination, toxicity, and biological effects

     •    The spatial extent of each problem area

     •    The confidence that sources  of potential  problem chemicals
          in  each  problem area have been accurately  identified.

     A prioritization  of the  21  problem  areas and  all identified problem
chemicals was made  in  Section 3.3.   Eight problem  areas were given  the
highest  priority for  source evaluation.   Four problem  areas were given
the next highest priority for source evaluation.  The  remaining nine problem
areas  were not included  for priority  source evaluation because of their
relatively low environmental hazard  ranking.  The  spatial extent of each
problem  area was also  defined in Section 3.3, but was  not considered in
the development  of recommendations of problem areas  for  source identifica-
tion.   In  this section, the relative  spatial  extent  of  each problem area
is considered,  along with the magnitude of contamination,  toxicity,  and
biological  effects.  For example, large areas with  a  high degree of environ-
mental  hazard are  ranked higher than are isolated hot  spots posing a similar
hazard.   Source evaluations for each problem area  are  also rated according
to the level  of  confidence that the problem sources  have  been accurately
identified.   Thus, the highest ranking problem area  for potential remedial
action is large, poses  a substantial  environmental  hazard,  and has  well-
characterized sources.   In this ranking method, a small  "hot spot" exhibiting
substantial effects that have been  traced confidently  to a contaminant
source may be ranked  at  the same,  or  even higher, priority than a much
larger  problem area with unknown sources.  To allocate  resources efficiently,
"hot  spots"  with known  sources would be recommended  for potential remedial
action before the  larger area with unknown sources.

     Potential  remedial actions  include  source  control  and/or  sediment
remedial  action  (see Tetra Tech 1984a).   Potential  remedial  technologies
have been discussed  in  Section 3.5.

     A final prioritization of Commencement Bay problem areas is presented
in Table 11.  Scores  for each problem area in three  categories (environmental
significance,  spatial  extent, and  confidence of source identification)
were summed to  estimate the relative priority for potential  remedial action.
Environmental  significance was scored from 1 to 4 according to the magnitude
of observed contamination,  toxicity,  and biological effects.  The  eight

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               TABLE  11.   FINAL RANKING OF PROBLEM AREAS
  Segment
 Containing
Problem Area*
Environmental
Significance
            Confidence
Spatial     of Source        Total
Extent    Identification     Score
  RSS2

  SPS1
  CIS1
  HYS5
  SIS1
  HYS1

  HYS2
     4
     4
     4
     4
     4
  3
  3
  3
  4
  4
4
4
4
3
3
12

11
11
11
11
11

10
CIS2
MOS1
RSS3
CIS3

HYS4
RSSla (RS-13)
BLS2
MIS1
RSSlb (RS-15)
HYS3
BLS1
HYS6
BLS3
BLS4
4
3
1
3

3
3
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
3
2

2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
4
2

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
8
8
8
7
h
6
5
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
a Problem areas did not always encompass an entire segment.   Problem areas
in the segments indicated  are listed  in order of their total  score for
environmental significance, spatial  extent, and  confidence of source  identi-
fication.

  Identification of potential  remedial  technologies was  conducted  for prob-
lem areas with a total  score greater than or equal  to 7.
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highest-priority areas  identified in  Section 3.3 were  given a score of
4 for environmental  significance.  The  four  second-priority sites  (Section
3.3) were given  a  score of 3, and the two third-priority sites  (plus Milwaukee
Waterway)  were given a score of  2.   All  remaining lower-priority problem
areas were given scores of 1.

     The spatial  extent (surface  sediments  only) of each problem area was
estimated  by planimetry.   Scores were  assigned on the  basis of size  of
each problem area  as follows:

     t    >50 acres; score = 4

     •    30-50  acres; score = 3

     •    10-30  acres; score = 2

     t    <10 acres; score = 1.

     The confidence of source  identification  was scored according  to the
following  qualitative criteria:

     t    Ongoing sources  were well-identified by spatial  patterns
          of contamination (and effects), and  chemical characteristics
          of the sources matched chemical characteristics of  the receiving
          water  environment; score=4.  Or, contamination was  clearly
          established as  historical, although sources may  not have
          been well-identified; score=4

     •    Potential  sources were identified, but  their relative contri-
          butions  compared with  historical deposits  were not  clear;
          score=3

     •    Adjacent  sources were  suggested  by  land  use or  drainage
          patterns, but spatial patterns  of contamination were ambiguous;
          score=2

     •    Source unidentified; score=l.

