“…There are, however, some specific outdoor sources that can lead to higher concentrations of certain VOCs indoors than in the general outdoor air environment. For example, gases generated in landfills or from petroleum contamination can migrate through the soil and groundwater to adjacent buildings and homes to give larger indoor concentrations, particularly in basements and crawl spaces, than otherwise expected (Moseley & Meyer, 1992;Hodgson et al, 1992;Fischer et al, 1996). In one such case, the total hydrocarbon concentration was measured to be 120 ppm in a crawl space beneath the floor of a school where petroleum contamination was present from adjacent sources, compared to < 80 ppb outdoors (Moseley & Meyer, 1992).…”