United States
                              Environmental Protection
                              Agency
               EPA/600/N-95/005
               September 1995
SEPA
ECHNOLOGY
RANSFER
from
Office of Research and Development
                                       New Technology Transfer Publications
                                           [use form in back to order]
                                     Process Design Manual for Land
                                     Application of Sewage Sludge and
                                     Domestic Septage
                                     (EPA/625/R-95/001)
                                       Almost 33 percent of the 5.4 million dry
                                     metric tons of sewage sludge generated
                                     annually in the United States is land
                                     applied. Of the sewage sludge that is land
                                     applied, approximately 67 percent is land
                                     applied on agricultural lands, 3 percent on
                                     forest lands, approximately 9 percent on
                                     reclamation sites, 9 percent on public
                                     contact sites, and 12 percent is sold or
                                     given away. In addition, almost 8.6 billion
                                     gallons of domestic septage is generated
                                     annually. In 1993, the U.S. Environmental
                                     Protection Agency promulgated 40 CFR
                                     Part 503 to regulate the use and disposal
                                     of sewage sludge. The information in this
                                     manual is intended for use by municipal
                                     wastewater treatment and sludge manage-
                                     ment authorities, project planners and
                                     designers, regional, state, and local
                                     governments concerned with permitting
                                     and enforcement of federal sludge
                                     management regulations, and consultants
                                     in relevant disciplines such as engineering,
                                     soil science, and agronomy. The manual is
                                     intended to provide general guidance and
                                     basic information on the planning, design,
                                     and operation of sewage sludge  land
                                     application projects for one or more of the
                                     following design practices:
                                       • Agricultural land application (crop
                                         production, improvement of pasture
                                         and rangeland)
                                       • Forest land application (increased
                                         tree growth) Land application at
                                         reclamation sites (mine spoils,
                                         construction sites, gravel pits)
                                       •  Land application at public contact
                                         sites (such as parks and golf
                                         courses, lawns, and home gardens.
                                      The manual gives state-of-the art
                                    design information for the land application
                                    of sewage sludge.
                   Process Design Manual: Surface
                   Disposal of Sewage Sludge and
                   Domestic Septage
                   (EPA/625/R-95/002)
                     Sewage sludge and domestic septage
                   may be applied to the land as a soil
                   conditioner and partial fertilizer, inciner-
                   ated, or placed on land (surface disposal).
                   Placement refers to the act of putting
                   sewage sludge on an active sewage
                   sludge unit (land on which only sewage
                   sludge is placed for final disposal) at high
                   rates for final disposal rather than using
                   the organic content in the sewage sludge
                   to condition the soil or using the nutrients
                   in the sewage sludge to fertilize crops.
                   This manual provides practical guidance
                   on the surface disposal approach to
                   managing sewage sludge and domestic
                   septage. It
                     • Describes the various types of active
                       sewage sludge units.
                     • Provides guidance in selecting the
                       most appropriate type of active
                       sewage sludge unit for a particular
                       situation.
                     • Details the engineering aspects of
                       designing and operating a surface
                       disposal site.
                     • Describes the applicable federal
                       regulations.
                     The manual is intended for owners and
                   operators  of surface disposal sites,
                   municipal  officials involved in sludge
                   management, planners, design engineers,
                   and regional, state, and local governments
                   concerned with permitting and enforce-
                   ment of federal sludge management
                   regulations.
                  National Conference on
                  Environmental Problem Solving
                  with Geographic Information
                  Systems (EPA/625/R-95/004)
                    This publication presents the technical
                  papers presented at the National Confer-
                  ence on Environmental Problem Solving
                  with Geographic Information Systems,
                                                                                      Printed on Recycled Paper

