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Advances in the assessment of drystone retaining walls-some case studies

Advances in the assessment of drystone retaining walls-some case studies
Advances in the assessment of drystone retaining walls-some case studies
Drystone retaining walls have played an essential part in the infrastructure of hilly and mountainous regions around the world, and have provided platforms for building and for agricultural terraces. Research carried out in England and in France has led to a good understanding of their behaviour, but it is difficult to determine the details of the construction of individual walls without dismantling them, and so it can be hard to tell whether or not apparent defects and deformations are a threat to stability. Replacing every apparently defective or deformed wall would be a waste of resources, yet dismantling a wall would obviously be completely disruptive to its function. Invasive investigation, such as drilling, could easily cause damage to the wall structure and destabilise the wall. There is therefore a pressing need for non-disruptive methods of investigation that can reveal critical aspects of a wall's construction. Thermal imaging carried out in the right conditions can reveal important information about aspects of a wall's construction that are critical to its stability. This paper presents case studies that have contributed to the development of this technique, and demonstrate its potential.
3583 - 3588
ICE Publishing
Warren, L.A.
421929da-fe19-47bf-9ac0-433f0844383d
Briggs, K.M.
8974f7ce-2757-4481-9dbc-07510b416de4
McCombie, P.F.
12f30716-5a63-4a97-8c45-a017f6b911c3
Warren, L.A.
421929da-fe19-47bf-9ac0-433f0844383d
Briggs, K.M.
8974f7ce-2757-4481-9dbc-07510b416de4
McCombie, P.F.
12f30716-5a63-4a97-8c45-a017f6b911c3

Warren, L.A., Briggs, K.M. and McCombie, P.F. (2015) Advances in the assessment of drystone retaining walls-some case studies. In Geotechnical Engineering for Infrastructure and Development - Proceedings of the XVI European Conference on Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering, ECSMGE 2015. vol. 6, ICE Publishing. 3583 - 3588 .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Drystone retaining walls have played an essential part in the infrastructure of hilly and mountainous regions around the world, and have provided platforms for building and for agricultural terraces. Research carried out in England and in France has led to a good understanding of their behaviour, but it is difficult to determine the details of the construction of individual walls without dismantling them, and so it can be hard to tell whether or not apparent defects and deformations are a threat to stability. Replacing every apparently defective or deformed wall would be a waste of resources, yet dismantling a wall would obviously be completely disruptive to its function. Invasive investigation, such as drilling, could easily cause damage to the wall structure and destabilise the wall. There is therefore a pressing need for non-disruptive methods of investigation that can reveal critical aspects of a wall's construction. Thermal imaging carried out in the right conditions can reveal important information about aspects of a wall's construction that are critical to its stability. This paper presents case studies that have contributed to the development of this technique, and demonstrate its potential.

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Published date: 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493736
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493736
PURE UUID: 6f3da0a3-7c94-44b2-b9b1-0e4cbd2cceb5
ORCID for K.M. Briggs: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1738-9692

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2024 17:25
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 01:43

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Contributors

Author: L.A. Warren
Author: K.M. Briggs ORCID iD
Author: P.F. McCombie

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