Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations cowski on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

what to look out for in soil investigation 2

Status
Not open for further replies.

greenelephant

Geotechnical
Oct 15, 2000
4
what are the things to look out for in soil investigation? something fundamental will do. will be grateful if you can point out here or recommend any book regarding this.

thanks in advance
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Hi Greenplant!
This is my first time in the forum, so I hope this will work for you.
I strongly recommend the book from McGraw Hill, "Geotechnical and Foundation Engineering - Design and Construction" written by Robert W. Day.
This is my favorite, its a hands-on experience from planning the geotechnical work to report writting. One got-a-have-it.
Visit McGraw Hill website.
Let me know if this message was helpful to you... I know it will.
 
This question is difficult to answer in this forum, but here goes. A good geotechnical exploration should include subsurface exploration (adequate number of borings or soundings), laboratory testing, and engineering analysis of the data followed by report writing. As part of the field exploration, the engineer should visit the site to document vegetation, surface drainage, topography, etc. Soil samples should be classified by a geotechnical engineer. Represenative samples should then be tested in the lab to help determine shear strength and compressibility characteristics. Foundation analyses (bearing capacity and settlement, at least) can then be performed. The last part is documentation of the findings in a written report. FHWA has a Soils and Foundations Manual (FHWA HI-88-009) that is available for free (see their website), which outlines recommended exploration procdeures. Any of the available geotechnical textbooks (Das, Kovacs, Bowles, etc.) also have chapters on this subject, but may not be up to date. ASFE (Association of Soil and Foundation Engineers) also has good information on subsurface explorations and legal matters.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor