Public Lab Wiki documentation



sandbox-interpret-soil-tests

This is a revision from March 05, 2021 19:50. View all revisions
1 | 4 | | #25850

If you’ve given soil samples to a lab for contaminant testing and received the results, one of the next steps is to interpret the results and make meaning of them. You might have a short document listing test results from the lab, or a longer report that includes some summarizing and recommended actions.

Guides and activities to try

Here are some resources and activities that can help you understand the kinds of information in soil test results and how to interpret them. Some of these activities explain how community members can work together on reviewing documents.

Activities


Activities should include a materials list, costs and a step-by-step guide to construction with photos. Learn what makes a good activity here.


These activities involve comparing the measured amounts of chemicals reported in your results to health-based standards or screening levels set by a government agency. The standard level is the amount of chemical over which there might be concerns, and more detailed testing would probably be helpful. “Health-based” means that the standard considers potential impacts on human health.

Some notes on terminology

In a survey of regulatory agencies in several states across the US, here’s how the states usually defined terms (paraphrased from pg. 44 of this document):

  • Screening level: “a level that provides information on whether additional evaluation of a specific chemical in a medium is required.”
  • Cleanup goal: “most states indicated that this related to the level at which no further remediation would be required.”
  • Target level: “either a chemical level in a given medium that is protective of human health, or an acceptable risk level (e.g., a specific cancer risk and/or HQ [hazard quotient]).”

From: ITRC (Interstate Technology & Regulatory Council). 2005. Examination of Risk-Based Screening Values and Approaches of Selected States. RISK-1. Washington, D.C.: Interstate Technology & Regulatory Council, Risk Assessment Resources Team.

For more information about screening levels, this section) explains what screening levels are and how they relate to human health.


Example sources for health-based standards

As mentioned in the posts above, standard levels can vary by city, state, country, and agency. In “How to interpret soil test results,” you’ll find a table comparing standards from different regions and agencies for various contaminants.

Your soil test results or report might already list local standard or screening levels next to your results. If not, here are some different sources for standards:

  • New York State Soil Cleanup Objectives (SCOs)
  • US Environmental Protection Agency
  • ETOX: Information System Ecotoxicology and Environmental Quality Targets
    • The ETOX database “contains information on various national and international environmental quality guidelines, targets, standards, criteria, and limit values.”
    • Search by “Substance” on the left-hand menu to see entries for that chemical. Click on an entry and you’ll see on the right-hand menu “Quality targets,” which lists that chemical’s standard levels for soil and water in different countries. It’s not an exhaustive list, but it’s a source for some international standards.


More background on technical documents and standard levels







Additional resources and guides