Q. Can you think of any additional literature available on how  to calculate/assess risk, not written by a government agency?
  A. There are many books and articles that deal with that,  especially from the statistics and probability point of view.  Here are two:
  http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Risk-Analysis-Management/dp/1566701309
  http://www.amazon.com/Theoretical-Mathematical-Foundations-Health-Analysis/dp/146137815X/ref=sr_1_sc_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1423101241&sr=1-1-spell&keywords=theoretical+andmethematical+foundations+of+human+health+risk+analysis 
  But, as a practical matter, most clean-ups must meet  government standards, regardless of theory or science.   See also my chapter in toxicology:  http://www.raperkins.net/ENVE_652/Module12/12A_RegulatoryTox/12A_RegulatoryTox.htm 
  The field of systems engineering deals with the risk of  failures.   For our interest, the effect  of chemicals from the environment, we deal with many uncertainties in both the  toxicity and in the fate and transport.  
  
  Q. What do RA/SI and PI mean?   In the 2011 closure, the second question asks about phases I don’t  recall seeing in the module: the RA/SI and the PI.  The quiz also added PI/SA but I think that is  red herring.
  A. 
  Those are terms of art from the EPA Superfund process.  But, the concepts are universal.  PA/SI means Preliminary Assessment/Site  Investigation, which could be the first few site visits and enough thought to  get some budget to do more.  RI/FS, “riff  is” means the Remedial Investigation, where the site is sampled, drilled, etc.,  and Feasibility Study, where the various alternative are examined; RI/FS  requires budget..  
  See bottom of http://www.raperkins.net/ENVE_651/Module02/2A_RA_laws_and_regs/Module_02_2A.html
Q. I read through chapter 4 of McKay’s Mulitmedia Environmental  Models and was curious if the calculations take into consideration things like  permafrost? 
  A. No.  Nor does it do  groundwater.  We have another program for  that.  Permafrost diverts groundwater  flow, but does not really affect contaminants otherwise – that I know of.  
Q. The groundwater is also very cold and I have heard that  contaminates have a much longer lifespan due to the colder water temperature  upwards of 50 years longer than in groundwater temps found in the lower 48. Is  there any validity to that assumption?
  A. That varies with the contaminant.  Some bacteria can operate at very cold  temperatures.  If there is a steady  source of contaminant that is amenable to degradation, the bacterial community  will adopt to degrade it.  The  degradation involves burning the contaminant for energy and making biomass –  new bacteria.  
Q.  Does “Long John” now “own” the contamination (and  all of the associated costs of cleanup) even though the PCBs likely migrated  into his harbor from upstream sources? Obviously the tributyltin can be  attributed to the harbor.  However,  PCB-contaminated soils are expensive to dispose of.  On a related note, if there were a USACE  permitted dredge material disposal site out in the bay, he could have dumped  away, right? So just by putting the dredge material on land he created a  hazardous waste?
  A. lI constructed the problem to emphasize the transport of the  chemicals. But now, Long John does indeed own the pile and its contaminants.   As a practical matter, you  can’t dredge without a permit.   The  permit is joint with EPA and the Corps of Engineers.  Long John would not be allowed to dredge  without a proper site for spoil disposal.   Likewise, if there was an approved site, it would only be for clean  materials and you would have to have a sampling program to prove it was clean –  below the regulatory standards.  
Q. My criticism is evident in the answer I  provided for my chemical search above. I use Google almost exclusively, and I’m  pretty sure it is the most popular search engine. Wikipedia almost always comes  up first for chemical searches, and the top five non-wikipedia pages are  usually government sites (EPA, NIH, CDC, IARC). I’m not sure I’m grasping the  point of this exercise. Maybe I should use a bunch of different search engines  and see what results I get, but the Google results usually seem pretty  relevant. 
  A. Yes, Wiki has it all.   If it’s important, I look at the references at the bottom of the Wiki  site.  
Q. I don’t know if you will be able to answer this questions  but it is regard to a hazardous waste and a hazardous substance. When a refined  petroleum product or even a crude oil is released and cannot be recycled I  would assume that it then goes from being a hazardous substance to a hazardous  waste. However, it does not appear to be considered a hazardous waste under  RCRA. Do you know why that is?
  A. Petroleum products were exempt under the RCRA law.  However, if a component, say benzene, is over  the toxicity limit on the TCLP, the waste is hazardous under RCRA.