     All problem  areas  with clearly  identified  sources (i.e.,  score=4)
exhibited  major  environmental effects, with  the exception of the problem
area  within Segment RSS3  on  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline, where the
source of metals contamination  is believed  to be ASARCO  slag or ores  in
the  sediments.  No  benthic data directly comparable to those  in other areas
(i.e.,  0.06-m2  grab samples)  were collected  from  this problem area because
of sampling difficulties.  Qualitative  evaluation of replicate 0.1-m2 grab
samples indicated  a  general similarity  to Carr Inlet reference conditions.
The  differences in  numbers of species  and  abundances of the major taxonomic
groups were not large, and probably reflected natural  differences in benthic
community  structure  between the Segment RSS3 site and Carr  Inlet.  Therefore,
major impacts to  benthic  communities did  not appear  to  be  occurring  in
the  potential  problem area.  Based on this qualitative analysis, the score
for environmental  significance was reduced  from 2 to  1  (Table 11).   This
area will  still  be evaluated for potential  remedial action.


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     All of the  problem areas  in  Table 11 with  a  total score  <6 have a
low priority for  evaluation of potential  remedial action.  These ten problem
areas  had  largely unidentified sources and were  not extensive.  Potential
"hot spots"  in  Segments HYS4 (Hylebos  Waterway) and RSS1 (Station  RS-13;
Ruston-Pt.  Defiance Shoreline) are  included in  this  group.  Ship scour
or some unidentified activity could have resulted in the multiple significant
benthic  depressions observed at a single station (HY-37) in the Segment
HYS4 hot spot.   Further characterization  of  potential contaminant  sources
is  required  for the Station  RS-13 hot  spot  within Segment RSS1.  Further
source identification of problem chemicals is recommended  for each of  these
low priority  problem areas  before the  feasibility of  any remedial action
is evaluated.

     Recommendations for the remaining problem  areas with  scores >7 in
Table 11 are presented below.

4.2  RECOMMENDATIONS  FOR POTENTIAL REMEDIAL  ACTION

     Potential  remedial actions include  source control and sediment actions
such as removal,  capping, or in situ treatment.   All problem areas discussed
below  have  ongoing, potentially ongoing, or unknown  sources of problem
chemicals.   Remedial action  with respect  to  the contaminated sediments
is  recommended for  all  areas only after  the sources have been identified
and effectively controlled.

4.2.1  Hylebos  Waterway

Hylebos Problem Area  In Segment HYS1--

     Potential  sources of HPAH, arsenic,  copper, lead, and  zinc were identified
for the problem area  in Segment HYS1 of Hylebos Waterway.  Source  control
measures are recommended to reduce HPAH discharge from Kaiser Ditch.  Source
control evaluation  is  also recommended to  reduce metals discharge (especially
arsenic and  zinc)  from unpaved log sort yards (Wasser Winter, Cascade Timber
yard #2, Dunlap Towing,  Louisiana Pacific),  and from  Hylebos Creek  (B&L
Landfill and Fife  Ditch).

Hylebos Problem Area  In Segment HYS2--

     PCBs were the  highest priority  chemicals found   in the problem area
defined within  Hylebos Segment HYS2.   Exposure  of historical  accumulations
of  PCBs  [and  other  chemicals (e.g.,  hexachlorobutadiene)] by dredging was
identified  as the most probable source of this contamination.  There  was
little  evidence of  an ongoing  source  of  PCBs in this  area.  A PCB source
reconnaissance survey  is recommended prior to evaluation of sediment remedial
action.  Potential source control should  also be evaluated for other problem
chemicals discussed below  that have significant ongoing sources  in  this
problem  area.   The extent of subsurface  PCB contamination  was not well
characterized,  but is probably broad.  This problem should  be considered
when dredging projects are planned in Hylebos Waterway.

     Elevated  HPAH  concentrations  were found  in  subtidal sediments of the
problem area in Segment HYS2 near the  boundary between  Segments HYS1  and
HYS2.   These sediments do not appear to be within the dredged area discussed

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for PCBs.   The  HPAH contamination is likely an extension of the  contamination
found in the  problem area within Segment  HYS1.   As discussed  previously,
source  control evaluation  for HPAH has been  recommended for  the Kaiser
Ditch, the major HPAH source to Hylebos  Waterway.

     Pennwalt  Chemical  Corporation  was  identified  as  an ongoing source
of chlorinated  ethenes,  chlorinated butadienes, arsenic, copper,  lead,
and  zinc  to  intertidal sediments  of the  Segment HYS2 problem  area.  Tetra-
chloroethene  is also elevated in some of  the  subtidal sediments.   Source
control  evaluation is recommended for  these  chemicals in the  main plant
outfall, surface drains,  groundwater  seeps,  and groundwater  in  shallow
and intermediate aquifers.