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 which was held in Cincinnati, Ohio, on
 September 21-23, 1994. The conference
 was a forum for over 450 environmental
 professionals to exchange information and
 approaches on how to use geographic
 information systems (GIS) to define,
 assess, and solve various types of
 environmental problems.
   The papers presented in this publication
 have been organized by general topic area
 as follows:
   • GIS Concepts
   • Groundwater Applications
   • Watershed Applications
   • Wetlands Applications
   • Water Quality Applications
   • Environmental Management Applica-
     tions
   • Other Applications of GIS
   The purpose of this document is to
 share the information presented at the
 conference with individuals that were
 unable to attend. This document will be
 useful to individuals who are currently
 applying GIS to environmental situations or
 considering GIS for application in environ-
 mental problem solving. These individuals
 will include environmental regulatory
 personnel at the federal, state and local
 level; university professors, researchers
 and students; private sector personnel,
 including industry representatives and
 environmental consultants; and other
 interested persons. By sharing this
 information with a broader audience,  it is
 hoped that the application of GIS to
 environmental problem solving will be
 conducted with a greater awareness of the
 power and limitations of this very useful
 tool.
Environmental Planning for Small
Communities: A Guide for Local
Decision-Makers
(EPA/625/R-94/009)
   EPA's Office of Research and Develop-
ment in concert with the Office of Regional
Operations and State/Local Relations
announce the availability of a new publica-
tion for small communities.
   Environmental Planning for Small
Communities - A Guide for Local Decision-
Makers presents a process for creating
and implementing a community environ-
mental plan. With a comprehensive
environmental plan, local decision-makers
can create an integrated approach to
protecting the environment and meeting
their community's needs. Planning ahead
to solve environmental problems can
especially help small communities that do
not have the resources to meet all of the
regulatory requirements at once. This
approach will help the community prioritize
solutions to environmental problems and
develop a strategy for regulatory compli-
ance.
    • Chapter 1 introduces the goals of
     creating a plan and putting it into
     action.
    • Chapter 2 describes how to build a
     planning team that can lead your
     community in creating its environ-
     mental plan.
    • Chapter 3 explains the importance of
     developing a shared vision, or
     framework, for your community's
     future.
    • Chapter 4 describes how to define
     your community's needs by deter-
     mining the greatest problems facing
     your community's public health,
     environment, and quality of life; by
     determining which environmental
     regulations apply to your community;
     and by evaluating the effectiveness
     of your environmental facilities.
    • Chapter 5 explains how to figure out
     which technologies and strategies
     can work in your community.
    • Chapter 6 discusses how to weigh
     your community's needs and
     possible ways of meeting those
     needs to set priorities for action.
    • Chapter 7 is about implementation:
     putting the plan  into action, evaluat-
     ing how well the plan works, and
     revising the plan as you need to.
   This guide provides general information
about environmental issues and offers
suggestions for dealing with many of these
issues. The reader will still have questions
about what their community can and
should do. Appendices are provided that
include information on regulations,
assessing risks, and where to turn for help.
   With minimal exposure in the form  of
large conference distribution,  about 3,000
copies have been distributed in seven
months. This demand is significant in  that
it is by word-of-mouth only. The guide is
being used as the primary resource
document for a Region VIII pilot project in
South Dakota for three small communities.
These communities with the assistance of
the regional Rural Community Assistance
Project (RCAP)  personnel are identifying
and prioritizing their local environmental
issues. Similar pilot projects are being
conducted in Region X in the states of
Idaho and Oregon.
   The Decision-Makers Guide is also the
cornerstone of several community-based
environmental projects being proposed
under the Environmental Technology
Initiative and other Office of Research and
Development initiatives.
I Software |

