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Locating dissolution features in the chalk

Locating dissolution features in the chalk
Locating dissolution features in the chalk
Dissolution features are common in the Chalk and may result in differential or collapse settlement of foundations if undetected. Dissolution pipes and cavities may be easily missed by conventional drilling methods. Probing and geophysical methods of investigation offer an attractive alternative due to their ability to cover large areas rapidly and thus minimize cost. The success of geophysical methods depends on many factors, principally the size of the feature in relation to the depth of burial and the cover material. This paper describes a study of dynamic probing and a number of geophysical methods used to locate dissolution features at two sites with contrasting ground conditions. The first site contained a bowl-shaped doline over a clay-filled dissolution pipe beneath a relatively thin soil cover. At the second site there was a thick, predominantly granular cover material that contained cavities which had migrated from dissolution pipes in the chalk below. Ground truth data from trenching was obtained to provide a basis for evaluating the investigation methods used. The ability of both dynamic probing and geophysical methods to locate and map dissolution features is discussed.
case studies, cavities, chalk, geophysics, site investigation
1470-9236
125-40
Matthews, M.C.
d02f32ac-4928-4942-810e-f60e7d7123a5
Clayton, C.R.I.
8397d691-b35b-4d3f-a6d8-40678f233869
Rigby-Jones, J.
44141f76-8c54-46b8-80fe-2f748029d61f
Matthews, M.C.
d02f32ac-4928-4942-810e-f60e7d7123a5
Clayton, C.R.I.
8397d691-b35b-4d3f-a6d8-40678f233869
Rigby-Jones, J.
44141f76-8c54-46b8-80fe-2f748029d61f

Matthews, M.C., Clayton, C.R.I. and Rigby-Jones, J. (2000) Locating dissolution features in the chalk. Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology, 33 (2), 125-40.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Dissolution features are common in the Chalk and may result in differential or collapse settlement of foundations if undetected. Dissolution pipes and cavities may be easily missed by conventional drilling methods. Probing and geophysical methods of investigation offer an attractive alternative due to their ability to cover large areas rapidly and thus minimize cost. The success of geophysical methods depends on many factors, principally the size of the feature in relation to the depth of burial and the cover material. This paper describes a study of dynamic probing and a number of geophysical methods used to locate dissolution features at two sites with contrasting ground conditions. The first site contained a bowl-shaped doline over a clay-filled dissolution pipe beneath a relatively thin soil cover. At the second site there was a thick, predominantly granular cover material that contained cavities which had migrated from dissolution pipes in the chalk below. Ground truth data from trenching was obtained to provide a basis for evaluating the investigation methods used. The ability of both dynamic probing and geophysical methods to locate and map dissolution features is discussed.

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More information

Published date: 2000
Keywords: case studies, cavities, chalk, geophysics, site investigation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 75067
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/75067
ISSN: 1470-9236
PURE UUID: dab6e646-8165-4113-8f9b-dbff7f1353df
ORCID for C.R.I. Clayton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0071-8437

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 11 Dec 2021 03:33

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Contributors

Author: M.C. Matthews
Author: C.R.I. Clayton ORCID iD
Author: J. Rigby-Jones

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