Hylebos Problem Area In Segment HYS5--

     Source control evaluation for  chlorinated compounds, including  chlorinated
ethenes and chlorinated butadienes, from Occidental Chemical Co.  is  recom-
mended.   Although chlorinated butadienes  (with the exception of hexachloro-
butadiene) did  not exceed apparent  effect  thresholds for sediment toxicity
or benthic community structure,  source control  for these substances is
still recommended for the  Occidental Chemical  Co. main outfall  based on
their  extreme  concentrations  in  this area.  Very  high concentrations of
chlorinated ethenes in this area were  restricted to the immediate vicinity
of the  Occidental  Chemical  Co. docks.  Because  of the localized nature
of this contamination, clear response  gradients  could not be established.
However,  because  of the magnitude of chlorinated  ethene contamination,
these substances warrant a high priority  for  source control.  The  source
of PCB contamination in this area was  not  established.  A PCB reconnaissance
in this area  is recommended.   PCB contamination in this area  should be
considered when dredging is planned.

4.2.2  Sitcum Waterway

     Ore  unloading  operations  at  the  Port of Tacoma docks are a potential
source of metals contamination to the  north shore of the waterway.  Although
the  contribution  of this  source  to overall sediment metals  contamination
cannot be established with available data,  it is recommended  that evaluations
be conducted on  possible  control technologies  for minimizing  release of
ore into the  waterway.

     Three storm drains  (i.e., SI-172, SI-176, SI-717) are also  major  con-
tributors  of  metals to Sitcum Waterway.  Source  identification within  the
drainage  areas of these storm drains is necessary before source controls
can be implemented.

4.2.3  St. Paul Waterway

     The main  outfall  from the Champion International  pulp mill located
at the mouth  of St. Paul Waterway,  is  an ongoing source of alkylated phenols
(or their precursors), methoxyphenols, copper,  organic enrichment, and
chloroform.  Source control  evaluation  for  alkylated phenols  (or  their
precursors)  is recommended  at Champion International  pulp mill.  Source
control for copper and chloroform  is also  recommended because  these contaminants

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were measured at elevated  concentrations in plant effluent or, in the case
of copper, exceeded  applicable  water quality criteria.

4.2.4  Middle Waterway

     Ship repair operations were  identified as potential sources of mercury
and copper in Middle Waterway.   No definite sources of  pentachlorophenol ,
dichlorobenzenes, and PAH  have  been identified.  Evaluation of source control
at the ship  repair operations is recommended.   Source  investigations  for
pentachlorophenol, dichlorobenzenes, and PAH are recommended before evaluating
source controls.

4.2.5  City  Waterway

City Problem Area In Segment CIS1--

     The  south  Tacoma and  Nalley Valley drains (CS-237 and CN-237) at the
head of City Waterway are  the largest ongoing sources of metals (especially
lead)  and organic  material.   The specific sources of metals and organic
matter within these  drainage areas have not  been  identified.  Therefore,
source  investigations are  recommended within these drainage areas.  Source
control alternatives  should be evaluated following identification of specific
sources.  Source investigations  and source control evaluations should also
be conducted for  the 15th  Street drain, which  also contributes metals  and
PAH to  the  waterway.  Source control evaluation is recommended for Martinac
Shipbuilding, which is a probable source of copper and zinc to City Waterway.
The wood products  industries, the Tar Pits site, and the 23rd and A Street
coal gasification site are possible sources of 4-methylphenol to City Waterway.
The contributions of 4-methylphenol from these sources should be investigated.

City Problem Area In Segment CIS2--

     Ongoing sources of the  contaminants of concern in Wheeler-Osgood Waterway
could not be identified.   Source investigations  are therefore recommended
for 4-methyl phenol, 1,2-dichlorobenzene, organic material, lead, and zinc.
Source investigations  should  include evaluation of specific sources  of
these contaminants within  the drainage area served by CW-254.  The potential
for groundwater  transport of 4-methylphenol  from the  Tar Pits site  also
requires further  investigation.

City Problem Area In Segment CIS3--

     Sources of  the  problem  contaminants in City Waterway Segment 3, including
LPAH and HPAH, could  not be identified with existing information.  Therefore,
remedial action  for this problem area is not recommended until contaminant
sources and  transport mechanisms  have been  established.   Further  source
investigation is  recommended for PAH.

4.2.6  Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline

     The  ASARCO  facility was  identified as the source of metals (including
high-priority mercury and  arsenic)  and PAH to  the adjacent problem  area.
Although ASARCO  is  the  major  source  of contaminants to the problem area,
for most of the  contaminants  it  is  difficult  to determine if the  major

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loading  has occurred through any one  route  (i.e., process effluent,  surface
water runoff,  grpundwater).   Because the  facility has closed  recently,
a characterization and source control evaluation of the residual  discharge
of contaminants from site runoff and groundwater is recommended.   A recon-
naissance  survey is recommended to  determine possible sources  of  PCBs to
this problem area.