Municipal Solid Waste Options
Software (SWOP) - REVISION
   SWOP is a PC-based user-friendly
planning tool  developed to help the small
community solid waste planner evaluate
and select the major resource recovery
options for diverting municipal solid wastes
from landfills. The program provides
technical details for solid waste manage-
ment options  and an estimation of the
resultant effects and costs involved once a
course of action is selected. This software
enables analysis for an almost infinite
variety of solid waste management options
to select the optimum combination. SWOP
is a useful starting point in understanding
the solid waste  decision-making process
and optimizing integrated solid waste
management activities.
   SWOP was the focus  of a CERI
workshop series in 1992  and has been
available as a downloadable file on the
ORD Electronic Bulletin Board System.
During 1995,  some aspects of SWOP were
enhanced to address comments received
from users, including National Association
of Counties, the U.S. Army Center for
Public Works, small community service
providers, and from EPA solid waste
experts. The software and user documen-
tation was extensively reviewed and
modified.
   The major  areas of enhancement
include the following:
    • Addition of multiple neighborhoods
     (or districts) as part of communities
     and multiple communities as part of
     waste management districts.
    • Review  and expansion of the existing
     cost algorithms
    • Full documentation  of the modified
     program. Throughout the program a
     number  of technical and economic
     assumptions are made for which
     default values are used in the
     program to calculate both sizes  and
     costs. These default values are
     clearly defined along with full
     documentation of the software's logic
     approach.
   Getting your free update of SWOP  is
easy. You can send a blank, high density
3.5" floppy diskette to

          USEPA (CERI)
          26  W. Martin Luther King Drive
          Cincinnati, OH 45268
          Artn:  SWOP

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                                        National Rural Water Association
                                         Wellhead Protection Program
   The National Rural Water Association's
(NRWA's) Wellhead Protection Program
was implemented March 15, 1991, through
12 NRWA Member State Rural Water
Associations covering 14 states. It is a
cooperative effort between NRWA and the
Environmental Protection Agency. The
purpose of the program is to provide
training and on-site assistance with small
municipal water systems and rural
communities in the design and implemen-
tation of ground water protection plans.
There are currently 1,594 water systems
actively participating in the program in 31
states representing a population of
2,840,988.
   Formal training has been provided
through a series of 70 technology transfer
training sessions in 27 states. A center-
piece session is directed primarily at state
and federal personnel, decision makers,
and other association representatives to
acquaint them with NRWA's program and
begin a dialogue as to the future direction
of the program in the state. Areawide
sessions  are presented in two other
locations  around the state. The target
audience for these training sessions are
water system personnel, other community
officials, decision makers and consultants
who will be directly involved in the devel-
opment and implementation of wellhead
protection plans.
   The following is a tentative schedule of
the upcoming technology transfer (one-
day) sessions. For further information
please call the respective state rural water
association or contact Dr. Jim Smith in
USEPA's National Risk Management
Research Laboratory at 513-569-7355.
Louisiana
   Nov. 27, 28, & 30; (318) 738-2896
Minnesota
   Oct. 24, 25, & 27; (218) 865-5197

Mississippi
   Oct. 18, 19, & 20; (601) 544-2735
Ohio
   Oct. 18, 19, 24, & 25; (614) 871-2725
                   STATUS OF NRWA GROUND WATER PROGRAMS
                   |     [ PROGRAM BEGAN 1991


                         PROGRAM BEGAN 1994


                   HH PROGRAM BEGAN IN 1995

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      Mine Drainage Workshop
         December 4-6,1995
           Cincinnati, Ohio
   This workshop is being sponsored by
Terrene Institute, USDA-NRCS, U.S. EPA
and many other government and non-
government organizations to address the
water quality problems and the economic
and social effects of mine drainage,
including acid mine drainage. The goal of
the workshop is to help participants
understand the resources, approaches and
programs that are available for building
partnerships to address the many prob-
lems related to mine drainage.
   This workshop is designed to build on
the successes of the 1994 Acid Mine
Drainage Workshop and will address a
wide variety of topics, including the
following:
     historical perspectives;
     partnership efforts;
     industry successes;
     legislative  updates;
     education and outreach;
     technology transfer;
     funding alternatives;
     watershed associations; and
     measuring success.
   Participants in this workshop will include
federal, state, and local government
agency personnel; representatives of
industry, coal mining coalitions, and
academia; members of environmental,
watershed and citizens groups; and other
interested persons.
   This workshop will be held at the Regal
Cincinnati Hotel, which is located at 150
West Fifth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. To
receive additional information on register-
ing for the workshop call Lisa Grayson,
Terrene Institute, at 215-245-2219 (Fax -
215-245-2253).
   EPA has established a database of
 GRtTS/STATusers. The database wilt
 be used to notify GR1TS/STAT users of
 updates to the software and potential
 problems and solutions encountered in
 using the software. If you have not
 already registered, send your name,
 organization, address, phone number,
 and fax number to the following
 address:

