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Download Brochure

Download Brochure

Central Labs is located in Red Deer, Alberta. We service residential, agricultural and oilfield testing requirements and provide drop-off and on-site local analysis on soil, water and oilfield samples.

INTERPRETATIONS
Central Labs does not interpret results, however we give guidance toward relevant regulatory standards.  If in doubt for consumption or health reasons, please consult your local health agency (Alberta Health Services, etc.)
 
  1. MAC: health based and listed as maximum acceptable concentrations;

  2. AO: based on aesthetic considerations and listed as aesthetic objectives;

  3. OG: established based on operational considerations and listed as operational guidance values

Water Wells

A water well is an excavation or structure created in the ground by digging, driving, boring, or drilling to access groundwater in underground aquifers. The well water is drawn by a pump, or using containers, such as buckets, that are raised mechanically or by hand.

Soil Nutrients

Sixteen chemical elements are known to be important to a plant’s growth and survival. The sixteen chemical elements are divided into two main groups: non-mineral and mineral.

Septic Soils

Soils are sampled prior to installation of a variety of septic discharge systems.  Speak to your installer or installation engineer for exact sampling requirements depending on your build.

Generally, the following parameters are required:

  • 1 Bag of Soil from each depth/zone.  Ziplocks are ok.  approximately 1L (1.5kg) soil required.
  • Particle Size (Grain Size): % Sand, Silt, Clay.
    • If Sand is > 50%, you may need DETAILED SAND analysis (Coarse/Med/Fine)

Applicable Containers

 

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500mL Amber: Amber-colored, wide-mouth with Teflon-lined cap. Amber glass assists in filtering UV light and any photo-degredation of UV-sensitive chemicals (ie: BTEX)
Good for: Solids, Sludges: [CCME Hydrocarbons (solids, sludges), Microtox]

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Wide-Mouth Glass Jar 500mL: Certified, Pre-cleaned wide-mouth glass jar. Teflon-lined cap. Good for: Solids, Liquids, Sludges: [Soil/Sludge Salinity, Microtox, Class-II Solids, CCME Trace Metals]

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250mL Natural Plastic: Clean, natural-plastic container with cap. Good for: Water Samples: [Potable Water, Dissolved Metals (CCME)]

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2.5mL vial: Contains a concentrate Acid preservative.
Good for: Preserving water samples for [Total Metals (CCME)] – put the preservative into the 250mL Natural Plastic Container if you want TOTAL Metals only. If you want dissolved metals, a separate (non-preserved) sample is required.

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40mL Amber: Amber-colored glass container with septum-cap.
Good for: Water samples where volatiles (ie: hydrocarbons) are required.
Note: MUST fill completely without ANY HEADSPACE (air pockets)

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100mL Coliforms: Plastic lock-top container with preservative.
Good for: Total & E.Coli Coliforms (1 container does both), IRB’s, SRB’s (1container can do both)
Note: Fill to fill-line. Preservative will dissolve into sample to stabalize bacteria. Must remain cool (2-10 oC), and into lab within 24 hrs.

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Soil Bag: 22cm x 30cm Zip-Top Plastic Bag
Good for: Soil Nutrients, Soil Salinity, Septic Soils


Sampling

A general rule of thumb is “Test results can only be as good as the sample”

Sampling is the first step in a long process to find out “what’s there”. An incorrect sample will therefore give an incorrect result. In fact, there are courses available that deal just with applicable sample acquisition and handling. A professional Environmental representative will ensure that the correct sample is acquired depending on the analysis that is required.

A few hints & tips to consider:

  • Representative Sampling is your best bet; collect what best represents the entire system if applicable, or local system as applicable.
  • Composite Sampling is a common technique where numerous samples are gathered, then combined, and a sample of this combination is taken for analysis. It ensures a much more representative sample has been acquired.
  • Cross-Contamination occurs when residual analytes are left over and/or transferred to the new sample. Make sure sampling tools and containers have been adequately cleaned between uses.
  • Hold times refer to the time from sampling to the time of analysis. Please inquire about hold times if you can not send samples directly to lab.
  • Temperature can affect your sample between time of sampling to time of analysis. Some items are very temperature sensitive; others not. Please inquire if concerned.
  • A Chain of Custody is very important to complete. It can be a legal document that trails who & when samples got relinquished to other’s responsibility. It can also serve as a “Purchase Order” that clarifies to the lab exactly what analysis needs to be done.