Testing And Evaluation Of Driven Plate Piles In A Full Size Test Slope: A New Method For Stabilizing Shallow Landslides ? Introduction

Deep Foundations Institute
Richard Short
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
10
File Size:
1054 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

Shallow rainfall-induced landslides in residual and colluvial hillslopes and steep embankments are a common occurrence in many settings [1, 2, 3]. While occasionally posing a threat to property and life-safety, they more often present an ongoing maintenance problem and can lead to the initiation of larger failures. Typically, these slides consist of 2 to 4-foot thick translational movements of silty and clayey soils down slope through the reduction of strength from increases in pore water pressures. Direct surficial infiltration and indirect groundwater seepage are the normative triggers for failure. In the residential community of Blackhawk, California, located east of the San Francisco Bay, these types of landslides are a common occurrence (Figure 1). However, shallow landslides have also been a repetitive and constant problem along many state highways where steep embankments have been constructed in close proximity to busy thoroughfares. Given the real threat to property values in residential and commercial settings and the constant maintenance problem posed to lifeline structures such as utilities, roadways, and pipelines, new methods to deal with these landslides are needed.
Citation

APA: Richard Short  (2007)  Testing And Evaluation Of Driven Plate Piles In A Full Size Test Slope: A New Method For Stabilizing Shallow Landslides ? Introduction

MLA: Richard Short Testing And Evaluation Of Driven Plate Piles In A Full Size Test Slope: A New Method For Stabilizing Shallow Landslides ? Introduction. Deep Foundations Institute, 2007.

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