Data pertaining to 'Can artesian groundwater and earthquake-induced aquifer leakage exacerbate the manifestation of liquefaction?'
DOI10.5281/zenodo.4391461Zenodo4391461MaRDI QIDQ6704893FDOQ6704893
Dataset published at Zenodo repository.
David S. Harte, Michael Manga, Sjoerd van Ballegooy, Helen K. Rutter, Anton Gulley, Virginie Lacrosse, Caroline Holden, Simon C. Cox
Publication date: 24 December 2020
Copyright license: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Geodatabase (ArcGIS 10.5.1), Excel files and mp4 videoto accompany: Cox, S.C.; van Ballegooy, S.; Rutter, H.K.; Harte, D.S.; Holden, C.; Gulley, A.K.; Lacrosse, V.; Manga, M. (in press) Can artesian groundwater and earthquake-induced aquifer leakage exacerbate the manifestation of liquefaction? Engineering Geology Manuscript ENGEO 105982. Vast quantities of liquefaction ejecta repeatedly inundated properties during the 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence in New Zealand, resulting in differential ground surface subsidence and significant damage to buildings and urban infrastructure. There are strong spatial correlations between the occurrence of ejected sediment with groundwater pressure in deep aquifers. When geotechnical testing sites are grouped according to liquefaction vulnerability indices (to control variance relating to shaking strength, water table depth, and soil profile strength), places where minor and moderate-severe liquefaction occurred during the Mw6.2 Christchurch earthquake had distinctly higher aquifer pressure than sites where liquefaction was not observed. Together with observations of earthquake-induced pressure changes and inferred transfer of groundwater from deep aquifers to shallower levels, an interpretation is that leakage from aquifers with artesian (above ground) pressure provided an additional driving mechanism for surface manifestation of water and sediment. It is surmised that above-ground aquifer pressures further promoted suffusion and piping along fractures, flow-pathways and liquefied horizons. The Mw6.2 Christchurch earthquake is presented as an example where leakage of artesian groundwater likely contributed to the near-surface liquefaction-induced ground damage. The process can result in underprediction of liquefaction vulnerability so needs to be considered when evaluating potential for earthquake-induced liquefaction and ground damage wherever groundwater is confined.
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