         MaryBitney
         ARTD/RPGS
         USEPA Region 7
         726 Minnesota Avenue
         Kansas City, KS 66101

   EPA is pleased to offer you software
 we feel will enable you to analyze
 technical data efficiently. Report
problems encountered using the
 software  to the Technical Support Line
 at 913-351-7074, We are currently
 improving the software and anticipate
 being able to offer Version 5.0 in the
 spring of 1996,

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                     ORD Reorganization
    Office of Resources
     Management &
     Administration
       Carl Gerber*
    AA
DAA/Science
 DAA/Mgmt.
   Staff
Office of Research &
     Science
    Integration
   Peter Preuss
                           Office of Science
                               Policy
                            Dorothy Patton
    I  I Headquarters
       National Lab/Center
     • Joint Representation
     * Acting
 U.S. EPA's Internet Access: HTTP://WWW.EPA.GOV

  The EPA World Wide Web Server (WWW) is run as a prototype system to
provide public access to EPA information. If you have any questions or
problems with the WWW server, please feel free to use our on-line feedback
form or send e-mail to internet-Support@unixmail.rtpnc.epa.gov. Information
is available on the following subjects:
   •  Press releases, calendars, announcements, speeches
   •  EPA offices and regions
   •  Consumer information
   •  EPA initiatives,  policy, and strategy documents
   •  Rules, regulations, and legislation
   •  EPA standards
   •  Science, research, and technology
   •  Information about  grants, contracts (RFPs), and job vacancies
   •  Newsletters and journals
   •  Software and databases
  The following programs have links to this EPA home page:
   •  Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP)
   •  Gulf of Mexico Program
   •  National Estuaries Program
   •  Great Lakes Information Network
   •  Government Information Servers
  Coming soon to the this home page:
   •  EPA's Office of  Research and Development

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                              TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER MATERIAL
MANUALS
  Phosphorus Removal (Sept. 1987)	625/1-87/001
  Land Treatment of Municipal Wastewater (Oct. 1981)	625/1-81/013
  Supplement for Land Treatment of Municipal Wastewater (Oct. 1984)	625/1-81/013a
  Dewatering Municipal Wastewater Sludges (Sept. 1987)	625/1-87/014
  Land Application of Municipal Sludge (Oct. 1983)	625/1-83/016
  Odor and Corrosion Control in Sanitary Sewerage Systems and Treatment Plants (Oct. 1985)	625/1-85/018
  Municipal Wastewater Disinfection (Oct. 1986)	625/1-86/021
  Constructed Wetlands and Aquatic Plant Systems for Municipal Wastewater Treatment (Oct. 1988)	625/1-88/022
  Fine Pore Aeration  Systems (Oct. 1989)	625/1-89/023
  Alternative Collection  Systems for Small Communities (Oct. 1991)	625/1-91/024
  Guidelines for Water Reuse (Sept. 1992) 	625/R-92/004
  Wastewater Treatment/Disposal for Small Communities (Sept. 1992)	625/R-92/005
  Control of CSO Discharges (Sept. 1993)	625/R-93/007
  Nitrogen Control (Sept. 1993)	625/R-93/010
  Alternative Methods for Delivery and Recover (Oct. 1994)	625/R-94/003
  Recycling and Reuse of Materials Found on Superfund Sites (Oct. 1994)	625/R-94/004
  Ground Water and  Leachate Treatment Systems (Jan.  1995)	625/R-94/005
+ Process Design Manual for Land Application of Sewage Sludge and Domestic Septage	625/R-95/001
+ Process Design Manual: Surface Disposal of Sewage Sludge and Domestic Septage	625/R-95/002
TECHNICAL CAPSULE  REPORT
  Radon-Resistant Construction Techniques for New Residential Construction: Technical Guidance	625/2-91/032