4.3  GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS

     There  were several PCB hot spots  in  the project area where PCBs  concen-
trations  exceeded apparent effects thresholds.   In addition,  general PCB
contamination  within the waterways  is  sufficient to be the apparent  cause
of elevated PCBs  in fish muscle, fish  liver, and crab muscle  tissue.  PCBs
are  the  chemicals that are  responsible for the highest predicted  risk to
human health  from fish consumption.  The sources  of PCBs are  unknown.
A general  reconnaissance survey of the area for PCB sources is recommended.
Other chemicals for which general reconnaissance  surveys  are  recommended
include  aromatic  hydrocarbons and dibenzofuran.
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           5.  OVERVIEW OF CONTAMINATION AND BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS
                            IN  COMMENCEMENT  BAY


     The Commencement Bay  Nearshore/Tideflats Remedial  Investigation included
a comprehensive assessment of  sediment  contamination and  associated biological
effects.   Results  of  this  assessment  were used to  identify and prioritize
problem areas.   An  overview of  these  conditions  in  Commencement  Bay  is
provided in this  section.

     During  this and  previous studies, several hundred chemicals have been
tentatively identified in Commencement  Bay sediment samples.  Routine analyses
have  been conducted  for  about  150  chemical variables.  Chemicals detected
in over two-thirds  of the  surface  sediments  analyzed  in the Superfund  study
included phenol,  4-methylphenol,  PAH,  1,4-dichlorobenzene, PCBs, dibenzofuran,
and most U.S. EPA priority pollutant  metals.   Most  of  these  chemicals  had
already been  reported in many areas of Commencement Bay.  Chemicals detected
only rarely or not  at all  in the  present study  included  pesticides, most
organonitrogen compounds,  most  chloro- and nitrophenols, halogenated ethers,
2,3,7,8-dibenzodioxin (never  detected), selenium, and  thallium.  High concen-
trations  of  some  of the  pesticides in this group had been found in past
studies, but  the  findings  had not  been confirmed by mass spectroscopy.

     Sediment  contamination  throughout the Commencement Bay  study area
is variable both  in concentration  and  composition.  The highest PAH concen-
trations  were found  near the head  of Hylebos  Waterway.   Benzo(a)pyrene
was found  at  over 1,000 times reference  conditions at one  Hylebos Waterway
station.   In this  study and in others,  Hylebos Waterway sediments contained
a complex  mixture of chlorinated  compounds, many of which were unidentified.
Tri-  and  tetrachlorinated  butadienes  were found at well over 1,000 times
reference conditions  near the mouth  of  the waterway.  Other chemicals measured
at over 1,000 times reference concentrations were 4-methyl phenol and 2-methoxy-
phenol (guaiacol) in sediments  adjacent  to the main outfall of the Champion
International  pulp and  paper mill  in  St. Paul Waterway, and four metals
(antimony, arsenic, copper,  and mercury)  in  sediments adjacent to the main
outfalls  of  the  now closed  ASARCO copper smelter on  the Ruston-Pt. Defiance
Shoreline. With  some exceptions,  concentrations of most chemicals measured
in the  current  investigation of subtidal sediments were comparable to or
higher than those in subtidal and  intertidal sediments  collected in previous
studies.   Chlorinated ethene concentrations in intertidal  sediments from
Hylebos Waterway were higher in other studies  than those  in subtidal sediments
in the  present  study. Metal  concentrations  in  sediments near drains at
the head of Sitcum  Waterway were  also  higher in other studies.

     In the  present study, Blair and  Milwaukee Waterways contained  the
least  contaminated subtidal sediments.  Additional sampling was not conducted
in the  Puyallup River, but historical sediment  concentrations were low.
The most extreme  contamination  in  the  remaining areas was typically located
in small areas  near point  source  discharges.  Pronounced gradients in chemical
concentrations  were observed in several  waterways (e.g., Hylebos, St.  Paul,
and City Waterways)  and along the  Ruston-Pt. Defiance Shoreline.  Concentra-


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tions  of contaminants  in sediments  collected well  outside of Hylebos and
Blair Waterways  were  low,  approaching reference conditions  in most cases.

     For most substances,  the range of concentrations was greater in subsurface
sediments than  in surface sediments.  The depth of penetration  in  the sediments
was  often limited by textural characteristics.  Concentrations approaching
reference area  conditions for all  chemicals  were  reached at the  bottom
of only some cores.  Many chemicals present at elevated  concentration at
depth in cores were still  below apparent effect  thresholds  for toxicity
and  benthic effects.   Consistently  low concentrations  of chemicals were
reached at the bottom of all cores collected in a special  drilling  program
in Blair Waterway.

