[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 40, Volume 24]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 40CFR258.14]



[Page 403]

 

                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT

 

         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 258_CRITERIA FOR MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE LANDFILLS--Table of Contents

 

                     Subpart B_Location Restrictions

 

Sec.  258.14  Seismic impact zones.



    (a) New MSWLF units and lateral expansions shall not be located in 

seismic impact zones, unless the owner or operator demonstrates to the 

Director of an approved State/Tribe that all containment structures, 

including liners, leachate collection systems, and surface water control 

systems, are designed to resist the maximum horizontal acceleration in 

lithified earth material for the site. The owner or operator must place 

the demonstration in the operating record and notify the State Director 

that it has been placed in the operating record.

    (b) For the purposes of this section:

    (1) Seismic impact zone means an area with a ten percent or greater 

probability that the maximum horizontal acceleration in lithified earth 

material, expressed as a percentage of the earth's gravitational pull 

(g), will exceed 0.10g in 250 years.

    (2) Maximum horizontal acceleration in lithified earth material 

means the maximum expected horizontal acceleration depicted on a seismic 

hazard map, with a 90 percent or greater probability that the 

acceleration will not be exceeded in 250 years, or the maximum expected 

horizontal acceleration based on a site-specific seismic risk 

assessment.

    (3) Lithified earth material means all rock, including all naturally 

occurring and naturally formed aggregates or masses of minerals or small 

particles of older rock that formed by crystallization of magma or by 

induration of loose sediments. This term does not include man-made 

materials, such as fill, concrete, and asphalt, or unconsolidated earth 

materials, soil, or regolith lying at or near the earth surface.



[56 FR 51016, Oct. 9, 1991; 57 FR 28627, June 26, 1992]