کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5787217 | 1641113 | 2017 | 9 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Ambient seismic noise is collected on a sea levee that presents sandboils.
- Seismic interferometry allows to retrieve surface waves in the 5Â Hz-20Â Hz range.
- Time-lapse seismic velocity changes are estimated during a tide cycle.
- Velocity changes are anticorrelated with in-situ pore water pressure measurements.
- Areas of stronger changes are identified and could be related to internal erosion.
Internal erosion, a major cause of failure of earthen dams and levees, is often difficult to detect at early stages using traditional visual inspection. The passive seismic-interferometry technique could enable the early detection of internal changes taking place within these structures. We test this technique on a portion of the sea levee of Colijnsplaat, Netherlands, which presents signs of concentrated seepage in the form of sandboils. Applying seismic interferometry to ambient noise collected over a 12-hour period, we retrieve surface waves propagating along the levee. We identify the contribution of two dominant ambient seismic noise sources: the traffic on the Zeeland bridge and a nearby wind turbine. Here, the sea-wave action does not constitute a suitable noise source for seismic interferometry. Using the retrieved surface waves, we compute time-lapse variations of the surface-wave group velocities during the 12-hour tidal cycle for different frequency bands, i.e., for different depth ranges. The estimated group-velocity variations correlate with variations in on-site pore-water pressure measurements that respond to tidal loading. We present lateral profiles of these group-velocity variations along a 180-meter section of the levee, at four different depth ranges (0m-40m). On these profiles, we observe some spatially localized relative group-velocity variations of up to 5% that might be related to concentrated seepage.
Journal: Journal of Applied Geophysics - Volume 138, March 2017, Pages 255-263