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Directional drilling
was initially intended for the installation of utilities, such as
water and sewer lines, electric lines, and fiber optic cables. More
recently, engineers and drillers have developed others uses for
these techniques. The same technology that allows a directional
drilling machine to operate underground and in difficult conditions
offers an exciting new possibility for directional drilling: remediation of contaminated areas. Countless sites in the United
States, from landfills to gas stations, have some degree of
contamination. A directional drilling machine can be used to install
drainage pipes in these environmentally hazardous areas, leeching
contaminants out of the soil without causing major disturbances
to the contaminated site or to their surrounding neighborhoods.
Jackson Creek Enterprises is one
of the leading experts in the field of soil and ground water remediation. Before
leaving Vermeer Manufacturing, David Wampler supervised and directed
several remediation projects, as well as teaching other operators
how to use directional drilling in this way. He compiled his expertise
in a manual on the subject: "The Basics of Environmental Remediation
Utilizing Horizontal Wells". This manual is reproduced here
with the permission of Vermeer Manufacturing.
"The
Basics of Environmental Remediation Utilizing Horizontal Wells"
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