Loose cohesionless slopes are susceptible to liquefaction and subsequent flowsliding. Small scale sub-aerial laboratory flowslides have been obtained by inducing the collapse of loose deposits of saturated fine quartz sand. Failure mechanisms resembled field cases and other laboratory experiments. A detailed set of results is presented, illustrating the temporal and longitudinal variation of both surface velocity and the elevations of flowing and static material. Initially, the flowside accelerated under the influence of gravity. Movement was not arrested ‘en masse’, but unsteady deposition of sand and pore fluid occurred, being dependent on deceleration of the flowslide that propagated downstream. As a result, the slope over which the flowing material was moving increased with time. Excess pore water pressures were measured during flowslide motion, the magnitudes of which were reasonably predicted using the Coulomb failure criterion and assuming equilibrium of driving and resisting forces. This was despite the observance of unsteady flow and the limitations of experimental measurement.
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October 1997
Research Article|
October 01 1997
Small-scale laboratory flowslides Available to Purchase
I. Guymer
I. Guymer
*
University of Sheffield
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Discussion on this paper closes 2 March 1998; for further details see p. ii.
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
May 24 1995
Accepted:
July 16 1996
Online ISSN: 1751-7656
Print ISSN: 0016-8505
© 1997 Thomas Telford Ltd
1997
Geotechnique (1997) 47 (5): 915–932.
Article history
Received:
May 24 1995
Accepted:
July 16 1996
Citation
Spence KJ, Guymer I (1997), "Small-scale laboratory flowslides". Geotechnique, Vol. 47 No. 5 pp. 915–932, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/geot.1997.47.5.915
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