|
Feb. 21, 2007
Sandia
searches for unexploded ordnance
Team discovers bombs at
retired Kirtland bombing site as part of national program
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. —It’s
a local twist to a nationwide problem: Potential unexploded
ordnance (UXO) at old bombing ranges.
Imagery
of old Kirtland bombing site. Further analysis of the LiDAR
data found two more targets located in areas of highest
crater density.
Credit:
Sandia Nat. Labs.
|
Several intact 250-pound
bombs recently discovered during a construction project at the
old Kirtland bombing range near Double Eagle Airport on
Albuquerque’s west mesa have since been safely removed from
the area.
A complete site survey was
conducted by a team from Sandia National Laboratories and Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). The excavation was part of
an expansion of the Eclipse Aviation facility near Double Eagle
Airport for installation of water and power lines. The survey of
the Kirtland site, one of the national Wide Area Assessment (WAA)
sites, was initiated and funded by the Department of Defense’s
Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP)
and the Environmental Security Technology Certification Program
(ESTCP).
The survey showed no evidence
of any target areas south of the runways.
“This southern portion of
the site completely encompasses the area in which Eclipse
Aviation is expanding, so good news for them,” says Sean
McKenna, Sandia project team leader. “We did identify
several other potential target areas north of the airport; some
of these turned out to be geological noise such as magnetic
rocks. About three of them turned out to be legitimate potential
ordnance target areas.”
The team used LiDAR (light
detection and ranging) imagery to remotely characterize the
Kirtland site and the imagery revealed several features
indicative of UXO targets. The LiDAR provided a high-resolution
topographic map of the area and focused on old targets such as
concentric circles, a ship outline, and other areas of interest,
McKenna says.
Sandia is a National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA) laboratory.
The entire site was
characterized using two complementary geophysical techniques:
magnetometers and electromagnetic induction. The techniques were
run simultaneously on a specially designed trailer and pulled by
a dune buggy. This technique, used by GeoCenters, is known as
Vehicular Simultaneous Electromagnetic Induction and Magnetometer
System (VSEMS). In addition, a helicopter-mounted magnetometer
was used to survey the entire site, including some areas south of
the Double Eagle runways that were not surveyed with the VSEMS.
“These geophysical tools
don’t have the discrimination power to identify UXO versus
scrap metal, but they do a good job of identifying locations with
relatively larger concentrations of metal in the ground,”
says McKenna. “Typically, these areas are the target
locations we’re interested in.”
Research on the development of
the project techniques was funded by SERDP beginning in 2000.
Work funded by SERDP focuses on basic research. The ESTCP
subsequently funds initial field application and verification of
technologies developed under SERDP funding.
Sandia
researchers Sean McKenna and Barry Roberts check data that
confirms the location of metal fragments associated with the
old Kirtland bombing range on Albuquerque’s West Side.
Credit:
Sandia Nat. Labs.
|
Sandia received ESTCP funds
for initial “field” testing, which involved
application of algorithms to simulated sites; no field sites had
been adequately characterized and excavated to a point where they
could be used for validation. Results on the simulated sites were
successful.
ESTCP recently organized a set
of wide-area technology assessments and demonstrations. These
wide-area studies involved the testing and evaluation of a number
of UXO technologies at a given field site. The field sites for
the wide-area assessment have been chosen based on visibility and
urgency of the need to remediate the land. Urgency is generally
driven by someone else wanting to use the land.
Sandia has been involved with
various WAA research sites including the Pueblo site in southeast
Colorado; Toussaint River, an underwater site in Lake Erie off
the north shore of Ohio; the Victorville site in Southern
California; and the Camp Beale site north of Sacramento, Calif.
“The reason for the
different sites across the country is to test the different
technologies on various topography, soils, site areas, expected
number of target areas, and anomaly densities,” says
McKenna.
Overall, as much as 20,000,000
acres of land in the US —that’s about half the size
of Maine— could possibly contain UXO. The unexploded
ordnance is left over from wars as well as from decades of
live-fire training and practice in the US. “UXO presents a
discrete and acute health hazard, but not the same as the
land-mine problem,” says Barry Roberts, a member of the
team. The Kirtland site was used for training during and after
WWII.
In addition, data collected
from known historic target sites at Laguna and Iselta pueblos
have been used for development of various research techniques.
The data sets, funded by SERDP, were mainly collected to test the
helicopter-mounted magnetometer being built by Oak Ridge National
Laboratory.“We also used the data for the statistical
algorithm development work, but did not complete any reports
regarding the two sites,” McKenna says.
Currently the team is writing
final reports for the Pueblo, Victorville, and Kirtland sites.
The Sandia team has completed work on the conceptual model for
Camp Beale and worked with the Corps of Engineers and PNNL to
come up with a transect design for that site. The ground
magnetometer surveys will begin there this month.
This year, ESTCP has funded
Sandia to develop a training course with PNNL to present to state
and federal regulators and contractors involved with site
characterization and cleanup using these methods. The first
course will be offered in August.
Source
/ Credit: Sandia National Laboratories
|