SEMINAR PUBLICATIONS
  Permitting Hazardous Waste Incinerators	625/4-87/017
  Meeting Hazardous Waste Requirements for Metal Finishers	625/4-87/018
  Transport and Fate of Contaminants in the Subsurface	625/4-89/019
  Corrective Actions - Technologies and Applications	625/4-89/020
  Solvent Waste Reduction Alternatives	625/4-89/021
  Requirements for Hazardous Waste Landfill Design, Construction and Closure	625/4-89/022
  Technologies for Upgrading Existing or Designing New Drinking Water Treatment Facilities	625/4-89/023
  Risk Assessment, Management and Communication of Drinking Water Contamination	625/4-89/024
  Design and Construction of RCRA/CERCLA Final Covers	625/4-91/025
  Site Characterization for Subsurface Remediation	625/4-91/026
  Nonpoint Source Watershed Workshop	625/4-91/027
  Medical and Institutional Waste Incineration: Regulations, Management, Technology, Emissions, and Operation ... 625/4-91/030
  Control of Biofilm Growth  in Drinking Water Distribution Systems	625/R-92/001
  Organic Air Emissions from Waste Management Facilities	625/R-92/003
  The National Rural  Clean Water Program Symposium	625/R-92/006
  RCRA Corrective Action Stabilization Technologies	625/R-92/014
  Control of Lead and Copper in Drinking Water	625/R-93/001
  Wellhead Protection: A Guide  for Small Communities	625/R-93/002
  Operational  Parameters for Hazardous Waste Combustion  Devices	625/R-93/008
  Design, Operation,  and Closure of Municipal Solid Waste Landfills	625/R-94/008
  National Conference on Urban Runoff Management	625/R-95/003
+ National Conference on Environmental Problem Solving with Geographic Information Systems	625/R-95/004
BROCHURES
  Environmental Pollution Control Alternatives: Drinking Water Treatment for Small Communities	625/5-90/025
  Regional Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (R-EMAP)	625/R-93/012

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                       TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER MATERIAL (continued)
 HANDBOOKS
   Septage Treatment and Disposal (Oct. 1984)	          625/6-84/009
   Control Technologies for Hazardous Air Pollutants (July 1991)	           625/6-91/014
   Ground Water-Volume I (Sept. 1990)	625/6-90/016a
   Ground Water-Volume II: Methodology (July 1991)	625/6-90/016b
   Retrofitting POTWs for Phosphorus Removal in the Chesapeake Bay Drainage Area (Sept. 1987)	625/6-87/017
   Guide to Technical Resources for the Design of Land Disposal Facilities (Dec. 1988)	625/6-88/018
   Guidance on Setting Permit Conditions and Reporting Trial Burn Results (Jan. 1989)	     625/6-89/019
   Retrofitting POTWs (July 1989)	ZZZ 625/6-89/020
   Hazardous Waste Incineration Measurement Guidance (June 1989)	   625/6-89/021
   Stabilization/Solidification of CERCLA and RCRA Wastes (July 1989)	     625/6-89/022
   Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QA/QC) Procedures for Hazardous Waste Incineration (Jan. 1990)	625/6-89/023
   Operation and Maintenance of Hospital Waste Incinerators (Jan. 1990)	625/6-89/024
   Assessing the Geochemical Fate of Deep-Well Injected Hazardous Waste (June 1990)
    Reference Guide	625/6-89/025a
    Summaries of Recent Research	              625/6-89/025b
   Stabilization Technologies for RCRA Corrective Actions (Aug. 1991)	        625/6-91/026
   Optimizing Water Treatment Plant Performance Using the Composite Correction Program Approach (Feb. 1991).. 625/6-91/027
   Remediation of Contaminated Sediments  (Apr. 1991)	          625/6-91/028
   Sub-Slab Depressurization for Low-Permeability Fill Material	    625/6-91/029
   Sewer System Infrastructure Analysis and Rehabilitation (Oct. 1991)	         625/6-91/030
   Materials Recovery Facilities for Municipal Solid Waste (Sept. 1991)	            625/6-91/031
   Vitrification Technologies for Treatment of Hazardous and Radioactive Waste (May 1992)	625/R-92/002
   Control of Air Emissions from Superfund Sites	               625/R-92/012
   Subsurface Field Screening, Characterization and Monitoring Techniques: A Desk Reference Guide (Sept. 1993)
    Volume I:  Solids  and Ground Water - Appendices A and  B	     625/R-93/003a
    Volume II: The Vadose Zone, Field Screening and Analytical Methods - Appendices C and D	625/R-93/003b
   Urban Runoff Pollution Prevention and Control Planning (Sept. 1993)	         625/R-93/004
   Use of Airborne, Surface and Borehole Geophysical Techniques at Contaminated Sites:
    A Reference Guide (Sept. 1993) 	.'	625/R-92/007
  Control Techniques for Fugitive VOC Emissions from Chemical Process Facilities (March 1994)	625/R-93/005
  Approaches for the Remediation of Federal Facility Sites Contaminated with Explosive or
    Radioactive Waste (Sept. 1993)	625/R-93/013
  Ground Water and Wellhead Protection (May  1994) 	         625/R-94/001
  Guide To Septage Treatment And Disposal (Oct. 1994)	       625/R-94/002

