GICHD mine dog testing project : soil sample results #5.
Author(s) -
James L. Barnett,
James M. Phelan,
Luisa Archuleta,
Kelly Donovan,
SUSAN BENDER
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/918325
Subject(s) - environmental science , soil test , reliability (semiconductor) , sample (material) , mining engineering , soil water , engineering , soil science , power (physics) , chemistry , physics , chromatography , quantum mechanics
A mine dog evaluation project initiated by the Geneva International Center for Humanitarian Demining is evaluating the capability and reliability of mine detection dogs. The performance of field-operational mine detection dogs will be measured in test minefields in Afghanistan containing actual, but unfused landmines. Repeated performance testing over two years through various seasonal weather conditions will provide data simulating near real world conditions. Soil samples will be obtained adjacent to the buried targets repeatedly over the course of the test. Chemical analysis results from these soil samples will be used to evaluate correlations between mine dog detection performance and seasonal weather conditions. This report documents the analytical chemical methods and results from the fifth batch of soils received. This batch contained samples from Kharga, Afghanistan collected in June 2003
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