1 / 23

The Dirt on Soil

The Dirt on Soil. The Case of the Illegal Dumpsite. a heterogeneous mixture of: solids (minerals and organic matter ) liquid gases that occurs on the land surface, occupies space, and is characterized by horizons , or layers.

burketta
Download Presentation

The Dirt on Soil

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Dirt on Soil The Case of the Illegal Dumpsite

  2. a heterogeneous mixture of: • solids (minerals and organic matter) • liquid • gases that occurs on the land surface, occupies space, and is characterized by horizons, or layers.

  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YNbvKMOfGw news cast on importance of soil analysis

  4. Organisms found in Soil Organic matter Mole Nematode Earthworm Beetle Mite Amobea

  5. Due to the widespread location of soil (earth), it can be used to associate people, objects, and scenes in numerous cases. What crimes involve soil? More biodiversity than any other medium on the planet

  6. Nature of Soils (5 Soil Forming Factors) Parent Material: Parent material is the material from which soils form. Soils form in materials that have moved in from elsewhere. Climate: Climate causes soils to vary. Weathering and leaching patterns are determined by temperature and moisture amounts. Wind redistributes sand especially in dry regions.

  7. Nature of Soils (5 Soil Forming Factors) Topography: Slope affects the moisture and temperature of soil. Steep soils may erode and lose their topsoil as they form and consequently be thinner than level soils. Biological Factors: Biological factors including plants, animals, and humans affect soil formation. Plant roots open channels in the soil. Animals mix soils and form burrows. Humans can mix the soil intensely that the soil is considered parent material again. Time: Time for all the soil forming factors to interact with the soil is a factor as well

  8. Transfer Locard’s Principle Two main groups of analysis that scientists focus on in GEOFORENSICS---nativeand anthropogenic characteristics. • Native characteristics can include soil chemical/physical properties such as mineral composition, particle size analysis, or the inclusion of unusual fossils. • Anthropogenic characteristics can include chemical (TCE, PCE, Gasoline, MTBE etc.) or physical pollutants (metal shavings, glass, coal etc.) or combinations of each in the soil.

  9. How Do Soils Differ? • Color • Texture You will be isolating color, size and texture during your field analysis

  10. CSI Technician Data Qualitative and Quantitative Field Analysis: Field analysis gives qualitative or semi-quantitative results. Laboratory Analysis: Laboratory analysis gives quantitative results. http://special-paper.en.made-in-china.com/offer/sMemNJQEOxIK/Sell-Universal-Indicator-Paper.html

  11. Gas Chromatgraphy- Mass Spectroscopy • A GC-MS is a combination of a gas chromatograph and a mass spectrometer. • The gas chromatograph separates molecules as they travel the length of the internal column. The column retains the molecules and then they come off the column as different times. This is called retention time • Retention time allows the mass spectrometer to capture, ionize, accelerate, deflect, and detect the ionized molecules separately

  12. What is a VOC? • VOC stands for Volatile Organic Compounds. • VOCs are emitted as gas from certain products commonly used in the home, which in high quantities can pose serious health risks. • Products known to emit VOCs include: • Benzene (tobacco smoke, stored fuels, paint supplies, and automobile emissions • cleaning supplies • Pesticides • building materials and furnishings • Office equipment • Perchloroethylene (dry cleaning) • Gasoline

  13. Field Screening Tools you will will be using

  14. Universal indicator paper Universal indicator papers have been impregnated with a mixture of several indicators. On contact with the sample solution they assume a particular color. A check against the color comparison table supplied allows the pH to be determined—reds indicate acid, green neutral, blues bases http://special-paper.en.made-in-china.com/offer/sMemNJQEOxIK/Sell-Universal-Indicator-Paper.html

  15. Documenting the samples taken from the crime site Place collect samples on ice— 4 degrees C to prevent VOCs from evaporating Chain of Custody form Place sample into sterile jar and label with location code

  16. Your Task as a CSI Technician You will perform a visual inspection to determine which remaining sites contain grass, leaf matter, dirt and gravel. You will confirm the location of the possible contamination site through the field analysis using the sorting sieve Determine which of the remaining sites contain acidic and basic VOCs using a universal indicator paper Collect soil sample for laboratory analysis using the CHAIN OF CUSTODY process

  17. Proper Collection Technique • Wear Gloves • Rinse sieve and trowel after each sample sifting • Code/label the collection container • Complete a CHAIN OF CUSTODY form for each sample collected Retain “washed” water in a field rinsate blank jar.

  18. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZRLvRn56kI environmental crime scene 9min

  19. Write a hypothesis to solve the above scenario as it relates to finding the location of the weapon used to kill the victim? • How would you test you hypothesis? • REMEMBER … it is an IF and THEN statement

  20. Let’s Go to the Crime Scene

  21. Back in the CSI Crime Lab

  22. Questions What were the native characteristics of the soil where the contaminated soil was located? What were the anthropogenic characteristics of the soil were the soil was located was located? Can we definitely say that this analysis was from illegal dumping of toxic chemicals? If so, can we know who dumped it just from the analysis of the soil? What other evidence would we need?

More Related