GUIDES TO POLLUTION PREVENTION
  The Pesticide Formulating Industry (Feb. 1990)	         625/7-90/004
  The Paint Manufacturing Industry (June 1990)	          625/7-90/005
  The Fabricated Metal Industry (July 1990)	"""'"	625/7-90/006
  The Printed Circuit Board Manufacturing Industry (June 1990)	            625/7-90/007
  The Commercial Printing Industry (Aug. 1990)	_""'"	625/7-90/008
  Selected Hospital Waste Streams (June 1990)	          625/7-90/009
  Research And Educational Institutions (June 1990) 	                                                  coc/7 n™-,n
                                            '   	b^o//-90/010
  Approaches For Remediation Of Uncontrolled Wood Preserving Sites (Nov. 1990)	     625/7-90/011
  The Photoprocessing Industry  (Oct. 1991)	"^'""	625/7-91/012
  The Automotive Repair Industry (Oct. 1991)	           	625/7-91/013

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                     TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER MATERIAL (continued)
  The Fiberglass-Reinforced And Composite Plastics Industry (Oct. 1991)	625/7-91/014
  The Marine Maintenance And Repair Industry (Oct. 1991)	625/7-91/015
  The Automotive Refinishing Industry (Oct. 1991)	625/7-91/016
  The Pharmaceutical Industry (Oct. 1991)	625/7-91/017
  The Mechanical Equipment Repair Industry (Sept. 1992)	625/R-92/008
  Metal Casting And Heat Treating Industry (Sept. 1992)	625/R-92/009
  Municipal Pretreatment Programs (Sept. 1993)	625/R-93/006
  Non-Agricultural Pesticide Users (Sept. 1993)	625/R-93/009
  Organic Coating Removal (Feb. 1994)	625/R-93/015
  Alternatives To Chlorinated Solvents For Cleaning and Degreasing (Feb. 1994)	625/R-93/016
  Cleaning and Degreasing Process Changes (Feb. 1994)	625/R-93/017
  Organic Coating Replacements (Oct. 1994)	625/R-94/006
  Alternative Metal Finishes (Oct. 1994)	625/R-94/007

SUMMARY REPORTS
  In-Vessel Composting of Municipal Wastewater Sludge	625/8-89/016
  Optimizing Water Treatment Plant Performance with the Composite Correction Program	625/8-90/017
  Small Community Water and Wastewater Treatment	625/R-92/010
* Environmental Planning for Small Communities: A Guide for Local Decision-Makers	625/R-94/009
EXECUTIVE BRIEFINGS
  Injection Well Mechanical Integrity	625/9-89/007
  Experiences in Incineration Applicable to Superfund Site Remediation	625/9-88/008
  Volumetric Tank Testing: An Overview	625/9-89/009

ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS AND TECHNOLOGY PUBLICATIONS
  The Electroplating Industry	625/10-85/001
  Fugitive VOC Emissions in the Synthetic Organic Chemicals Manufacturing Industry	625/10-84/004
  Autothermal Thermophilic Aerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludge	625/10-90/007
  Control of Pathogens and Vectors in Sewage Sludge	625/R-92/013
  Managing Used Oil	625/R-94/010

SOFTWARE
  POTW Expert	625/11-90/001
  Strategic WAste Minimization  Initiative (SWAMI) Version 2.0	625/11-91/004
  GRoundwater Information Tracking System with STATistical Analysis Capability (GRITS/STAT)	625/11-91/002

OTHER
  ORD BBS User's  Manual (V 2.0) 	600/M-91/050
  Description and Sampling of Contaminated Soils: A Field Pocket Guide	625/12-91/002
  +   Listed for first time.

 To order any of the above items, please use the Ordering Form on the last page. Please limit number of publications to 9. Justification
 on letterhead required for more than 9 publications.

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                          TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER  ORDERING FORM
           The numbers on this form correspond to those given to each publication. Circle the
           number of the publication(s) you want to receive (not to exceed 9) and return this page to
                                     ORD Publications (G-72)
                                     26 W. Martin Luther King Dr
                                     Cincinnati, OH 45268-1072
                                     Telephone: 513-569-7562
                                     Fax: 513-569-7566

           Justification on letterhead required for more than 9 publications.
Manuals
625/1-87/001
625/1-81/013
625/1-81/013a
625/1-87/014
625/1-83/016
625/1-85/018
625/1-86/021
625/1-88/022
625/1-89/023
625/1-91/024
625/R-92/004
625/R-92/005
625/R-93/007
625/R-93/010
625/R-94/003
625/R-94/004
625/R-94/005
625/R-95/001
625/R-95/002

Capsule Report
625/2-91/032

Seminar
Publications

625/4-87/017
625/4-87/018
625/4-89/019
625/4-89/020
625/4-89/021
625/4-89/022
625/4-89/023
625/4-89/024
625/4-91/025
625/4-91/026
625/4-91/027
625/4-91/030
625/R-92/001
625/R-92/003
625/R-92/006
625/R-92/014
625/R-93/001
625/R-93/002
625/R-93/008
625/R-94/008
625/R-95/003
625/R-95/004
Brochure
625/5-90/025
625/R-93/012
Handbooks
625/6-84/009
625/6-91/014
625/6-90/0163
625/6-90/0 16b
625/6-87/017
625/6-88/018
625/6-89/019
625/6-89/020

625/6-89/021
625/6-89/022
625/6-89/023
625/6-89/024
625/6-89/0253
625/6-89/025b
625/6-91/026
625/6-91/027
625/6-91/028
625/6-91/029
625/6-91/030
625/6-91/031
625/R-92/002
625/R-92/012
625/R-93/0033
625/R-93/003b
625/R-93/004
625/R-92/007
625/R-93/005
625/R-93/013

625/R-94/001
625/R-94/002

Guides to
Pollution
Prevention
625/7-90/004
625/7-90/005
625/7-90/006
625/7-90/007
625/7-90/008
625/7-90/009
625/7-90/010
625/7-90/01 1
625/7-91/012
625/7-91/013
625/7-91/014
625/7-91/015
625/7-91/016
625/7-91/017
625/R-92/008
625/R-92/009
625/R-93/006
625/R-93/009
625/R-93/015
625/R-93/016
625/R-93/017
625/R-94/006
625/R-94/007
Summary
Reports
625/8-89/016
625/8-90/017
625/R-92/010
625/R-94/009
Executive
Briefings
625/9-89/007
625/9-88/008
625/9-89/009
Environmental
Regulations and
Technology
Publications
625/10-85/001
625/10-84/004
625/10-90/007
625/R-92/013
625/R-94/010
Software
625/11-90/001
625/11/91/004
625/11-91/002
Other
600/M-91/050
625/12-91/002



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