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California Environmental Protection

California EPA. 2001. Evaluation of methyl parathion as a toxic air contaminant. Department of Pesticide Regulation, California Environmental Protection Agency. Http //www.cdpr.ca.gov 8765/. January 19, 2001. [Pg.197]

Department of Pesticide Regulation California Environmental Protection Agency Sacramento, California... [Pg.188]

McKone TE (1993) CalTOX, a multimedia total exposure model for hazardous-waste sites. Part I. Executive summary. A report written for The Office of Scientific Affairs Department of Toxic Substances Control California Environmental Protection Agency Sacramento, California by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore... [Pg.68]

KayLynn Newhart (2006) Environmental fate of Malathion. California Environmental Protection Agency Department of Pesticide Regulation, CA, USA... [Pg.274]

Lauren Zeise, California Environmental Protection Agency, Oakland... [Pg.7]

CA EPA 1998. USEPA/OPP Pesticide related database queries OPP s registered and cancelled pesticide product database. California Environmental Protection Agency. Internet http //www.cdpr.ca.gov/docs/epa/epamenu.htm. Accessed on Nov. 6, 1998. [Pg.205]

California Environmental Protection Agency (CalEPA). Online. Available HTTP (accessed 1 April 2003). [Pg.13]

A cost estimate was produced by the California Environmental Protection Agency (C-EPA) following a full-scale demonstration by AER Labs (formerly know as Ensotech, Inc.). The C-EPA estimated that treatment costs range from 70 to 130/yd of soil treated. Factors that determine the cost of treatment include the concentration of contaminants and the scale of the project (D16271K, p.7). [Pg.335]

This technology was successfully demonstrated for the California Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Toxic Substances Control, at a site in Bakersfield, California, and is commercially available. [Pg.1110]

California Air Resources Board/Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, Benzol a] pyrene as a Toxic Air Contaminant (1994) Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment/California Environmental Protection Agency, Air Toxics Hot Spot Program Risk Assessment Guideline, Part II Technical Support Document for Describing Available Cancer Potency Factors (1998) Collins et al. (1998). [Pg.470]

From California Air Resources Board (1994) and Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal EPA) (1998). [Pg.472]

Of course, activities such as smoking result in enhanced levels not only of nicotine (e.g., Thompson et al., 1989) but also of a variety of other gases associated with cigarette smoke (e.g., California Environmental Protection Agency, 1997 Nelson et al., 1998). For example, using 3-ethenylpyridine as a marker for cigarette smoke, Heavner et al. (1992) estimated that 0.2-39% of the benzene and 2-49% of the styrene measured in the homes of smokers were from cigarette smoke. [Pg.858]

California Environmental Protection Agency, Air Resources Board, Research Division, Determination of Formaldehyde and Toluene Diisocyanate Emissions from Indoor Residential Sources, Contract No. 93-315, Final Report, November 1996. [Pg.865]

The California Air Resources Board has prepared risk assessments for a number of toxic airborne compounds and mixtures, designated as toxic air contaminants, TACs (Table 16.15). For example, risk assessments for individual compounds such as benzene, benzo[a]pyrene (see Chapter 10), formaldehyde, and vinyl chloride have been carried out, in addition to complex mixtures such as diesel exhaust (California Air Resources Board, 1997a) and environmental tobacco smoke (California Environmental Protection Agency, 1997). These risk assessment documents form the basis for controls imposed as part of the risk management process (e.g., see Seiber, 1996). [Pg.925]

California Environmental Protection Agency, Health Effects of Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke, Final Report, September 1997. Available from the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, 301 Capitol Mall, Second Floor, Sacramento, CA 95814 http //www.calepa. cahwnet. gov/oehha/. [Pg.933]

Phelps, D., Schnell, J., and Shah, A. (2002) California Pharmaceutical Industry Hazardous Waste Source Reduction 2002 Assessment Report. California Environmental Protection Agency, Sacramento, CA, 96-110. [Pg.81]

Pilorin, R. (1994). Personal communication from Pilorin, R. (California Environmental Protection Agency, Sacramento, California) to Croff, A.G. (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee). [Pg.305]

OEHHA (2000) A ir Toxics Hot Spots Program risk assessment guidelines. Part IV. Technical support document for exposure assessment and stochastic analysis. Oakland, CA, California Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (http //www.oehha.ca.gov/air/hot spots/pdf/Stoch4f.pdf). [Pg.92]

W. Leigh Short, Woodward-Clyde, Inc. (retired), Calvin C. Willhite, California Environmental Protection Agency, and... [Pg.9]

F or more information or copies of the California Environmental Protection Agency, Air Resources Board Methods (a.k.a. CARB Methods), contact http //www.arb.ca.gov/testmeth/testmeth.htm or telephone the Engineering and Laboratory Branch at 916-263-1630. [Pg.56]

California Environmental Protection Agency. 1991. Draft Guidelines for Hazard Identification and Dose-Response Assessment of Agents Causing Developmental and/or Reproductive Toxicity. California Department of Health Services, Health Hazard Assessment Division, Reproductive and Cancer Hazard Assessment Section. April 3. [Pg.121]

California Environmental Protection Agency Hazard Identification Documents on Reproductive and Developmental Toxicity... [Pg.198]

Chemicals Known to the State to Cause Cancer or Reproductive Toxicity, Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986, State of California Environmental Protection Agency, 2005, p.65. [Pg.344]

Fan A. M. and Alexeeff G. V. (2000) Thiobenzcarb. California Environmental Protection Agency, Sacromento. [Pg.4540]


See other pages where California Environmental Protection is mentioned: [Pg.290]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.863]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.41]   


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