DocumentCode :
1580385
Title :
Ground penetrating radar and its use in forest road stability analysis
Author :
Ekes, Csaba ; Friele, P.
Author_Institution :
Terraprobe Geoscience Corp.
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
639
Lastpage :
642
Abstract :
Abstract-Two case studies are presented where GPR was used as the chief investigative tool to understand the underlying cause for road failures as they relate to fill slope stability in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada. 1, Bridge River Road: GPR was applied to map the depth of volcanic ash under a 800 m long section of the Bridge River forest service road (FSR) built in 1984. Both 50 and 100 MHz antennae reached sufficient depth penetration (8 and 16 m respectively) and provided good data quality. The thickness of the overlying volcanic ash was noted by a horizontally continuous reflection pattem. The results indicated a variable thickness of ash over rocky colluvium. Comparing interpreted ash thickness with landslide locations and available geological information it was apparent that ash thickness alone was not necessarily the cause of the landslides. Steep slopes, excessive side-cast and undercutting due to wave action at the base of the fill slope all appeared to contribute to instabity. GPR data, once confirmed through drilling was successfully used to fiid the appropriate engineering solulion. 2, Zeballos Canyon Road: GPR was used to delineate the contact between the road fa and the underlying bench on a section of the Zebzlllos Canyon FSR built in 1970. Recent fill slope failures suggested the potential for more extensive instability. The purpose of the study was to assess the extent of benching in the road prism and the thickness of fill material along a 1570 m long section of the road using GPR and field observations. Two profjies along the alignment and 53 cross sections were surveyed at 130 meter intervals with 100 MHz antennae. Radar interpretation was based on identifying characteristic reflection patterns. Bedrock depth was interpreted based on identifying 1) a hyperbolic and 2) a strong, discontinuous, surface parallel reflection pattern. By comparing the GPR profiles with detailed topographic cross-sections, we were able to make specif- c recommendations for follow up work. The effective use of GPR requires an interdisciplinary approach, comlbining geophysics, terrain analysis, and road engineering. Bringing these skill sets together, these case studies demonstrate that GPR is an efficient, non-destructive and cost effective tool in characterising the nature of slope stability problems as they relate to road construction in the forestry geotechnical sector.
Keywords :
Bridges; Costs; Forestry; Ground penetrating radar; Reflection; Rivers; Roads; Stability analysis; Terrain factors; Volcanic ash;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Ground Penetrating Radar, 2004. GPR 2004. Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Delft, The Netherlands
Print_ISBN :
90-9017959-3
Type :
conf
Filename :
1343548
Link To Document :
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