Abstract

Residential surface soil regulatory guidance values (RGVs) specify the threshold at which soil contamination requires action. Usually, these are risk-based values based on child ingestion, inhalation, and dermal exposure. Benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes (BTEX) are among the five most commonly regulated soil contaminants in the United States and worldwide. More than 100 regulatory jurisdictions have established surface soil RGVs for BTEX compounds. Analysis of these values indicates that they vary by several orders of magnitude and appear to fit a lognormal random variable model with values well dispersed across the number spans. The RGVs applied to benzene are statistically distinct from those applied to TEX contamination, but the TEX values appear to be statistically indistinguishable. The magnitude of difference between TEX RGVs of different jurisdictions appears to be more significant than differences in the T, E, and X values specified by any one jurisdiction. Although value distributions are dominated by randomness, some contain of points that are unlikely to be random and may represent on appropriate values. Where consensus clusters exist, they should be identified and explored. The mechanistic explanations for cluster values may yield methods of reducing RGV variability.

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