     Studies of benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages  and laboratory bioassays
of sediments were  used as  site-specific  indicators of biological  effects
and  toxicity in Commencement Bay.   These studies demonstrated that areas
of high toxicity and  effects on benthos were generally isolated near known
pollutant sources.  The most severe effects were observed at single sampling
stations near two  industrial facilities:   Champion International pulp mill
and  the ASARCO smelter.   In  these areas of extreme adverse  effects, very
few animals lived  in  the sediments or survived a 10-day laboratory exposure
to the sediments.   These areas were also characterized by very  high sediment
contamination in which concentrations of several chemicals  were over 1,000
times  higher than reference  concentrations.   In these  two  areas, there
was noticeable improvement  in benthic conditions at the next  closest transect
stations (250-400 ft away),  indicating that the areas of maximum  effects
were of limited  spatial extent.  Biological conditions varied  considerably
from station to  station  in  the waterways.  For example, in  Hylebos Waterway,
areas of high toxicity and  altered benthic communities were  interspersed
among  areas of low  toxicity and benthic effects. Some waterways displayed
well-defined areas of high toxicity  and benthic effects (e.g.,  Hylebos
and  City Waterways) and  others displayed little evidence of such  effects
(e.g., Milwaukee and  Middle Waterways).

     In general,  the waterway  sediments  supported  higher abundances of
benthic macroinvertebrates  than were found in Carr Inlet or  along the  Ruston-
Pt.  Defiance Shoreline.   The waterway  sediments supported  fewer  species
than other areas sampled, indicating possible  generalized  effects from
contamination,  sediment disturbance, or presence of fine-grained sediments.
Typical benthic  assemblages in the waterways were  dominated by polychaete
worms  and small clams.   These organisms are important food items for many
bottom-feed ing fishes.

     Demersal  fish  assemblages in the waterways were dominated  by flatfishes
such as English  sole.  Fish assemblages  in the  waterways  were over twice
as abundant as those in  Carr Inlet.  These fishes may be  attracted  by the
abundant food resources in  the waterways or by the increased habitat complexity
in the harbor environment.  English sole in several waterways had significantly
elevated prevalences  of  one or more  liver lesions.   The  highest  overall
lesion  prevalence was measured in Middle Waterway,  where 40 percent of
English sole sampled  had one or more serious lesions.   The  causes of these
lesions are unknown,  but the lesions are similar to those induced in laboratory
animals exposed  to  toxic chemicals.   The effects  of  these lesions  on the
fish are also unknown.   In  this study,  however, fish with  serious liver

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lesions  did  not exhibit  reduced condition  (as expressed  by weight at a
given length) when compared to fish without  lesions.

     Although many chemicals were highly elevated  in Commencement  Bay sediments,
relatively  few were detected in the  tissues of English  sole and crabs.
The  only metals that were  accumulated  above reference levels were copper
in English sole and lead and mercury in crabs.   PCBs were the most consistently
detected organic  compounds  and were measured  at concentrations about 10
times reference  levels in Hylebos and City Waterways.  In the heavily fished
Pt.  Defiance  area, concentrations of  PCBs  in  English sole were close to
reference levels.

     In summary, the  Commencement  Bay study area presents a mixed picture
relative to  contamination and biological effects.  The bay is not an ecological
disaster area  with overall  high contamination and pervasive biological
effects.  Commencement  Bay  is a complex estuarine environment  in which
the  levels of  contamination  and effects  vary  considerably.   While  there
are definite  indications of stress to local  biological communities (e.g.,
altered benthic  assemblages, accumulation of contaminants in fish  and shellfish,
and liver lesions in flatfish), most of the  area  is characterized by high
abundances of  benthic  organisms and demersal  fishes, and the fish do  not
appear to be  severely  stressed by liver lesions  or accumulations  of toxic
substances.
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             6.   STUDY  DESIGN EVALUATION AND  RECOMMENDATIONS
                           FOR FUTURE STUDIES
     The Commencment Bay Nearshore/Tideflats Remedial  Investigation involved
the  collection of extensive data  and the implementation  of a complex decision-
making  process.   Because of  the unique nature of  the study area and the
complexity  of potential  sources,  contaminants, and biological effects,
many of  the  investigative techniques and decision criteria were developed
specifically for this project.  This section provides a retrospective evaluation
of the  innovative study approach  and  presents recommendations for future
studies  of  sediment contamination in the marine environment.

6.1   SEDIMENT CHEMISTRY

     1.   The addition of multiple  (>50) isotopically labeled recovery
         standards to every  sample increased confidence in the validity
         of  detection  limits for  undetected  target compounds.  By
         forcing a search for  each  recovery  standard, this recovery
         technique also increased the efficiency  and  reporting of
         target  compounds  that otherwise may have been overlooked
         in  the  complex extracts.

     2.   Use of  a defined list of tentatively identified compounds
         to  search for in each sample analyzed greatly improved  the
         value  of these data  in spatial characterizations of contami-
         nation.

     3.   Low detection limits for organic  compounds in the  range
         of  5 to 50 ppb (dry  weight sediment or wet weight tissue)
         were useful  in defining  conditions  in the reference area,
         extent of problem areas, and interrelationships among chemical
         and biological indicators,  and in  estimating human health
         risks.   Because major sample interferences were  removed
         to  attain these  limits, improved  precision was possible
         in  the quantification of compounds  present at high concen-
         tration.

