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Fsne Obituary: Amberly Rose Dye June 27, 2015 UNM-Los Alamos:Due to inclement weathe [url=Link]stanley polska[/url] r conditions, the UNM-Los Alamos campus will open at 10 a.m. today.Subscribe FREE to News AlertsMake the Daily Post your HomepageMore News Like us on FacebookSubscribe FREE to News AlertsMake the Daily Post your HomepageMore News Like us on Facebook LOS ALAMOSladailypost website support locally by OviNuppi SystemsCouncil, Boards 038; Commissions CalendarHilltopper Sports Scores from MaxPrepCouncil, Boards 038; Commissions CalendarHilltopper Spo [url=Link]stanley germany[/url] rts Scores from [url=Link]stanley cup[/url] MaxPrepFacebook-fYoutubeInstagramSubscribe to your choice of breaking and/or daily news headlines.Subscribe to your choice of breaking and/or daily news headlines.Copyright 漏 2012-2025 The Los Alamos Daily Post is the Official Newspaper of Record in Los Alamos County. This Site and all information contained here including, but not limited to news stories, photographs, videos, charts, graphs and graphics is the property of the Los Alamos Daily Post, unless otherwise noted. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided that the Los Alamos Daily Post and author/photographer are properly cited. Opinions expressed by readers, columnists and other contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of the Los Alamos Daily Post. The Los Alamos Daily Post newspaper was founded聽Feb. 10, 2012聽by Owner/Publisher Carol A. Clark. Zndv Senior Activity Centers To Close Indigenous Peoples Day Danny Katzman, LANL water stewardship program manager, discusses proposals for containing the chromium plume in the regiona [url=Link]stanley cup[/url] l aquif [url=Link]stanley becher[/url] er during a Sept. 29 presentation at Cities of Gold. Photo by Roger Snodgrass/ladailypostBy ROGER SNODGRASSLos Alamos Daily PostPOJOAQUE PUEBLO ?Nearly nine years have gone by since Los Alamos National Laboratory formally reported the presence of a potentially carcinogenic chromium contaminant in the regional aquifer under the lab.The probable source was soon traced to an era in which hexavalent chromium dissolved in various fluids was commonly used to clean aluminum heat exchangers in cooling towers and a steady stream of the effluent was flushed from outfalls into the canyons. Over time wave of chromium infiltrated the strata of the Pajarito Plateau and eventually reached the regional aquifer where a hint of elevated concentration was first [url=Link]stanley termos[/url] noticed.In 2006, the New Mexico Environment Department proposed a $795,620 fine later reduced in a settlement to $251,970 for LANL not having properly notified the state for nearly two years about finding chromium concentration in the groundwater. The reading of 270 milligrams per liter exceeded both the New Mexico drinking water maximum contaminant level of 100 milligrams per liter and the New Mexico human health standard for groundwater quality of 50 milligrams per liter.According to NMED, the reading came from the regional aquifer well R-28, which was completed in 2004. The department charged the lab wit | |
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