Geotechnical in situ characterization of subaquatic slopes: The role of pore pressure transients versus frictional strength in landslide initiation


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Date

2007-04

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

Mineralogical composition and pore fluid pressure are the crucial controls for mechanical stability of water-saturated sediments. Their in situ measurements were undertaken in earthquake-triggered slope deposits in Lake Lucerne (Switzerland) in addition to geophysical characterization and laboratory index properties, shear and consolidation experiments on core. Two lithological units were identified: A weak, lightly underconsolidated section of postglacial silty clays overlies overconsolidated fine-grained glacial deposits with coarser components and excess fluid pressure (ca. 2.5× higher than in the hanging wall clay). In the event of an earthquake, hydrofracturing in the overconsolidated section facilitates an upward pore pressure pulse to the base of the softer, less stable unit. Here, excess pore pressure initiates sliding along a failure plane at the lithological boundary, causing the entire postglacial sedimentary section to slip downslope. We propose that many submarine landslides at active and passive continental margins may follow this mechanism of pore pressure-induced failure.

Publication status

published

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Book title

Volume

34 (7)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Date collected

Date created

Subject

Subaquatic landslides; cone penetration testing (CPT); frictional strength; pore pressure; effective stress; vane shear test

Organisational unit

03614 - Anselmetti, F. (SNF-Professur) (ehem.) check_circle

Notes

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