     4.   Historical  problems with potential misidentification  of
         pesticides in sediments was successfully  avoided by  using
         mass spectroscopy instead  of electron capture  detection.
         This advantage outweighed  the  increase in  detection  limits
         by  mass  spectroscopy, but electron capture analyses  are
         still recommended  for tissue  samples (with mass spectral
         confirmation  of any high values) to  obtain low enough detection
         limits for use in  health risk assessments.

     5.   Sampling of  suspended solids in the water column for toxic
         chemicals at  two depths and at two  times  during the  study
         made possible only  a  limited qualitative estimate  of the
         ambient  levels or  apparent transport of  chemicals.   Even

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         with  filtering 100 L of  water, detection limits  for most
         organic compounds  other than PAH were  too high to be useful .
         Water column studies are recommended only for metals, PAH
         (by GC/MS), or selected  chlorinated  compounds amenable to
         sensitive  GC/ECD analysis.  The  organic  analyses should
         be conducted with  a minimum of 0.5 g of material.

     6.   PCB concentrations reported as total PCBs enabled an  adequate
         characterization  of  the  PCB distribution.   This reporting
         format is recommended because PCB mixtures in the environment
         are rarely representative of original  Aroclor components.

     7.   A two-phase coring program  is  recommended to determine the
         extent of contamination in historical  sediments and to  overcome
         penetration  problems  caused by  textural  characteristics
         of the sediments.  The first phase  (lower  cost) should  use
         a coring device  (box, Kasten,  wide-diameter gravity  core)
         that  can recover  intact surface and near-surface sediments;
         the  second phase (higher cost) should incorporate  drilling
         techniques to recover  deeper sediments if  analysis of  the
         bottom of the phase I core shows  elevated contamination.

     8.   A sampling  interval  of up to  1 ft  in sediment cores  was
         adequate when the primary goal was  focused on potential
         required dredging  depths for contaminated sediments.  However,
         the bottom 2 cm of each  core should  be analyzed in future
         studies  of this  type to  reduce uncertainty as to whether
         a significant decline  in concentration  toward the bottom
         of  the  core was masked by compositing  over large  depth
         intervals.

     9.   Sampling intervals of 1-5  cm  thickness  should be used in
         sediment  cores to estimate the  chronology of deposition.
         This chronology can  be critical in determining  whether
         contamination is  historical or ongoing.

     10.  Substantial  quality assurance review and laboratory oversight
         were  required in  a study of this  complexity.   This review
         and  oversight were based on  an integration of analytical
         chemistry techniques with environmental trend analysis.
         Such  an  integration should  be  required  in future studies
         and should  always include a laboratory  site  visit before
         samples are processed.

6.2  BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS

      1.  The collection of  four replicate  0.06-m2 van Veen grab samples
         enabled an adequate assessment of benthic community  structure
         in Commencement  Bay.  Use of a 0.06-m2 grab is recommended
         for future studies because of substantial  cost  savings  (per
         sample) over a standard 0.1-m2 grab.

     2.   Statistical analyses of  the  abundances  of major groups of
         benthic macroinvertebrates (i.e., total  abundance,   Poly-

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     chaeta, Mollusca,  and  Crustacea)  enabled areas of  toxic
     effects  to  be  identified.  Evaluation of community structure
     based  on species-level identification was  useful in assessing
     differences  among areas and in identifying probable causes
     (e.g.,  toxicity vs. organic enrichment)  of modified benthic
     assemblages.

3.   Selection of an  adequate reference area is critical to evaluation
     of effects  on benthic macroinvertebrates because  of the
     overriding influence of sediment  particle size on  these
     assemblages.   If detailed information on the sediment charac-
     teristics  of  the study  area  and candidate reference sites
     is not available, a reconnaissance survey  should be conducted
     to ensure  that adequate  reference sites are available for
     the range of sediment characteristics in the study area.

4.   The current study design enabled detection of statistically
     significant  differences in fish hepatic  lesion prevalences
     at the  waterway level.  Therefore,  the use of demersal fish
     histopathology  as an effects variable  can provide a relatively
     localized assessment of biological effects.

5.   Fish  histopathology is  an  important independent indicator
     of biological   effects  because it does  not correlate  with
     effects  on  benthic macroinvertebrates or sediment toxicity.

6.   Analyses of  contaminants in English sole muscle tissue enabled
     assessment  of spatial differences  in bioaccumulation on
     a waterway basis,  and in some  cases  within a waterway.
     The site-specific co-occurrence of several  compounds in
     sediments and  fish muscle tissue  indicates  that these studies
     provide  a reliable assessment of  bioavailability of sediment
     contaminants.

7.   Use of five  fish tissue samples per area results  in a relatively
     poor  statistical  power  in  detecting spatial differences
     in tissue contaminant levels.  However, for important compounds
     such  as  PCBs,  the current study  design  enabled detection
     of statistically significant elevations in  tissue concentrations
     on a  waterway  basis that were <5  times  the  reference  concen-
     tration.

8.   Larger  English sole  (e.g., >300 mm  total  length) should
     be used  for  bioaccumulation studies to  ensure that sufficient
     muscle  tissue is  available for  full-scan  priority pollutant
     analyses.

9.   Full-scan priority  pollutant analyses  of fish  livers are
     not reconmended  because of small  sample sizes and the consider-
     able  sample  processing  required to  reduce interferences
     from  high lipid content.  Analyses of  fish  livers may be
     useful,  however,  for specific  substances such  as  PCBs or
     selected metals  (e.g., mercury).
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     10.   Volatile organic  compounds were bioaccumulated  by  English
          sole in several areas  of  Commencement Bay.   These  compounds
          (especially tetrachloroethene) should  be analyzed  for  in
          fish tissues if there  is  evidence of high sediment or water
          contamination.

     11.   The  oyster larvae  bioassay is not recommended  for  future
          studies of sediment contamination because of response  similarity
          with  the amphipod  bioassay, confounding problems with high
          mortalities, and  effects  of low dissolved oxygen.   To a
          lesser  degree, the amphipod bioassay may also  be  subject
          to interpretive difficulties  because of  oxygen  depletion
          during exposure to highly organically enriched  sediments.

     12.   Amphipod bioassay mortalities may result from particle size
          effects where  the sediments  are  >80 percent  fine-grained
          materials (i.e.,  silt plus clay).  In those cases, sediment
          chemistry data should be carefully reviewed,  and the influence
          of  particle size  should be evaluated before concluding that
          observed mortalities are  caused by toxic contamination.

     13.   Conducting sediment  bioassays and benthic  infaunal analyses
          at  each  sediment  chemistry station would have  enabled a
          much better determination  of  quantitative  relationships
          [toxicity and benthic  apparent effect thresholds (AET)].

     14.   Four kinds  of hepatic  lesions  (neoplasms,  preneoplasms,
          megalocytic hepatosis,  and nuclear pleomorphism)  should
          be used in assessing histopathology in English  sole.

     15.   For  liver histopathology  studies, 60 fish per area  is the
          minimum number required to  obtain  reasonable statistical
          discrimination  (i.e.,  to  detect differences in lesion prevalence
          of 10-15 percent)  among areas.

     16.   English  sole used  for  liver histopathology  studies  should
          be >225 mm total length  and  >3 years of age.   All  samples
          should  also be age-corrected prior to statistical  evaluation
          of spatial or temporal differences in lesion prevalence.

6.3  DECISION-MAKING APPROACH

     1.    The  defined decision-making approach,  incorporating five
          independent measures of  contamination, toxicity,  and  biological
          effects (i.e.,  sediment chemistry, sediment  bioassays, benthic
          macroinvertebrates, fish  bioaccumulation, and fish liver
          histopathology), enabled  an objective and  defensible identifi-
          cation and prioritization of  problem areas  associated with
          toxic  chemical contamination.  For this  purpose,  the  latter
          two measures were  used only as average values at the waterway
          level.  The first  three measures were also used as site-specific
          indicators to define the  spatial  extent of  problems  areas.
          The  use  of  this  assessment  approach ("pentad approach")
          is recommended  in  other studies of sediment  contamination.


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     2.    Using toxicity  and  benthic AET,  the  extent of problem areas
          could be  defined and  potential problem  chemicals at  each
          site  could be identified.   Although AET are first approximations
          and not proof of cause-effect relationships, the AET provide
          empirical evidence  that helps define and narrow the "gray
          zone" between a clear no-effects level  and an apparent effect
          level for different chemicals.   Identifying chemicals above
          AET values allowed source  identification  efforts to  focus
          on those  problem chemicals.

6.4  SOURCE IDENTIFICATION

     1.    Normalization  of  chemical  concentrations to organic carbon
          or percent  fine-grained material was  sometimes useful  in
          giving  additional  source  information not conveyed by dry-
          weight concentrations  in  sediments.   At  the  most severely
          contaminated sites, however, gradients  in dry-weight concentra-
          tions  were sufficient to  indicate potential sources.   Normaliza-
          tion  of chemical  concentrations  enabled a better definition
          of groups of chemicals  with  similar environmental distribu-
          tions  and  potentially  similar sources.   Because organic
          carbon and grain size  probably affect  the  bioavailability
          of  chemicals,  the  continued  evaluation of normalized data
          in developing quantitative  relationships is also recommended.

     2.    Contaminant loading data were limited for most  potential
          sources, and for many others, no  loading data  existed.
          This  data gap impaired  source evaluation and allowed prioriti-
          zation of  potential sources on  a relative  basis only.   Collection
          of  additional  source data is recommended  in all problem
          areas.  These data should  cover at least  critical problem
          chemicals, with detection  limits  that  reflect representative
          flow  conditions and  suspended solid loadings from each source
          (i.e., consider the detection limits of the resulting loading
          for each chemical).   Additional measurements  of  flow  rates
          are  needed to  establish reliable estimates of the relative
          magnitude of sources.

          Estimates of historical  contaminant  loadings are even more
          uncertain than those for  ongoing sources.  Contaminant loadings
          in a  problem area may have  changed over time because different
          industries occupied  the site or because changes in industrial
          activities altered the  contaminant loadings in the discharges.
          Therefore, additional  review of historical  industrial  and
          land  use  practices are recommended, with  a focus on  the
          problem chemicals and products that contain these chemicals.

     3.    In several of the problem  areas it was difficult, or impossible,
          to determine whether the  contamination observed in the sediments
          was  from historical  or  ongoing  sources.   Data gaps  that
          prevented this  determination included  inadequate  or missing
          source loading  data  for the  problem chemicals,  and inadequate
          sedimentation  rate estimates  for the  individual  waterways.

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     Additionally, disturbance from  dredging activities  within
     the  problem areas complicated the assessment  of relative
     depositional  periods of the  problem  chemicals.  This  was
     the  case  for PCBs in  Hylebos Waterway  Segment 2.  Source
     investigations  have revealed  little about whether PCBs  are
     from historical or ongoing  sources.

4.   Sediment  accumulation rates in major problem areas in waterways
     such as City  and  Hylebos  obviously differ substantially
     from one  another, but are needed to address remedial alterna-
     tives.  Representative rates are unknown.   While conditions
     in these waterways present problems in applying  dating  tech-
     niques, dating of selected cores  (e.g., by the Pb-210 technique)
     is recommended  to determine  if  gross estimates of sediment
     accumulation  rates  (mg•kg-i-yr'l) may be possible in  these
     areas.
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                              7.   REFERENCES


Becker, D.S.   1984.   Resource partioning by small-mouthed  flatfishes  (Pleuro-
nectidae)  in Puget  Sound, Washington.  Ph.D.  Thesis.   University of Washington
School  of  Fisheries,  Seattle, WA.  138 pp.

Brown  and  Caldwell,  and E.V.S. Consultants.   1983.   Site safety plan, tasks
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Brown and  Caldwell,  Seattle, WA  32 pp.
BRCA0050

Brown and  Caldwell,  and  E.V.S. Consultants.  1984.   Quality  assurance project
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Fowler, S.W.   1982.  Biological  transfer  and transport  processes.   In:
Pollutant  Transfer  and  Transport  in the Sea,  Volume II.  G. Kullenberg
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Gahler, A.R., J.M.  Cunmins, J.N. Blazevich, R.H.  Rieck,  R.L.  Arp, C.E. Gangmark,
S.V.W.  Pope, and  S.  Filip.  1982.  Chemical contaminants in edible, non-salmonid
fish and crabs  from  Commencement Bay, Washington.  EPA-910/9-82-093.   U.S.
Environmental  Protection Agency, Region 10, Seattle,  WA.   118 pp.

Malins, D.C.,  B.B.  McCain,  D.W. Brown, A.K.  Sparks,  and H.O. Hodgins.
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Malins, D.C.,  B.B.  McCain, D.W. Brown, A.K.  Sparks, H.O. Hodgins,  and S.L.
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MALI003F

Malins, D.C.,  B.B.  McCain, D.W. Brown, S.L.  Chan,  M.S. Myers,  J.T.  Landahl,
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fish in Puget Sound,  Washington.  Environ. Sci. Techno!.  18:705-713.

Orlob,  G.T.,  D.R.  Peterson, and K.R. Jones.   1950.  An investigation of
pollution  in  Commencement  Bay and  the Puyallup River System.   State of
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plus appendices.

Pierce, D.,  D.  Noviello,  and S. Rogers.  1981.   Commencement Bay seafood
consumption  study-preliminary report.  Tacoma-Pierce  County Health Department,
Tacoma, WA.
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Tetra Tech.  1983.   Site safety  plan  guidelines for Commencement Bay Nearshore/
Tideflats Remedial  Investigation.   Tetra  Tech,  Inc.,  Bellevue, WA.

Tetra  Tech.  1984a.   A decision  making approach for the Commencement Bay
Nearshore/TidefTat  Superfund  project.  Prepared  for  the  Washington  State
Department of Ecology.   Tetra Tech, Inc.,  Bellevue, WA.  64 pp.

Tetra Tech  1984b.   Sampling  and analysis  plan  report  prepared and modified
by Brown and Caldwell  and E.V.S. Consultants  for the Commencement  Bay Superfund
Project, Washington Department of Ecology.  43  pp.

U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency.   1984.  Health assessment document
for tetrachloroethylene.  External  review draft  report.   U.S. EPA  Office
of Health and Environmental Assessment, Washington, D.C.
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